Say what you want about the Lord, but his followers can hoop. #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/LZ9C1UQeQY
— John Crist (@johnbcrist) March 19, 2025
Say what you want about the Lord, but his followers can hoop. #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/LZ9C1UQeQY
— John Crist (@johnbcrist) March 19, 2025
“The right to free speech is more important than the content of the speech.” Voltaire
.@WGNNews‘s Robert Jordan interviews Tommy Lee Jones during the filming of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade chase scene from The Fugitive (1993). #chicago #StPatricksDay @nuzman9pic.twitter.com/63C10zRM7D
— Trent (@tnertz) March 16, 2025
Hope you all have fun and thanks for all the great times. pic.twitter.com/uTfPdouoIR
— Adam Sandler (@AdamSandler) March 18, 2025
THIS IS INSANE: In a bizarre moment, a camera operator is abruptly removed from the room during Trump’s remarks at the Kennedy Center, when he appears to veer off into one of his unhinged rants. They are hiding his decline.
Make sure everyone sees this.pic.twitter.com/HmI4Mpsnim
— Really American (@ReallyAmerican1) March 17, 2025
Meanwhile, there are three-month plans that are as low as 9.7 cents. I could literally cut my bill by 60%, yet I keep putting it off. Ideally, I’d sign a two or three-year plan and not have to think about this again for a while. But the long-term plans aren’t as competitive, and I don’t want to put a reminder on my calendar and renew every three months like I’m on some kind of weird Columbia House subscription service for electricity. If I log into my provider’s website and look at my renewal options, the lowest they’ll offer me is 20 cents per kWh — which is way higher than what I could get if I just went through PowerToChoose.
And that’s the trap. So many people just renew with their current company without realizing they can seamlessly switch providers with barely any effort. If you forget or don’t know any better, you’re stuck paying outrageous prices while the energy companies laugh all the way to the bank.I ended up going through ChooseEnergy.com, an energy broker registered with the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT), to find a better deal than I could through PowerToChoose.org. Basically, I just cut my electric bill in half for the next two years. To get this rate, I just have to consume more than 1,000 kWh a month. Easy peasy.
Well, this is embarrassing.
Marjorie Taylor Greene tries to push Russian propaganda about Ukrainian nazis, and is completely shut down by Holocaust Historian and the Leading Scholar on Ukrainian Nationalism in America, Dr. Snyder. pic.twitter.com/ZPjjt9XznY
— Ed Krassenstein (@EdKrassen) March 17, 2025
This is hilarious… Cybertruck like you have never seen before…
— Being Liberal ®️ (@beingliberal.bsky.social) March 16, 2025 at 7:15 PM
That led me to another website I wasn’t familiar with Ancestors.FamilySearch.org. And that gave me this neat little writeup on Simon, who lived 76 years. And, possibly the origin of my last name.
Not only that, but it also provided me with different options for viewing the Family Time Line. I’m shocked I can find all this information for free, and all because I asked ChatGPT about the Gooding and Geeding family. This is what I mean by going down a rabbit hole. Heck, I even found a 1891 marriage license and discovered he had two sisters, Anna and Carry.
I don’t think I’ve ever discovered anything about Simon’s parents before, but now I know his father was William Rockingham Rinehart Geeding, who was born in 1842. Wow, I’ve just traced my last name all the way back to 1842.
Why stop now? I might as well dig deeper. Wow, WRR Geeding died at the age of 29. I wonder why he died so young? One day, I’ll make time to try to find his death certificate. Bummer I don’t have any photos of these men.
WRR Geeding’s father, Moses, also died young, just living 40 years.
And that’s where it dries up. Other than a Census record for Moses, there’s nothing else free online, his parents’ names are not available, but this is much more than I expected.
This is where it gets a little tricky. I also found an old Cincinnati Inquirer obituary that said a Simon Geeding died at the age of 91.
If this Simon Geeding died in 1935 at the age of 91, that means he was born in 1844, right? The other Simon Geeding, the one I first mentioned, was born in 1867 in Cleves, OH. I guess there are two different Simon Geedings. However, the top photo of this post is a Bible a distant cousin sent me that I think belonged to my grandfather, and is dated 1905 and mentions Cleves. I don’t know why there is an M after Cleves. Methodist? Maybe this old church?
To make it even more confusing, I found a third Simon Geeding. So, there was 1867-Simon of Cleves OH, and 1844-Simon. Now, I found a Simon Geeding born in 1846 in Illinois on another genealogy website, WikiTree.com. That website leads me to believe that somehow Geeding came from the name Gidding, but I’m not so sure I’m buying that.
I need to start mapping this out because I’m all sorts of confused, because that page also lists a Samuel Geeding of Illinois. This is information overload and I need to take some time to sort it all out.
Alright, so far I have found the following Simon Geedings:
– 1867-Simon Geeding of Cleves, OH
– 1844-Simon Geeding
– 1846-Simon Geeding of Illinois
To make it even more confusing, I found a fourth Simon Geeding born in 1849 on Geni.com.
Well, 1849-Simon has a father named John Geeding, so I might as well check him out to go back another generation. John was the father of EIGHT Geedings!
There’s no more information on John Geeding, so the trail of that succession of Geedings ends there. So, to backtrack, we have FOUR Simon Geedings:
– 1867-Simon Geeding of Cleves, OH
– 1844-Simon Geeding
– 1846-Simon Geeding of Illinois
– 1849-Simon GeedingTo make it even more confusing, I found a fourth Simon Geeding born in 1849 on Geni.com.
An obscure search led me to a FIFTH Simon Geeding. Actually, he’s a Simon Geeding Jr. So I guess that means there’s a SIXTH Simon Geeding?! Also, Jr. had a son named Josephus! What a GREAT name! We have a JOSEPHUS!
So, there should obviously be a Simon Geeding Sr, right? NO! Instead, 1813-Simon Geeding’s father isn’t even a Geeding or has the first name Simon. Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you the end of the line, I can’t find anything that goes back further than L. Simon Geeting born in 1788. Cool, I may have just traced my family tree to the 16th Century, and discovered I’m probably not a Geeding but a Geeting.
If I want more information on L. Simon Geeting, I have to sign up for a free account. Well, I probably should, or, I can do a search on “L. Simon Geeting” and see what I can find. And, now I’m back at FindAGrave.com. But get this, there’s even a photo! It turns out L. Simon and Simon Jr were both preachers. And, I think I may have posted about one of these guys before.
Let’s just make it a little more confusing. L. Simon Geeding may not even be correct because WikiTree has him listed as Simon L Geeding.
It looks like this Rev. Simon Geeting had a father named George Adam Geeting. Well, let’s see what we have on him. It turns out, a lot. Now, I may have discovered my European ancestors and German name, and I may have to visit this marker and do a little research on the Church of the United Brethren in Christ.
Oh, and you thought I was done. Well, I’m darn close. I’m tired and going to bed. But, here’s the tail end of my family trail. I have no idea how many generations I’ve gone back. But I have now researched it to the 15th Century, and all for free. Wow, what a time to be alive to have all this information at my fingertips or pants pocket. I think some of this is a bit of a retread, so my apologies. I’m almost 50, I can’t remember everything.