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'If you have pure intentions, reaching the destination is easy.' - His Divine Eminence RA Gohar Shahi

 

Enjoy the weekend - David Ellis

You were not given life just to have a job or career. You were given life to discover the wildly creative power and resources of your soul… - Caroline Myss

 

Picture Quotes on Life

 

More Life Quotes and Sayings

 

Cassia Phuket Pet-Friendly Hotel with Full Facilities

 

Original photo credit: setthayos sansuwansri from Pixabay

#myedit ★☆★ @jessica.syj @official_blancgroup ★☆★ ♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥♡♥ #JessicaJung #jessica #jungsooyeon #sooyeon #jungsis #princess #maomao #gorjess #myj #ceo #bossjung #blancandeclare #lifequotes #quotes #motivational #lifelesson #inspiration #women #womenqoutes #success #life #yslbeautehk #followYourHeart #igotyourback #doflymyj #제시카 - chaieejessi0418

Tarot and castles inspire my mind to separate and joint ventures. Historically the two may not have mixed together that much, but the cards popular in Italy and France did make it over to Scotland and availability in print of the cards and the opening of castles to tourist has arrived at the right time for me to join the two historic inspirations to tell stories and to suggest paths that I might like to ponder at leisure. The early and maybe the original cards that still survive are elaborately hand painted scenes displaying figures showing their worldly station in life and the role they play in society. The cards offer up a pictorial Bildungsroman, or educational story, as they reveal a coming-of-age adventure as the central characters are presented with rites of passage and encounters through which they transform in old terms morally and spiritually. Whilst those terms still apply to this day the development of perception, philosophy and education gives us ideas of the Tarot images allowing us to gain psychological insights of developing ourselves through symbolic cultural awareness of the world we all live in. Some have suggested that Tarot cards might have been popular around betrothals, or weddings in Italy with 15 partial sets of cards named Visconti-Sforza being dated from the middle of the 15 century. If they are such the intricate designs were expensive artworks commissioned for noble families.

 

Some sources have the cards being brought into Europe as gaming and gambling items from Mamluk sources once in Egypt and later warring their way through Turkey. This for some fulfils ideas of Gypsy Tarot being from Egyptian roots and the Gypsy bloodline being from Egypt via the Ottoman and Hungarian Empires. Other sources see the Aleph Bet, the 22 Hebrew letters and can find a route for such thoughts and symbols to come out of the Levant, where from the translation of the French name of ‘the rising of the Sun’ a radiant journey can be traced through Southern France and Spain which helps to bring Qabalah into Tarot. Sure footed and well founded as castles are they are well set to stand in comparison to the vagaries of potential Tarot histories.

 

Tarot and castles can be linked as the former preserve of nobility whose patronage has left us strong ruins and delicate relics giving us a history in which the majority were included and to which we can now join in and adapt if we wish to do so. The cards shown here are from The Mythic Tarot conceived by Liz Greene and Juliet Sharman-Burke with illustrations by Tricia Newell. First published in 1989 the 78 cards feature images of goddesses, gods, demigods, heroes and the others from the mythology of Ancient Greek. The castle shown is Tantallon built and remodelled over several stages hosting Queens, Kings, noble ladies and valiant knights with heroes and the others amongst their ranks. The castle is now in the care of Historic Environment Scotland and is available to visitors with opening times being available through the link below.

 

PHH Sykes ©2020 (January)

phhsykes@gmail.com

 

Tantallon Castle Near North Berwick, East Lothian, EH39 5PN

Historic Environment Scotland

www.historicenvironment.scot/visit-a-place/places/tantall...

One of our Kwanzaa activities this year for Umoja meaning Unity. He traced and cut out 12 red, black and green handprints and glued them together to form a circle. It's now hanging in our Family Room, at his request. :)

'Whenever a calamity strikes upon you, never complain.' - His Divine Eminence RA Gohar Shahi

 

1.Dharma is the biggest and sacred in whole universe.Following dharma on your right beliefs is the ultimate offering to the god

 

2.if you love what you do then you can excel.Example is karna and Arjuna

 

3.krishna talking about the dubious nature of the human

 

4.If you mind is saying one thing...

 

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Romantic as it sounds, business travel can be brutal, especially when leaving a wife, newborn baby, or toddlers behind. Another missed connection, another tiny bag of peanuts, and another Godforsaken Marriott.

LOLA Day 201

 

Well I have finally voiced how much I am disliking the fact that I am a single parent. Saying it out loud and admitting it first made me want to ball my eyes out and I actually did a couple of times. Now it feels good to have have admitted it to myself. Now I am also able to put a name to E's behavior and that he is in the terrible twos. It's not because I am not the perfect mom or his parents are getting a divorce, it's because it's his age and developmental stage. Phew I have not ruined my child and I am not a horrible person for not liking being a single parent.

 

Now that I have made these realizations I can start figuring out how I can move forward, accept them and stop feeling bad for myself. I made time today for the a simple year monthly webinar with Courtney Carver, the creator of Project333 (www.flickr.com/photos/angestar/14937551830/). I had no idea when I first heard about Project333 that I would actually get an opportunity to talk with Courtney, discuss minimalism, busyness and life in general. How amazing that here I am today in a webinar with her!!

 

I am just realizing that I have passed the 200 mark and the halfway point for my LOLA 365 project!! I like looking back through my photos and see that I truly have come a long way and I am looking forward to what the rest of this year will bring. I look back at the beginning of this and it seems like it was a lifetime a way, very foreign. A life I do not want to ever want to go back to. I have learned that I will not put up with the crap I used to. I have learned that I deserve to be treated with love and respect and I am strong enough to walk away from a toxic relationship. I have learned that even in the middle of a divorce I can start making and achieving personal and financial goals. I have learned that I CAN DO THIS.

 

In talking with a friend yesterday he mentioned that he is back to his "original new me". I like that, and I am going to use that. I am back to the original new Angela. It's a great concept, today you are you (That is truer than true! There is no one alive who is you-er than you!- thanks Dr. Suess) but that doesn't mean you have been sitting on a dusty old shelf, you are still shiny and new with great new things to explore and ways to grow. And you will always still this way as long as you continue to move forward in this life.

 

No matter what just keep going. Learning and growing is exciting, but also tiring and hard work. Soon things will become easier and second nature, then you can move onto your next exciting goal. I can do this. You can do this.

 

Quotes for today:

 

*She turned her can'ts into cans and her dreams into plans -Kobi Yamada

 

*Speak what you seek until you see what you've said -Unknown

 

*Never give up on a dream just because of the time it will take to accomplish it. The time will pass anyway. Earl Nightingale

 

“Sometimes things work out on the golf course and sometimes they don't. Life will go on. You try to understand what happens, but maybe today I don't want to know. I just screwed up so maybe I should just put it behind me.” - Greg Norman

 

Greg's gone through a few marriages so I guess this quote could apply to life off the course as much as on!

 

I do like the end to his quote "...I just screwed up so maybe I should just put it behind me." Reminds me of another quote from a great scholar of this world...

 

"It doesn't matter. It's in the past. -Rafiki, Lion King

'No one on Earth is in a position to judge anybody.' - His Holiness Younus AlGohar

 

“When life knocks you down, try to land on your back. Because if you can look up, you can get up. Let your reason get you back up.” ~Les Brown

 

“Sometimes life has a way of putting us on our backs to force us to look up.” ~Charles L. Allen

 

Commentary (ok ~ you can just go ahead and check out now if you'd like)

 

If I may...when my son was young and I was learning to skateboard and roller-blade with him, he would often say, "Mom, you fall like a girl." He was right, I'd never been taught how to fall, tuck and roll with it.

 

In my life as an adult, I've had alot of "learning assignments" on this...on falling...when I saw this tall lamp post tonite, it reminded how much better I've gotten, not ONLY at falling, but at looking up and getting back up!

 

Donnie McClurkin says it well, when he says, "You Can Get Back Up Again"

Any single parent knows the seemingly unending challenges in raising children by yourself.

 

I am a single father to three of the most amazing girls that I've ever met.

 

I've tried to raise them to be compassionate, considerate... to be responsible and to have good judgement... to understand that their actions can make some difference in our world... that they have within them the power to make changes to our reality...

 

Today I am so filled with pride.

 

On May 20th my daughter came home with a brood of tiny ducklings in her tee shirt.

 

She had tears in her eyes.

 

Mama duck was killed by a car and the ducklings were milling about their mama's smooshed body waiting for some miracle that would never come...

 

They must've just hatched because they were so tiny and helpless... cute with their fluffy yellow and brown down and their tiny little duckbills...

 

My daughters decided that they'd raise these little fuzzballs...

 

They researched and they learned all about the care of ducklings... they took turns staying up late to adjust the lights that kept them warm... they'd read next to them and watch for signs that they were too cold or too hot.

 

Every day they'd feed them and clean their pen.

 

In the first days we lost a couple and the house was filled with tears.

 

It was a heartbreaking time.

 

Dad had to have the sensitivity to let them absorb this lesson... that there is no substitute for the skill of a mother duck in raising her chicks... that the girls were doing their best... that nature was 'culling' the weakest chicks so that the strong could survive...

 

And dad had to leave the room for a few minutes after trying to teach them that one.

 

They had to raise these ducklings and I had to raise them.

 

Still the tears flowed and there were a couple of duck funerals in our backyard... one of my daughters got really upset and claimed 'this is all my fault!'

 

I let the lessons sink in and I encouraged them as much as I could... I never did anything more than capture the ducks when they got out...

 

They knew that they were doing this on their own.

 

As the little ducks grew the joy of watching them grow overcame the sadness of the early loss and their waddling around the yard made us all laugh and smile...

 

Each day the girls took care of them... each night they put them to bed in a tiny pen in our shed... in the morning they'd put them in another pen theyd built in the yard... give them baths with the hose and feed them...

 

The little ducks grew and they grew so fast and pretty soon we all knew it was time to let them go.

 

I had told them in the first days that if they could raise just one of the ducks to maturity that they'd done a good job.

 

They raised four.

 

Today we let the last one go... 'Feathers.'

 

She'd become quite 'imprinted' on us... she was the one I'd run into in my bathroom... she was the one who thought she was a person... she was the one who'd walk into the house if the door was left open... she was the one who expected a seat at the dinner table...

 

We drove in my truck to the pond near our house and my youngest daughter insisted at the last minute on carrying Feathers in her arms so she could give her one last hug.

 

There would be no more baths with her duck friend.

 

There were some tears as we said goodbye and Feathers waddled into the water...

 

She let out some quacks of joy and she looked really happy.

 

Then she ran across the water and joined her siblings who'd been in the pond for two days.

 

She started eating right away.

 

My daughters tears dried up and they became filled with pride as Feathers started swimming and cavorting with the others...

 

They knew right there that they had done this...

 

I told them how proud I was of them and gave a round of hugs and took some pictures.

 

The proudest one at the pond right there was me.

 

It's moments like this that make all of the challenges and all of the struggle so worth it... these moments are the payoff.

 

Moments when you see the product of the way you've raised your children.

 

These girls will make a difference in our world.

 

They already have.

This is his first Kiwi Crate project, a Polar Bear catching game! He made his own polar bear paws and ears and covered a small ball with velcro so it sticks to the paws when he catches it! He did most of it by himself and he's so proud.

Life lessons I've learned from people with special needs:

  

A lot of people are uneasy around people with special needs. I don’t know why, they are just people who are different. Some can’t speak with words, or move their bodies, but they always make the best out of whatever they have. I work with special needs children, and would choose to work with them instead of ”normal” children on any day. They may not communicate in the normal sense, but if you pay attention, you sure can learn a lot. And they always love unconditionally.

 

Here are a few important lessons I’ve learned from people with special needs.

 

-First and foremost: when you fall down, get back up.

 

-Never give up.

 

-The smallest of accomplishments are a big deal.

 

-On somedays, getting out of bed and ready to go can be the biggest accomplishment all day, but it is no less valuable than any other accomplishments. After all, if you don’t get out of bed and try, then you will accomplish nothing.

 

-When happy, laugh as loud as possible. Let everyone know you’re happy and make sure you spread it around.

 

-When you are unsuccessful at trying something new, keep trying until you get it right.

 

- Don’t look at how beautiful or ugly, fat or skinny, odd or obnoxious a person is, when looking at people to determine if they’re any good, look into their soul and spirit.

 

-When you’ve got something important to say, and no one is listening, you keep trying different ways of communicating until someone hears you.

 

-Find something enjoyable in everything you do.

 

-When you feel like you can’t go anymore, do it anyway.

 

-From the chronically ill special needs kids, I’ve learned that everyday is special and should be lived to the fullest of your ability.

  

1.Time

is most important thing given ti anyone.We always tend to postpone things and suddenly years pass .So if you want to do things do them with fixed time periods and take them as serious

 

2.Relationships

These are always give you lessons .Everyone faces failed relationships in their life...

 

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Kendi likes to watch one of his favorite shows on the iPad and draw characters and scenes from that episode. He's getting pretty good at it!

This is his first Kiwi Crate project, a Polar Bear catching game! He made his own polar bear paws and ears and covered a small ball with velcro so it sticks to the paws when he catches it! He did most of it by himself and he's so proud.

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