Jules here with your first Living Room Content delivery. I'm stoked!All you need to do is login in as often as you can as we are posting content on a regular basis (almost daily and in bite-sized amounts). Each post will be named Your Living Room Content for Today (1) where the number will increase with each post delivered.You'll be receiving my songs and Rick's motivational, pop and rock songs as well as my spoken quotes. I'll share my private thoughts and memories of my amazing friends. Rick will be inspiring you with spirit-building content from many of today's most respected personal development and spiritual leaders as well as sharing his beautiful "charts" and chapters from his award-winning book, A Large Slice of Life to Go, Please!There will be beautiful PDF's, inspirational videos, thought-provoking articles and more! Even a little Living Room Humor:-) I'll also be giving you 50 of the world's top self-help eBooks - one each week - and in a few weeks you'll be receiving Rick's top-selling spirituality-meets-business e-Book, Success: A Spiritual Matter, so stay tuned for a whole lot of amazing inspirational content!There are eight tracks on my new release, Legacy, and you probably heard the full-version of Evening Train when you first came to this site. Here's another song, one that Rick Beneteau and I wrote in 1992, and recorded in Nashville the next year using the top session players of the time. These musicians have played for the likes of Dolly and Willie and Merle, and when I played the five songs we brought them, well, they were plenty excited and delivered their creative best during the sessions.This song, called One Tear Too Late, was one of the last Rick and I wrote, and the first we laid tracks down for in the iconic House of David Studios, where Elvis used to record.Next week, I'll be giving you download links for all eight songs but for now, have a listen:One Tear Too Late Download the lyric here. Click play to hear me recite one of my favorite quotations. This is the opening chapter from Rick's print book, A Large Slice of Life to Go, Please! It's the story of his then 3 year-old daughter, Teri, who had just returned home from an extended stay in an out-of-town hospital having undergone a risky brain surgery. Enjoy your ice cream!The Ice Cream 'Comb' StoryShe was three. Just released from a far-away hospital after life threatening brain surgery, ready to take on the world again. I was happy just to have her back. My little "Mr. Clean" (shaven head and hoop earrings) and me driving along to our local mall. Hanging out with dad day. I recall her words as if it were yesterday."Daddy, can I get a treat?"As she was understandably spoiled (if there is such a thing), I replied, "Ok honey, but just ONE."Her eyes beamed like the Fourth of July in anticipation of that something only she knew at the time.We drove around to the new end of the mall on the normal seek-and-destroy mission of capturing a parking place. After all, it was Saturday. We landed a fair distance from our destination, and began walking hand-in-hand towards the entrance, her pace gaining momentum with each tiny step. A few feet from the doors she broke loose and ran hands-first into the thick wall of glass, trying with everything she had to swing the big doors open. No luck. With a little assistance, she 'did it' and tried the very same thing at the second set of doors.It was then that I asked her what she wanted for her treat. Without hesitation, she matter-of-factly said "an ice-cream comb from the ice-cream store." Ok, the goal was set and we were in the mall!But hold on! What was this? At the end of what was just an ordinary looking lane of retail chain outlets she spied something new- this huge fountain, water shooting who knows how high into the air. The new goal line!She ran, and I walked (don't ya just hate it when parents let their kids run wild in public?),