"The axe forgets; the tree remembers" - Zimbabwean Proverb

Mar 26, 2022 17:46

This is a post meant to save space.  You know that I often repost stuff from other LJ people, or etc., because those posts offer new thought or new angles on what I am getting at which is everything so kinda hard to go wrong eh?  BUT, there are too many to choose from today, and so I am simply linking you to them here in this here post right here.  The title of this post is part of that.  It was taken from a person I am not creditting because she hasn't shown proper LJ manners.  But, she's in college, it looks like, and that's how they are there, if mammaries serve me correxit...

def_fr0g_42 (old school liberal progressive in Hong Kong) has some interesting / important topics in his retweets today HERE.

btripp (old school liberal and libertarian radical) has another pithy quote, this time from Carl Sagan, HERE. Buy the book for an idiot.

mo_love_99 (may be a conservative but idk) has one tweet about the latest woketimidation of corporations HERE, but you can go straight to this guy, who seems to be pretty interesting, HERE. Buy razors.

"Silence is the mother of truth." - Benjamin Disraeli

"In honor of the 94th Oscars, broadcast this Sunday, this week's event is movies in ads! Remember all ads must be between 1945 - 1975." - midcentury_ads

The amazing cerezamarrero (coffeehouse hipster with various ailments) has a good discussion on how thoughts might influence illness, including videos, HERE. "Neuro-linguistic programming."

The distant and aloof kornopolous (60's liberal turned conservative or libertarian?) decries the failure of the latest SCOTUS nominee, a woman, to define, "woman," HERE. Not that I agree, I am just prepping you for my own future post.

Have you ever wondered why you like sad music? Do you find comfort or inspiration in rainy days? In this profound, poetic talk, author Susan Cain invites you to embrace the feeling of longing -- or the place where joy and sorrow meet - as a gateway to creativity, connection and love. Accompanied by the splendid sounds of violinist Min Kym, Cain meditates on how heartache unexpectedly brings us closer to the sublime beauty of life.
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