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Text of flyer that was se...
Forum: Pandemic
Last Post: smallj53
02-01-2022, 05:35 PM
» Replies: 1
» Views: 176
Text of flyer that was se...
Forum: Where's my food?
Last Post: smallj53
01-30-2022, 01:36 PM
» Replies: 1
» Views: 158
Scene Music Releases
Forum: Off Topic
Last Post: LouisTom
01-24-2022, 07:46 PM
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» Views: 124

 
  Text of flyer that was sent out
Posted by: smallj53 - 02-01-2022, 08:27 AM - Forum: Pandemic - Replies (1)

[Image: virus.png]

Two plus years and still going?  Really?  If you look at the history of various pandemics, they don’t last long.  This one should be ending by now.  The last pandemic, the so-called Spanish Flu, lasted about two years with four waves and according to Wikipedia, estimated deaths of 17 to 50 million world-wide.

Seen through the lens of history, we’ve gotten off rather lightly, three waves and as of February 2022, 6 million or so deaths.  Of course, no virus has faced such an onslaught of modern medicine, the best trained minds working near magic, creating vaccines and new treatments in record time.  And let’s not forget the huge difference public support for health measures such as wearing masks and even closing whole sectors of our economy made to our case numbers.  Such things have never been tried before.

We are unique, and we should give ourselves more credit.  Nearly everyone pulled together to wage war against an enemy that we cannot see.  But if you read the news, you would think we are losing this war.  Why is that?

Could it be our attitude towards things?  Expectations can be a curious thing.  You expected a sunny day and it rained.  Your new car is wonderful, but the new car smell is giving you a headache.  That new guy at work will make a difference to your workload but training him is exhausting.  We tend to focus on what is wrong and not what is right.

There is something to be said for mountain top experiences, you know the ones where your whole life makes sense.  You feel exhilarated.  Nothing stands in your way. How do people get those, you might say?  Easy.  Make sense of your life, even with this ongoing pandemic.

You can’t have mountain top experiences without a mountain.  And you must climb it yourself.  Otherwise, it is sort of like how you aren’t religious, but something awful happens, and you start to pray.  You don’t really expect an answer, you’re just hoping to win the lottery or something.  You saw it in a movie. 

Or it can be like taking out insurance, you invest the time to get what you need and make your payments before you use it.

Ok, let’s cut to the chase.  I haven’t gone to the trouble of writing this to endlessly tease about where I am headed.  The mountain is a belief system, a way of explaining everything.  And we all have belief systems, we just are not in the habit of talking about them.

It’s like breathing.  You only think about it when there is something wrong.  And for many of us something is very wrong right now.  Let’s talk.

I can be reached at Chimeri.ca.  There’s a discussion board there.  For some of you it might be a little complicated to post something because you have to register, but just reading should be straightforward. 

Oh, and for those who like full disclosure, I’m a Roman Catholic, if that means anything.  Just thought you might want to know.

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  Scene Music Releases
Posted by: LouisTom - 01-24-2022, 07:46 PM - Forum: Off Topic - No Replies

Hello,

FTP service is a community for DJ’s & fans that helps you gain full access to exclusive electronic music. Main target of our service is to show the world new upcoming talents as well as famous producers, populations of music culture, promotion of perspective projects.
https://www.0daymusic.org

Best Regards, Louis

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  Text of flyer that was sent out
Posted by: smallj53 - 01-23-2022, 06:22 PM - Forum: Where's my food? - Replies (1)

[Image: Where-s-my-food-final-smaller.jpg]

Where’s my food?

A dog has certain expectations regarding its care:  food, water, love and attention.  At least a walk a day, maybe some playtime, and a secure place to sleep are some of its needs.  The joy of owning a dog can be found in how they so transparently show appreciation for what we do for them. 
 
We have many more needs than any animal.  To meet those needs, we make plans, anticipate problems and depending upon our situation in life, fulfill our commitments to things like our jobs, our families, and society at large.
 
Of course, we expect that our plans for living will succeed because they are based upon our own ideas and experiences.  Control, planning, a dash of luck and away we go.  Even friends telling us that we are wrong about something can mean nothing to us. 


But if there is anything the pandemic has taught us, it is that our own ideas about how we should live have their limits.  It isn’t just that our environment seems to care little about us, it’s having to abide by rules and intrusive plans that we’ve had no part in formulating.  We could update Aesop’s fable, “The Ant and the Grasshopper,” skip the part about hard work ensuring success in life, and instead imagine a more appropriate 21st century scene such as in this synopsis of a BBC video from YouTube:

  An ant colony, facing a drought, is forced to search for water about forty meters from its nest. In their search, they encounter a larger, hostile, colony near the only water source. The larger colony chases the foraging ants back to their nest, kills their queen, and destroys the weaker ant colony. 


A video about one ant colony exterminating another might make someone say that these things just happen. Life can be like that, they would say.  Or maybe someone might make a joke about the moral of the story being to avoid larger ants.  But what do we do when our lives resemble not the triumph of the strong ants but that of the weaker colony, what then?  Do we console ourselves by believing that our misfortune is just a part of life?

In the normal course of events, planning our lives and determining for ourselves life’s meaning and purpose, is fine.  If we don’t do this for ourselves, who else will?  Yet such an approach has trouble dealing with things that are outside our control like setbacks, personal misfortune and, yes, pandemics.  Can something else make sense of these things? 


Why not consider accepting, even if for only a short while, that making plans based upon life experience alone is not an adequate foundation for living?  In other words, life cannot teach us how to live? 


And if you can do that, start an investigation.  Look for something from outside your day-to-day existence to inform your thinking and planning.  Is there an all-encompassing explanation for life, its meaning and purpose, that can be found?  And once found, might such a belief system enable you to better process and cope with reversals and major disappointments in life?

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