It's a power of the power, it's a power of the fire. It's a power for the workers, for everyone, so it's mine.
It's a power for the workers, it's a power for the fire.
F***.
.
Well, that was the wrong one.
Let's try this.
You're listening to the Hour of the Time.
I'm William Cooper.
And I, too.
Folks, tonight is going to be kind of a special program.
Some of you who really aren't into this kind of stuff may not like it.
But those of us who have families and understand what this fight is all about probably will love every single Because, folks, this is what it's all about.
And, you see, why would we be interested in a future world in which we're not going to live if we didn't love our children?
And it all started folks like this.
We're all mad in love, oh why? Can't keep my love from getting there.
He'll change the world for the good things he finds.
If she is bad, he can't fix it.
She can do no harm.
Turn his back on his best friend, kick his curtain down When I'm crying under the water
Sittin' there the last time I'm a-walkin' on the floor clean
Keepin' my garden water Sleep out in the rain
If he said that the rain could all choose Well, his face was all wrong
I gave you everything that I had I'm a-holdin' you down
I'm a-lettin' you go Baby, please don't keep me down
When I'm crying under the water God, you gave me so much to lose
You can break me open, take me to the beach Kissin' me tight, I never wanna go
Even man's one to lose For me, love and I, we never lose
When I'm crying under the water He can do no harm
you We can have a ball.
Come on, let's go.
Yes, we can have a ball.
I know it's like a season.
Crazy days.
Yes, we love the home of the high.
I'm going back out to see baby, baby, baby.
Oh, my, oh, my.
We love the home of the high.
Going back out to see...
Now, I bet this is just about the craziest radio broadcast that you've ever heard, folks,
because you never know what you're going to hear on the hour of the time.
But you can always be sure that it's from the heart, and it's the product of something that we really care about, whether we're talking about our family life, or whether we're talking about the research we've done, or whether we're talking about the future.
Poo has expressed a desire to be my co-host tonight.
Good evening, Poo.
Hi.
Thank you for sitting in with me tonight to help me along with this.
You're welcome.
We've sort of had kind of an exciting last few days haven't we?
Yeah.
Pals forever?
Pals forever.
That's the way our relationship is and I certainly believe that's the way my relationship is going to develop with the new addition to the family and I know you're all eagerly waiting to find out What's happened with that little baby?
Well, she's home.
In fact, we brought her home.
I believe it was Saturday.
Was it?
Yes, Saturday morning.
But you see, folks, you have to understand that the medical profession sometimes gets in the mode that they believe that they're God.
And they didn't want us to bring the baby home for some reason or other.
In fact there were no doctors there.
The nurses in the nursery were talking about a ten day regimen on antibiotics and the baby would have to stay in the hospital for those ten days.
And of course many of you know that I wasn't going to go for that.
Not in your wildest dreams because there was no justification for it except to put more money in the doctor's pockets.
So I started asking questions and demanding to talk to doctors and people and administrators and everybody else
and The upshot of it was is that nobody had bothered to check
the culture in the lab and there was nothing wrong with the baby and there was no
infection and there was nothing growing in the culture and and
So we brought the baby home She's healthy, she's beautiful. She's very very happy
I...
I was absolutely amazed the first night.
She slept all night long, didn't cry, didn't wake us up, anything.
The second night, she woke up, I guess, about 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning, probably more like 3, for a feeding, went back to sleep, and slept all the way through until morning.
So, that's the way that goes.
You know, we were so proud.
I was so proud.
And I know Annie was, too.
And I was so proud of Annie when Pooh was born.
Annie went through twelve hours of intense labor.
And, you know, it started out her going through all the pain and ended up with me going through the pain with her in that first birth.
The second birth was all Annie and I was helping her through, except for a couple of times when she almost broke my arms.
But, you know, Pooh, when she came back from the hospital, by the way, her real name is Dorothy Marie Cooper.
Pooh is a nickname, as in Winnie the Pooh.
What are you laughing at?
Do you like your nickname?
Uh-huh.
Do you like Dorothy?
Yeah.
You were surprised when you saw a movie and there was a Dorothy in that movie, too, weren't you?
Remember the Wizard of Oz?
Oh, yeah.
He tried.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I know you only forgot for a second because you're not the forgetting type.
It's not about stuff like that.
Well, folks, let me tell you something.
When Pooh popped into the world, it was about a week or two weeks, I forget which, but it was at least one solid week where she was having problems with her digestion and she just wasn't feeling good.
She couldn't sleep and she would just cry and cry and cry and she couldn't keep any food down.
And the doctor said there was nothing wrong with her.
And so Annie would watch her and take care of her and take care of the house and cook the meals all day and while I was at work and then I would come home and I would rest for as long as I could until Annie was so tired she had to go to bed.
Then I would get up and spend the night holding Pooh and singing to her and talking to her and holding her and rocking her and throwing her up in the air and Everything you can think of.
I did just as much to keep her company as I did to keep myself awake so that I could watch her and take care of her.
Changed her diapers and tried to feed her and everything like that and eventually she was okay.
You remember that time?
But, honey, uh, did you really throw me up to the air?
Sure I did.
I still do sometimes.
You mean like you did, um, um, right, I mean, This night right now, honey?
Yeah.
Oh, you like that, Weezy?
Uh-huh.
But you don't remember those days, do you?
Well, we developed a pretty good friendship, started it at that time, and it's just continued right up until now, huh?
Yeah.
You like that friendship?
Yeah.
It's pretty neat, huh?
Yeah.
Oh, she's giving me the secret sign.
She made up her own secret sign just for me and her, just for our friendship, folks.
And no, we're not part of any brotherhood or anything, but I guess Pooh had been listening to my broadcast for so long she thought that was absolutely necessary.
So anyway, this is sort of how Pooh and I do it.
Everything you did got a gloom in it.
I called you up at night.
I'd like to go and see you move in.
First I said no.
Got some plans for tonight.
Then I stopped and said alright.
And make the next stop in town All the way
Love is kinda sweet Spooky, wicked, wicked like you
you you
You always keep me guessing.
I never seem to know what you are thinking.
And if I barely look at you.
Just show your little eye and I'll fade away again.
I get confused.
Cause I don't know where to stand.
Can't smile.
And oh my, love is kind of free, Spooky little girl like you.
Spooky.
Well, that's kind of the way it goes with us.
We do things together.
We go places together.
We talk to each other.
We're really pals.
We play.
We play a lot, don't we?
Uh-huh.
What kind of games?
What do we play anyway?
Um... You have your computer.
We do things on your computer.
Yeah, and... And we do things on my computer.
Yeah, like, um, games too.
Uh-huh.
What were you doing last night?
Um, playing airplane games.
Playing airplanes?
Boy, you were playing airplanes, folks.
This girl is a pilot.
She was flying a Learjet of Microsoft.
It's the Flight Simulator.
And she can really fly really well.
I mean, she can take off.
She can fly.
She can turn.
She can change altitude.
She can control the engines.
And this is just like flying a real plane.
I mean, it's as close as you can get without dying if you crash.
The only thing she can't do yet is land, but she knows how to click on the right button to make the program land for her if she wants to.
And, you know, she's not doing bad because I can't land yet either.
So we don't worry about it.
What else do we do?
Well, we catch ball.
Yes, we do.
We take walks with Sugar Bear.
Yeah, and he sometimes doesn't want to walk with us, but he's checking around the tree sometimes, so that's why we have to call him to come with us to take a walk.
You like that dog?
Yeah, he sounds like, his name sounds like sugar.
Well, it does.
It is sugar.
It's sugar bear.
Yeah, I see sugar bear.
Well, folks, Pooh, since she was just a little over, I guess, a week, almost two weeks old, has traveled with us.
She's been everywhere that we've been.
She has met an awful lot of people.
She has learned to be a good little girl under all kinds of different circumstances.
For a while, we called her Traveling Baby.
She has grown and I'm just so proud of her.
I'm pleased as punch.
And we were both really not expecting another addition to the family.
In fact, I'm pretty sure Pooh thought she was going to be the only one for a while.
And I think her mother and father did too.
Although, I did kind of wish in my heart of hearts for another child so that Pooh wouldn't be alone a lot of the times.
Because we travel a lot, folks, and she's there with us by herself.
And when we get somewhere, it's usually adults who attend these functions, and so she doesn't get to meet a whole bunch of other children.
And, of course, we live up on a mountaintop.
There are no next-door neighbors, and so her greatest playmate is her father and her dog.
And when her mother's not too busy, her mother, too.
Her mother doesn't play with her as much as Sugar Bear and I, but her mother She probably loves her more than all of us put together.
And we certainly love her.
So anyway, one memorable time, we just, you know, rediscovered how much we love each other.
I can't live anymore but you.
You're my love.
You're the one You're the one
You're the one You're the one
You're the one I desire I'm your man
I don't know.
I don't look at the clouds, I look at the moon I am only a boy
I am a boy You know that Annie
I've always only had eyes for you, and I only have eyes for you now.
In fact, I love you very, very much.
I am the wind, wearing a heartache.
I am the wind.
Don't know you are here, don't know how you are mine.
Don't know maybe they are here, but I'm all mine.
But they all belong to me, for you.
And I only have eyes for you.
I gotta be careful around this song.
We might end up with three.
I think it's the Shabop Shabop that does it.
I'm not sure.
But it wasn't too long after that that Annie announced that she was pregnant.
And actually, she kept it secret for a while.
And when she announced it, we were all just as pleased as punch.
And Pooh said, what's pregnant?
And what was it?
A baby?
That's right.
Where was that baby?
In the hospital.
No, no.
When Nanny was pregnant, before it was born, where was the baby?
In the doctor?
No.
Before the baby was born, where was the baby?
Don't you remember?
We used to feel?
And the tubby?
That's right.
Did you feel the baby move?
Yeah.
I, I, sometimes I didn't feel it move somewhere.
But sometimes we did and we talked to that baby, didn't we?
Yeah.
I mean, well, you know what?
It's sort of kind of, it doesn't feel like, Nothing in the baby's tummy.
You know what I mean?
You mean in the mommy's tummy?
Yeah.
It just felt like a lump once in a while, huh?
Yeah, because it felt, I mean, feels like something different.
Like it's not a boy or a girl, huh?
We didn't know for a long time, did we?
Yeah, um, I thought it was a girl and then... Well, it was a girl.
I was right.
You were right.
But there was a while when you wanted a little brother, huh?
Yeah, but... But you wanted a little sister, too, huh?
Yeah, because so... so we could change dresses together and look pretty.
Oh, that would be a lot of fun.
Yeah, so nobody... so I don't have to button my buttons up.
Oh, you mean your sister could help you?
Yeah.
Well, that's wonderful.
Well, let's get into your story.
You know, Annie was pregnant for...
Nine months with that baby and we felt the baby move and we talked to the baby through Mommy's tummy.
Where should I start?
Well, why don't you start on the night that we went to the hospital.
How did all that happen anyway?
You and Mom went somewhere that day, didn't you?
Where did you go?
I think we went to Show Low.
You went to Show Low.
Did you go to Taylor?
I think so.
And then you came back home sometime around, what, 3 o'clock?
I don't know.
And then what happened?
Well, and then her tummy was feeling pretty bad.
And then what?
And then so she said, well, let's go to the hospital.
And so we did.
And then it really was hurting in the car.
And it took a long time to get there, didn't it?
Yeah, it was the twilight bark.
The twilight bark.
Now folks, that's how she refers to twilight time, because twilight bark is what the dogs do.
You know, in the morning they talk to each other in twilight, and at night they talk to each other in twilight.
And so who calls it the twilight bark?
And we went to the hospital, and then she sat down on the bed, and then it was, it was It was coming on Thursday night.
Yes.
What happened?
How long was Mommy in the room with the bed?
Um... Not very long, huh?
Yeah, but... Then they took her to the other room.
And we played catch the teddy.
Yeah, catch the teddy.
And then Poppy helped take her to the other room.
Yeah, and so I had to stay in the other room, so I did.
And then, um, I'm a...
Not for a while.
I mean, you were in the delivery room with Mommy for a while.
Yeah.
And then a girl came and said, I mean, she brought me, and then she said, can she have some crackers and some grape juice?
And so you said, So my daddy said, yeah.
And so she brought me to the front desk and she let me have it in color.
And then what happened?
Well... Weren't you kind of worried about mommy?
Yeah, and then I was crying for my mom because I really love her and I care about her.
I was crying for that because I really, really love my mom.
And then what happened?
And then, um, the same girl said, you want me to go check your mother?
And so she did.
And then, um, she said it was a baby girl, um, um, when she came back.
And I said, I knew it was a baby girl!
And the next thing I remember is you were opening the door to the delivery room and you were standing right there with me.
Yeah, and I was just staying with my baby sister.
She looked very happy with the hat on her.
She had a little hat on, huh?
Yeah, so she won't get cold.
I mean, so her head won't get cold or anything.
And what did you think about that?
Well...
Peach...
I don't know if I peaked...
You don't know?
Were you happy?
Yeah, I was happy.
And what was Mommy doing?
She was feeling better.
She wasn't yelling anymore, was she?
Yeah, because she was really yelling when it hurt really bad.
And then she said, can I get her a putty?
And then Poppy said, no, I'm afraid, I mean, I mean, I mean, you can't get up because you have to stay, you have to stay in the bed.
Yeah, the doctor wasn't quite finished with her, was she?
Yeah, but, but then, um, she wanted some ice water when she was in the next room.
And so, ice water, And this girl came and got her some ice water, and so she drank it.
And then, um, I did a taste, and Poppy got a taste, and then, um, this cup came, and then she throwed up from the water.
She drank too much, too much water.
And then?
And then, she stayed at, she was, she had to go, um, She had to stay at the hospital, so we had to go home and spend the night, one night.
And then, the next day, we... Wait a minute, what happened when we left the hospital?
Oh, yeah, of course!
What about all those talks we had, and where did we go?
Why don't you talk about that a little bit?
Okay.
And then we went to the Sonic Drive-In, or Jack in the Box, and I told him maybe, maybe, um, the Sonic Drive-In was open.
So I was right!
So we ate there, and then, I mean, we ate there, and then we were talking about lots of things, like, um, when the, where I was crying about mom, and then all those things.
And about the little baby.
And about the baby was born.
And the name?
Yeah, and the name was, um, Allison Dovey Cooper.
And you figured out how to spell Allison.
Yeah.
You added the Y instead of the I, huh?
Yeah, because we sort of liked the Y, me and Poppy.
That was a lot of fun, folks.
And, uh, we came home, and it was pretty late, wasn't it?
Yeah, so Poppy told me to go to bed first, and then he went to bed, and then he took me, He said, um, don't you really, are you excited?
And what did you say?
Yep, I'm excited!
And I was excited too, folks.
In fact, we couldn't wait for morning, could we?
Yeah, and then I was still sleeping at night, and then the next day, um, we went to pick up Mommy, and so we did, and then we... But we missed her, didn't we?
Yeah, I really missed her that night.
And it was kind of rough in the morning.
Yeah.
Because I couldn't make a ponytail and you wanted a ponytail really bad.
No, I don't like ponytails on me.
Really?
Yeah.
That's not what you said that morning.
Did you change?
In fact, you've got a ponytail right now.
But when the next day We went to pick up Mommy, and so we did.
So, we had to wait for the baby to come with us home.
Yep, and it's time to take a break.
You remember Craig Smith?
Yeah.
Remember his daughter?
Yeah.
Remember Jean Miller?
Yeah.
Remember all those nice folks up at Swiss America?
Yeah, she had a little girl named Katie.
And I got her picture in my room draw.
You played with Katie one day for quite a long time.
Yeah, because she had a swing to go swing and back.
So I played out with her and swing and a lot of things I had to do.
I pushed the cradle and her baby.
They're pretty nice folks, aren't they?
Yeah.
We like them a lot, huh?
And now we'll get back to our broadcast.
That little baby.
Boy, we looked at that little baby and we knew there was a future, huh, Phil?
Yeah.
That was four.
That was the next one in line.
Now there's four of us.
Yeah, because we got one and two.
Yeah, because we got One, and two, and three, and four.
And little Allison, you got to hold her today, huh?
Yeah, because I'm, um, I mean, I'm baby.
I, I was, I mean, when, when, when we, we were going to, um, the Pine Top Play at Shovel, and we stopped by Arby's to eat something.
We were in And Papi told me to fix my own stuff, but Mommy was holding the baby.
She just eat with one hand and drink with one hand.
And how did you feel about holding that baby?
Well, tonight, Daddy showed me how to hold her.
And I hold her just by the neck.
Well, you didn't hold her by the neck.
You supported her into the neck.
And the head.
Yeah.
Where was your other arm?
Um, by the feet.
Yeah, and you held her pretty good, didn't you?
Yeah, now I know how to hold her, but she's kind of heavy.
Yeah, so you didn't hold her too long, huh?
Yeah.
But you're helping Mommy?
Yeah, but I don't...
Because mommy wants to help me, I mean, help her to change the diapers, but I don't know when I'm going to change the diapers.
Well, it won't be too far off.
You have to remember that she's just been born and she's so tiny.
And she's so little, you can't, I mean, you can't even play with her or hurt her when she's a little baby.
Yeah, we just kinda look at her and boy... Yeah?
This is what we think, huh?
That's right, baby.
It's all of you.
Only you can make others' lives seem bright.
Only you can make the darkness bright.
Only you, and you alone, can bring me back to you.
You want to sing along with this?
Yeah.
Okay, go ahead.
I'm a part of a love where only you, only you can make a change in me.
But you, you are my everything.
When you hold my hand, I understand the magic that you do.
You're my dream come true, my one And only you, only you can make a change in me
For me, you are my family When you hold my hand, I understand the magic that you do.
You're my dream come true, my one and only you, and only you.
Hey, that was pretty good.
Thank you.
You know, you haven't done that in a long time.
I was worried you wouldn't remember all the words.
You didn't rehearse today.
In fact, I haven't heard you sing that in over a year.
Is that the first time?
Yeah, because I like this show tonight.
Boy, me too.
I really like this show because I love my family.
I love you, I love Mommy, and I love little Allison.
Well, I wouldn't leave without you and Mommy and Allison, and you wouldn't leave, um, me and Mommy and Allison, and Allison wouldn't leave without, um, me and Mommy and And Poppy and Mommy wouldn't leave without me and Poppy and Allison.
That's absolutely right.
And I'm glad you understand that because you don't have to feel insecure all the time, do you?
Yeah, because for all... Mommy doesn't like me to ask a lot of questions.
About what?
That's not true.
Mommy doesn't mind you asking questions.
Unless she's really, really busy, and then that kind of gets on her nerves, huh?
Yeah, but, you know, my, well, I'm wearing this pretty, pretty dress today, and, I mean, tonight, right now, and it's, and it's really pretty.
It's got, um, uh, whatever you call this, this blue... A vest, a blue vest.
I got a blue vest and I got a shirt that's white and it's got a little flower on it and I got this blue shirt that's got a blue dress and it's got pink, yellow, red, orange, I mean yellow and that's all the colors I got on my dress.
And where did you get that dress?
At Walmart, and I got two pants that got, um, a pink and white, um, pant.
And how did you get them?
Well, I got them at Walmart, too.
Mommy, Mommy said that if you'd be a go-kart in Walmart and she'll buy me something, so I did.
And she bought me, um, earrings to stick on, you know, those little earrings.
Oh, yeah.
And she bought me that whole bunch, but I left it in the car.
Uh-oh.
That's why I didn't see those, huh?
Yeah.
Well, why don't you tell us, what does the little baby look like?
Can you remember?
Well, Mommy said it looks like her.
But, I said, what about me?
And she said, she looks like you too.
Actually, she looks very much just like you looked when you were born.
But she looks like a Spanish girl.
Really?
What makes you say that?
Well, she looks like those Chinese girls you know what I'm talking about?
Uh-huh.
Well, she's half Chinese.
Yeah, because she's got those eyes.
Well, she's got those eyes right now because she's a baby right now and she's got those eyes that look like...
Those eyes?
What do you mean by those eyes?
Say that again.
You tell me what that means.
Those eyes.
Does she have any hair?
Yeah, she has the same hair that I got, black hair.
And how about her fingers and toes?
Well, it looks like mine too.
And are they little, big, medium-sized?
Little.
Her fingers are tiny, little, and Poppy told me their fingernails are sharpened.
Very sharp, huh?
Yeah, because I saw this thumb, I mean, her thumb, and her fingernail, that was really sharpened.
Yeah.
How about her head?
Did she hold her head up?
Yep, I hold my head up.
No, can Allison hold her head up?
Yeah, she can hold her head up.
She can?
I mean, she might.
Well, she might, but she hasn't.
Yeah, it flops around like it's attached to a rubber band, huh?
That's why we have to put our hand under her head and neck to support her.
Yeah, because, um, well, tonight I was just Well, she doesn't really hold her by her neck.
and and and poppy told me I you gotta um uh appoint her like like I did by the counter um downstairs
well folks she doesn't really hold her by her neck what she means is that she holds her
hand under her neck and head like we showed her so that the baby's head doesn't flop around and fall
all.
Babies just don't have any muscles in their little necks.
So, gotta do that.
And what about the top of her head?
What's the rule?
Don't ever touch it really hard.
I mean, just don't touch it's head.
Yeah, right on the top, huh?
Because the bones haven't come together yet.
Yeah, because it doesn't really come together.
Gotta grow a little bit, huh?
Yeah, gotta grow a little bit, then you can touch your head.
Yeah.
Yeah, but when you get 5 or 2, I mean, I mean, I mean I'm talking about if you get 4 or 5 or any age, and then you can touch your head when you grow big.
How old are you?
5!
Boy, and are you real big compared to that baby?
Well... Makes you feel all grown up, huh?
Yeah, because today I don't know what to do.
I mean, today I didn't know what to do, but I did know what to do.
I just think about it, because yesterday I did the same thing, and I did the same thing today, too, because I Just pretending I went to school and I did a lot of things really good because I like going to school.
It's a lot of fun.
Now when you said just pretending, that's because you really don't ever go to a school.
You learn here at home, huh?
Yeah, because it's not really a school.
It's just my room.
It's her room and that's a lot of stuff and boy, she learns how to read with the real Phonics, folks.
She doesn't get into this whole word baloney that has so many illiterate people running around.
Well, well, um, well, um, this day, um, I mean, I think this happened a long time ago.
It's not true to me.
I learned my hook on phonics and it's got three more pages to go to to read the other letters so don't practice anything like
those you know by me like that stuff and the okay like the way you pronounce the
alphabet and are you going to teach are you going to help teach Allison when she gets a
little older yeah but but when she gets five i'll give her um a quarter and and when she gets i
mean when she buys i'll teach her how to be an artist and write and all those stuff.
To teach you how to be an artist and write and all that stuff?
Yeah!
You can write, huh?
Yeah!
Because I can... Well, you see, I write, um... And you are a great artist.
Yeah, I am!
And... And, um... I... I think I write, um... P-R-P, I think.
Is that a word, honey?
Well, you know that's not a word.
You know what words are.
You can spell, and you can write, and you can count.
Yeah, and I can count all the way to 20, I think.
Yeah, 20.
One day you even went to 30 and you surprised me, but you haven't done that again yet.
Yeah, because she's downstairs and her white cradle looks really good and it's even got a cushion with it.
And she likes it a lot, huh?
Yeah, because she likes that cradle, but when she gets a little older, I can play with her.
Yeah.
You know, I was really Proud of you when you decided you were going to give your little baby sister a gift and you made that decision all on your own.
What did you give her?
Um, a little tiny rabbit.
It's got clothes on it.
And that was one of your little favorite rabbits too, huh?
Yeah.
Well that was very nice of you and it was very selfless and I'm very proud of you.
Thank you everyone.
And I'm very proud of the way you conducted yourself at the hospital, and I'm very, very proud of the way that you've handled all of this, and the way that you treat your little sister.
Honey, but what about the way I act?
Well, that's what I'm talking about.
But you know what?
I think you're starting to get a little bit silly, like children do sometimes when they're getting a lot of attention.
What do you think about that?
Folks, I don't like vegetables.
I like macaroni.
I don't like bananas anymore.
When did that change?
This morning?
Yep.
I think so.
I think I said I don't like no bananas now.
Well, you know what?
I think it's about time for us to get out of here.
I've just about run out of things to talk about and you're getting a little bit silly.
So why don't we do that?
How about we talk a little bit more?
No, we're out of time, babe.
Okay!
Now, when Mommy gave us this little baby, we decided that she was our hero, huh?
Yeah, so we went to the gift shop and we told Mommy that we're going to get you some cactus, not even flowers.
That's right, we told her we were going to get some cactus, huh?
Yeah, and then we went to the gift shop and then That's right.
And she brought us a precious little addition to our family.
she wouldn't see the surprise so we got her some pretty pretty flowers and then she said wow that's
beautiful thank you because we bought her that because um she was our really really hero that's
right and she brought us a precious little addition to our family oh um i really love my mom and she
She's really beautiful.
She is and she's very special.
Time to say goodnight.
Goodnight folks and I'm a princess and God bless you all.
Goodnight folks.
God bless you and Annie, my dear, this is for you.
We love you very much and thank you so much.
You are our hero.
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love was true. I was like something inside. Can not be denied. I'm the head, it's the