A few of my fav films of 2017
styofa doing anything

Origami Around
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

PR's Tumblrdome
almost home
Not today Justin

titsay
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Three Goblin Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

oozey mess
art blog(derogatory)

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
sheepfilms
Stranger Things

@theartofmadeline
RMH

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@ericasante
A few of my fav films of 2017
148 years
From Across the Mackenzie Bridge Downtown Ottawa. 148 years Canada Music: Arcade Fire - The Suburbs Piano Instrumental (2010)
Sins of my Father is my last edit from a few very well crafted films ( with excellent cinematography).Â
For Education Purposes Only. Films in Order Godzilla (2014) Fury (2014) The Place beyond the Pines ( 2012) Prisoners ( 2013) Music: Snow Angel by Mike Patton Album: The Solitude of Prime Numbers Released: 2011
Commissioned Project for Brockville Tabernacle.
For Education Purpose Only.
And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of his return is drawing near.
Hebrews 10:25
Inspired by this Bible Verse, here is the result of the visual translation. From Creation to our Journey in Christ. Together.
1957 Crusade - How to Live a Christian LifeÂ
Space time lapse images courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA Johnson Space Center eol.jsc.nasa.gov/
Collection of images from BBC Planet Earth Series. (2006)
Music: Ólafur Arnalds
Another Project Complete
Working on a new project for April.
I need a title for this Project! Learning After Effects and all its habits.
December B2G Project AE: DIZZY Edited:EA Music: Oceans- Hillsongs
Working on my Fourth Short Film - Filmed in 2009! Finally being edited Now!!!
Working on a new Project. Canon makes beautiful images!!
Editor For Hire!!!
LEARNING TO MEASURE TIME IN LOVE AND LOSS
Article from The New York Times by Chris Huntington. ( Edited to fit the blog post)
"For about 10 years, I worked full time in prisons as a teacher, logging more than 40 hours a week behind those fences, including a long winter at one facility that had been a cereal factory and stood near the highway in downtown Indianapolis. It was a rock of a building with finger-thick grilles on the windows.
During my first week there, an inmate laughed when I asked him to reset the wall clock.
“A few minutes off?” he said. “We need one that goes by months and years. What do we care about five minutes?”
I mention this only because his words summed up the love story that had defined my life. When my wife left me, I was living in Paris, which was not as romantic as it may sound because I was incredibly lonely. My bones ached, especially at the sound of accordions in train stations.
All my plans had come to nothing. I had failed at marriage, failed at work and had no money to speak of. Sometimes I would see my ex-wife on the street and she would turn away with an eagerness that could not be ignored.
One night I came upon two boys robbing an old Vietnamese man, and when I tried to intervene and make them stop, they turned on me. I began to wonder if maybe a part of me wanted to die.
I moved back to the United States and took the job in the prison. I met the inmate who helped me with the clock. I also met an inmate who had salt-and-pepper hair, huge biceps and a pair of ridiculous glasses no one in the free world would ever wear. This inmate’s name was Mike.
Mike showed me a folder of clippings and photocopied certificates from all the educational programs he had completed in prison. He had earned a G.E.D. and a bachelor’s degree, as well as certifications in the usual programs like small engine repair and barbering.
He had kept letters from his counselors, chaplains and teachers. In these letters, supervisor after supervisor claimed to love him, but it all struck me as kind of sad and awkward. I couldn’t read the whole thing.
When I first met Mike, he said: “These young guys — they just got locked up and they’ve got five years to do and they hate it. I get that. When you’re 20, five years is a long time, so they act out. I used to be like that. But now I’m two-thirds done, so every day is taking me closer to the door. When I think like that, I can get up in the morning and smile.”
A month later, my supervisor told me Mike had been locked up for more than 16 years and had at least 8 more to go. Arrested when he was a teenager, he wasn’t going to be released until he was in his mid-40s. He had raped the sheriff’s daughter in his hometown. It didn’t matter how fat his folder of supportive letters got.
“I used to be angry,” Mike told me. “I’d pick fights over nothing. I was mad to be in prison and I wanted everyone else to be mad, too. But then I realized: Man, this is my life. Do I want to be that guy? Always mad? I’m not going to get married or have a family. Not today. Maybe never. I’m going to be here. I’m a prisoner. There are some things I’m never going to do. And I can spend my life being mad about that, or I can try something else.”
I asked him what he had decided.
“I decided to be the best prisoner I could be,” he said.
I get to spend every friday night with a bunch of Dads playing the best sport in the world.Â
THE SURPRISINGLY LARGE COST OF TELLING SMALL LIES
A mentor once told me, we tell lies because we are scared, afraid or just worried about the outcome. Often I think it will be impossible to go without a white lie in a day. But what if I tried the alternative, if I went without a lie, white lie or just a bold face to avoid an uncomfortable situation or to preserve the status quo.
A great article once again from the NY Times by Rebekah Campbell
 offers perhaps new insight into one of the secrets to success. Enjoy!!
“...The secret to success in business and in life is to never, ever, ever tell a lie,
I did some research and it seems most of us lie quite a bit. A study by the University of Massachusetts found that 60 percent of adults could not have a 10-minute conversation without lying at least once. The same study found that 40 percent of people lie on their résumés and a whopping 90 percent of those looking for a date online lie on their profiles. Teenage girls lie more than any other group, which is attributed to peer pressure and expectation. The study did not investigate the number of lies told by entrepreneurs looking for investment capital, but I fear we would top the chart.
Most people lie about little things to make them look good. A study by a film rental company found that 30 percent of respondents lied about having seen “The Godfather.” It’s a classic film, we assume everyone has seen it, and we lie that we have too, because we want to fit in. People lie to stave off the consequences of making a mistake, to buy more time or to spare someone’s feelings. Their hearts may be in the right place, but they are still telling lies.
Telling lies is the No. 1 reason entrepreneurs fail. Not because telling lies makes you a bad person but because the act of lying plucks you from the present, preventing you from facing what is really going on in your world. Every time you overreport a metric, underreport a cost, are less than honest with a client or a member of your team, you create a false reality and you start living in it.
You know the right path to take and choose another, and in so doing you lose control of the situation. Now, rather than tackling the problem head on, you have to manage the fallout from the lie. I know people who seem to have spent their entire careers inflating the truth and then fighting to meet the expectations they have set..."
Heres to not spending our entire time managing the fallout of lies and living in truth.
Oct 2013.Â
FOR SOME FOLKS, LIFE IS A HILL.
The title is from a NY Times article that captured my attention this month.Â
"...For some folks, life is a hill. You can either climb or stay at the bottom.
It’s not fair. It’s not right. But it is so. Some folks are born halfway up the hill and others on the top. The rest of us are not. Life doles out favors in differing measures, often as a result of historical injustice and systematic bias. That’s a hurtful fact, one that must be changed. We should all work toward that change.
In the meantime, until that change is real, what to do if life gives you the hill?..."
Charles M. Blow goes on to say that "...Trying hard and working hard is its own reward. It feeds the soul. It affirms your will and your power. And it radiates from you, lighting the way for all those who see you."
I would like to add, Life as a Believer doesn't guarantee a clear path, from pain, injustice or hurt. It is almost certain you will experience these. Perhaps cliche to say, but these are the conditions that forge us, they help us grow, closer to God and its assuring to know you can call upon his name when the waves of life get higher than your boat. His promise is found in Psalm 37:25: I was young and now I am old, yet I have never seen the righteous forsaken or their children begging bread.
He is in your boat when the waves get high, he is beside you as you climb. Whatever you do, don't stop climbing!!
Manitoulin Island
My name is Eric Asante and this is my story.
Gravity
Just when you think you have your footing, a cluster of debris from a Russian explosion gone wrong comes your way and knocks you into space. Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity, by his own admission, is exploration into the director’s personal life and a spiritual journey that catapults the viewer- if he chooses- to an amazing examination.
The debris from the Russian explosion, which circles the earth and comes around every 90 mins -or when least expected, is a clear metaphor for adversities that we face in life. It seems to have its own timing and it comes when least expected, or almost on queue when you are comfortable, trying to move forward.
Metaphors splatter this masterpiece, and none bigger than our main character, drifting in space literally. Completely cut off from communication, drifting towards the void, living in her own bubble and trying to find her bearings. We come to learn she has lost her way as well, on earth, drifting and trying to make sense of a tragedy in her life.
The debris hitting is perhaps the best thing to happen. It wakes us up, and gives us a chance for rebirth, to be born again.
I read a quote about a year ago on fear and never understood it but I loved it. It was almost a year ago to this day and I think I understand debris a bit better.
“Adversities, trials, and the fear that comes along with them: They will come; they are just circling
the earth to have another go.”