Archive for May 29, 2010

June Issue

Hello Friends and Family,

Be sure to drop down and read about my Dad, a WWII veteran who was honored in Washington, D.C. recently.

I am also excited about the release of several new products. Details below…

 staging-crash-course.jpg

* Professionally produced and edited DVD Regular price $250. now $125.

* Condensed from the realtor’s one day staging seminar, originally valued at $500.

* It contains a wealth of information directly from the staging course.

* It offers 2 hours of staging certification credit.

The Staging Crash Course includes these areas: 

1. Space Planning

2. Color Selection (including color chart)

3. Accessory Arranging

4. Staging Ideas and Tips (even your agent does not know)

5. Before and After Pictures

6. Money-Back Guarantee (must decide within 24 hours of receipt)

For a short time, it will include a bonus gift worth $50.

Additional DVD * Hands-On Staging Demo

       

        This 5-minute DVD is an actual narrated staging from

        beginning to end that you can show your clients on the

        consultation. It starts with a house that has already been

        decluttered and streamlined, where many stagers end.

        It illustrates all 4 of the major design principles that we

        cover in the class. The “Wow-Factor” says it all.

FROM MY HEARTTwo weeks ago, my 88 year old Dad, Chuck Morgan, went to Washington, DC as an “Honor Flight” guest. As a WWII veteran, he was invited on a military escorted, all expense paid, flight to view the memorial.  Many of the family members wrote letters of appreciation that he opened at the close of the day. The following message was penned by family friend and author, John Purner. John writes a blog for pilots and flight enthusiasts called The $100. Hamburger.

Half a century ago young men heard the call of their country and flocked to board the warbirds that would fill the skies over our enemy’s homeland. Such a man was Chuck Morgan. By choice he became a tailgunner on a B17. Say that fast and you lose the meaning of his sacrifice. A B17 though the largest and the best bomber the USA fielded in those days was frail by today’s standards. Its skin was no thicker than that of a Coke can and offered no armor plating at all. Unpressurized and unheated these birds of prey clawed their way to 25,000 feet carrying the men that flew them. The temperature at that altitude dips to 30 degrees below zero. The nearest oxygen that our planet could offer Chuck was 12,000 feet below him. He wore an oxygen mask to stay alive and a wool lined leather flying suit to avoid freezing.  Just getting to the target area required all the bravery an ordinary man could muster. But Chuck and his comrades didn’t just fly to their mission’s objective they fought their way there and they fought their way home. Chuck Morgan is no ordinary man.

Sergeant Morgan returned home a victor and quietly took his place beside countless other citizen soldiers; never talking about his war experiences and diminishing them when asked. He married the prettiest girl he ever met, rolled up his sleeves and founded a successful business to support her and the children they would bear.

Foundationed by the life he lived, Chuck Morgan knows the things that most men can only imagine. Chuck Morgan, an average American, answered history’s call and became a giant. I can only imagine what he experienced but I am certain of what it purchased; Liberty, Justice and Freedom for all.

Thank you Chuck.

  Sincerely,

 John Purner

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Till next time…

Happy Thoughts,

Becky Harmon 

“You miss 100% of the shots you never take.”
                                               
Wayne Gretsky
 

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