What!? Also I’ve been wondering, are all your devices like, hooked up to your churches program, or like, Do you just use your schools computer? 'Cause my family has their own computer in the school room.BTW I’m homeschooled.
Yes, they are all hook up to our church policy except for the ones Dad uses for testing. And we don’t have school computers. And I don’t think I’d want TV. Sounds strange, doesn’t it.
Because I’d hear all the problems and crises in the world and that would disturb me. It already does some, so how much more would it if we had a TV? 
Uh…I really don’t know how to answer to that.When I was 6, 7, 8 I was adicted to the TV but when I turned 9 I got a little busy and now I don’t care about as much.As much.
I guess it’s all in how we’ve been raised. 
A firefighter puts out a roadside fire in Goleta, California, on Wednesday, October 13.
Photo credits to: Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP
Firefighter Tyler McManigal battles Alisal Fire in Gaviota, California, on October 12.
Photo credits to: Erick Madrid/Zuma
An air tanker drops retardent on a wildfire in Goleta.
Photo credits to: Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP
Did all these fires happen recently?
I’m fairly certain most of them were this year. Terrible isn’t it? Sometimes I even get shocked when seeing some of these.
Well I hope everyone there is safe.
The fire season is over for the year, so yes, we’re all safe.
A forest of ashen trees stands in the wake of the Windy Fire, south of California Hot Springs, on September 27.
Photo credits to: David McNew/Getty Images
Operations Section Chief Jon Wallace looks at the General Sherman giant sequoia tree at Sequoia National Park on September 22. The base of the tree, the world’s largest by volume, was wrapped in an aluminum-based burn-resistant material to protect it from wildfires.
Photo credits to: Gary Kazanjian/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
The Windy Fire burns in the Trail of 100 Giants grove in the Sequoia National Park on September 19.
Photo credits to: Noah Berger/AP
Firefighters spray water as flames from the Windy Fire push toward a road in California’s Sequoia National Park on September 22.
Photo credits to: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images
A firefighter is seen as the Caldor Fire rages near California’s Silver Lake on September 2.
Photo credits to: Ty O’Neil/SOPA Images/SIPA USA
Embers fly from a tree as the Caldor Fire burns along Highway 50 in Californias’s Eldorado National Forest.
Photo credits to: Noah Berger/AP
Jason Marone of the Roseville Fire Department hoses down a hot spot in Meyers, California, on August 31.
Photo credits to: Karl Mondon/Digital First Media/The Mecury News/Getty Images
A tree burns in a blackened forest at dawn on August 30 after the Caldor Fire tore through Twin Bridges, California.
Photo credits to: Karl Mondon/Digital First Media/The Mecury News/Getty Images
The Caldor Fire burns homes along a ridge near South Lake Tahoe on August 30.
Photo credits to: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
The French Fire continues to spread near Wofford Heights, California on August 25.
Photo credits to: David McNew/Getty Images
So, just so you all know, I won’t be online for 4 days. 
Why!? Why can’t you be online!? Did you do something? Are you going on vacation? Is it something to do with church?What’s going on?!!?
Dad has the laptop. And he is in another state for a work meeting. So…
Firefighters spray water on trees being burned by the Dixie Fire near Janesville, CA, on August 17.
Photo credits to: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images
Fire fighting helicopter flies in front of the sun which was shrouded in thick wildfire smoke near Lake View, Oregon on August 15.
Photo credits to: Mathieu Lewis-Rolland/Getty Images
In this long-exposure photo, embers light up hillsides as the Dixie Fire burns near Milford, CA on August 17.
Photo credits to: Noah Berger/AP
Crews battle California’s Caldor Fire as it moved east toward Lake Tahoe on August 23.
Photo credits to: Micheal Nigro/Pacific Press/Shutterstock
In the pic of the helicopter flying in front of the sun. Back when the Camp Fire in 2018 and Complex Fire in 2020 went through, we had weeks of that color sky and we never saw the sun during that time. Everything smelled like smoke. Ash fell almost constantly.
It was like having twilight all the time. Nights were eerie. Depending on your location, you could see a red glow or even flames.































