Welcome to this weekโ€™s Reno News & Review.

Holy smokes. Was 2003 a wild ride or what?

The last week of the year is always a good time to look back, do a little self examination. Itโ€™s not something people can do often or should dwell on, but if you donโ€™t take a second to recognize failures and achievements, itโ€™s pretty hard to advance.

Iโ€™ve never spent a year so concerned with what other people are doing: the war in Iraq, the tax wranglings at the legislature, the changes in the country due to the War on Terror. I put in my first year as editor of this newspaper. I think we did OK overall, but I also think 2004 is going to be a year full of changes.

My family and I moved from Sparks into a fixer-upper in the Old Southwest. It has basically the same floor plan and square feet of the house in Sparks, but at least itโ€™s 15 years older and a third more expensive. Weโ€™ll have been in a year in the last week of February. My spring, summer and autumn weekends were filled with fix-it projects. (Did I write anything about how I pounded a T-post through a 220-volt wire?)

I lost a couple friends this year. Don Dondero was the hardest loss to take. My aunt Jeanette died of the flu in November.

Other people in my sphere had a tempestuous year as well. Hunter started first grade, and so far doesnโ€™t seem too traumatized by the experience. My honey, Kathleen, put in another year as a committed high school teacher. Amy began her last year of high school; Danny began his first. My 70-year-old dad got married.

I guess 2003 was the best of times and the worst of times, just as every year has been since Dickens penned the phrase.

Hereโ€™s to 2004.

RTV No. 8: The choices made by the people you choose will decide whether you have a good year or a bad one.

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