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Call My Bluff - 09-12
Jesse Owens
James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens (September 12, 1913 – March 31, 1980) was an American track and field athlete and four-time Olympic gold medalist in the 1936 games.
Owens specialized in the sprints and the long jump and was recognized in his lifetime as "perhaps the greatest and most famous athlete in track and field history". His achievement of setting three world records and tying another in less than an hour at the 1935 Big Ten track meet in Ann Arbor, Michigan, has been called "the greatest 45 minutes ever in sport" and has never been equalled. At the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany, Owens won international fame with four gold medals: 100 meters, 200 meters, long jump, and 4 × 100 meter relay. He was the most successful athlete at the games and, as a black man, was credited with "single-handedly crushing Hitler's myth of Aryan supremacy", although he "wasn't invited to the White House to shake hands with the President, either".
The Jesse Owens Award is USA Track and Field's highest accolade for the year's best track and field athlete. Owens was ranked by ESPN as the sixth greatest North American athlete of the twentieth century and the highest-ranked in his sport.
Early life and education
Owens was the youngest of ten children, three girls and seven boys, born to Henry Cleveland Owens (a sharecropper) and Mary Emma Fitzgerald in Oakville, Alabama, on September 12, 1913. J.C., as he was called, was nine years old when the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, for better opportunities, as part of the Great Migration, when 1.5 million African Americans left the segregated South. When his new teacher asked his name (to enter in her roll book), he said "J.C.", but because of his strong Southern accent, she thought he said "Jesse". The name stuck, and he was known as Jesse Owens for the rest of his life.
As a boy, Owens took different jobs in his spare time: he delivered groceries, loaded freight cars and worked in a shoe repair shop while his father and older brother worked at a steel mill. During this period, Owens realized that he had a passion for running. Throughout his life, Owens attributed the success of his athletic career to the encouragement of Charles Riley, his junior high track coach at Fairmount Junior High School. Since Owens worked in a shoe repair shop after school, Riley allowed him to practice before school instead.
Owens and Minnie Ruth Solomon (1915–2001) met at Fairmont Junior High School in Cleveland when he was 15 and she was 13. They dated steadily through high school. Ruth gave birth to their first daughter, Gloria, in 1932. They married on July 5, 1935 and had two more daughters together: Marlene, born in 1937, and Beverly, born in 1940. They remained married until his death in 1980.
Owens first came to national attention when he was a student of East Technical High School in Cleveland; he equalled the world record of 9.4 seconds in the 100-yard (91 m) dash and long-jumped 24 feet 9 1⁄2 inches (7.56 metres) at the 1933 National High School Championship in Chicago.
Career
Ohio State University
Owens attended The Ohio State University after employment was found for his father, ensuring the family could be supported. Affectionately known as the "Buckeye Bullet," and under the coaching of Larry Snyder, Owens won a record eight individual NCAA championships, four each in 1935 and 1936. (The record of four gold medals at the NCAA was equaled only by Xavier Carter in 2006, although his many titles also included relay medals.) Though Owens enjoyed athletic success, he had to live off campus with other African-American athletes. When he traveled with the team, Owens was restricted to ordering carry-out or eating at "blacks-only" restaurants. Similarly, he had to stay at "blacks-only" hotels. Owens did not receive a scholarship for his efforts, so he continued to work part-time jobs to pay for school.
Owens's greatest achievement came in a span of 45 minutes on May 25, 1935, during the Big Ten meet at Ferry Field in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he set three world records and tied a fourth. He equaled the world record for the 100 yard dash (9.4 seconds); and set world records in the long jump (26 ft 8 1⁄4 in or 8.13 m, a world record that would last 25 years); 220-yard (201.2 m) sprint (20.3 seconds); and 220-yard (201.2m) low hurdles (22.6 seconds, becoming the first to break 23 seconds). In 2005, University of Central Florida professor of sports history Richard C. Crepeau chose these wins on one day as the most impressive athletic achievement since 1850.
1936 Berlin Summer Olympics
On December 4, 1935 NAACP Secretary Walter White wrote a letter—which he actually never sent—to Jesse Owens. In this letter, he was trying to dissuade Owens from taking part in the Olympics on the ground that an African-American could not help promote a racist regime after what his community had suffered at the hands of white racists in his own country. In the months prior to the Games, the movement in favour of a boycott gained momentum. Owens was convinced by the NAACP to declare "If there are minorities in Germany who are being discriminated against, the United States should withdraw from the 1936 Olympics." Yet Owens and others eventually took part after Avery Brundage, president of the American Olympic Committee branded the advocates of a boycott as "un-American agitators."
So in 1936, Owens and his United States teammates arrived in Berlin to compete at the Summer Olympics. According to fellow American sprinter James LuValle (who won bronze in the 400 meters), Owens arrived in Berlin to a throng of fans, many of them young girls, yelling "Wo ist Jesse? Wo ist Jesse?" Owens's success at the games represented an unpleasant consternation for Adolf Hitler, who was using the games to show the world a resurgent Nazi Germany. He and other government officials had high hopes that German athletes would dominate the games with victories. Owens countered this by winning four gold medals.
On August 3, he won the 100 m sprint with a time of 10.3 s, defeating teammate and college friend Ralph Metcalfe by a tenth of a second and defeating Tinus Osendarp of the Netherlands by two tenths of a second. On August 4, he won the long jump with a leap of 8.06 m (26 ft 5 in), later crediting his achievement to the technical advice he received from Lutz Long, the German competitor whom he defeated. On August 5, he won the 200 m sprint with a time of 20.7 s, defeating Mack Robinson (the older brother of Jackie Robinson). On August 9, Owens won his fourth gold medal in the 4 × 100 m sprint relay when coach Dean Cromwell replaced Jewish-American sprinters Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller with Owens and Ralph Metcalfe, who teamed up with Frank Wykoff and Foy Draper to set a world record of 39.8 s in the event. This performance was not equaled until Carl Lewis won gold medals in the same events at the Soviet-boycotted 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. In 1935 (the year before the Berlin Olympics), Owens set the world record in the long jump with a leap of 8.13 m (26 ft 8 in), and this record would stand for 25 years (a very rare length of time for a track and field record), until it was finally broken by countryman Ralph Boston in 1960. Coincidentally, Owens was a spectator at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome when Boston took the gold medal in the long jump.
Just before the competitions, Owens was visited in the Olympic village by Adi Dassler, the founder of the Adidas athletic shoe company. He persuaded Owens to wear Gebrüder Dassler Schuhfabrik shoes, the first sponsorship for a male African American athlete.
The long-jump victory is documented, along with many other 1936 events, in the 1938 film Olympia by Leni Riefenstahl.
On the first day of competition, Hitler shook hands with only the German victors and then left the stadium. Olympic committee officials insisted Hitler greet every medalist or none at all. Hitler opted for the latter and skipped all further medal presentations. Historians have noted that Hitler may have left the games at this time due to looming rain clouds that might have postponed the games. This happened well before Owens was to compete, but has largely come to be believed to be the "snub". On reports that Hitler had deliberately avoided acknowledging his victories, and had refused to shake his hand, Owens said at the time:
Hitler had a certain time to come to the stadium and a certain time to leave. It happened he had to leave before the victory ceremony after the 100 meters. But before he left I was on my way to a broadcast and passed near his box. He waved at me and I waved back. I think it was bad taste to criticize the 'man of the hour' in another country.
Albert Speer wrote that Hitler "was highly annoyed by the series of triumphs by the marvelous colored American runner, Jesse Owens. People whose antecedents came from the jungle were primitive, Hitler said with a shrug; their physiques were stronger than those of civilized whites and hence should be excluded from future games."
In a 2009 interview, Siegfried Mischner, a German journalist, claimed that Owens carried around a photograph in his wallet of the Führer shaking his hand before the latter left the stadium. Owens, who felt the newspapers of the day reported 'unfairly' on Hitler's attitude towards him, tried to get Mischner and his journalist colleagues to change the accepted version of history in the 1960s. Mischner claimed Owens showed him the photograph and told him: "That was one of my most beautiful moments." Mischner added "(the picture) was taken behind the honour stand and so not captured by the world's press. But I saw it, I saw him shaking Hitler's hand!" According to Mischner, "the predominating opinion in post-war Germany was that Hitler had ignored Owens, so we therefore decided not to report on the photo. The consensus was that Hitler had to continue to be painted in a bad light in relation to Owens." For some time, Mischner's assertion was not confirmed independently of his own account, and Mischner himself admitted in Mail Online that "All my colleagues are dead, Owens is dead. I thought this was the last chance to set the record straight. I have no idea where the photo is or even if it exists still."
However, in 2014, Eric Brown, British fighter pilot and test pilot, the Fleet Air Arm's most decorated living pilot, independently stated in a BBC documentary "I actually witnessed Hitler shaking hands with Jesse Owens and congratulating him on what he had achieved." Additionally, an article in The Baltimore Sun in August 1936 reported that Hitler sent Owens a commemorative inscribed cabinet photograph of himself.
In Germany, Owens had been allowed to travel with and stay in the same hotels as whites, at a time when African Americans in many parts of the United States had to stay in segregated hotels.
Later, on October 15, 1936 Owens repeated this allegation when he addressed an audience of African Americans at a Republican rally in Kansas City remarking that "Hitler didn't snub me – it was our president who snubbed me. The president didn't even send me a telegram."
During a Manhattan ticker-tape parade in his honor along Broadway's Canyon of Heroes, someone handed Owens a paper bag. Owens paid it little mind until the parade concluded. When he opened it up, he found the bag contained $10,000 in cash. Owens's wife Ruth later said, "And he [Owens] didn't know who was good enough to do a thing like that. And with all the excitement around, he didn't pick it up right away. He didn't pick it up until he got ready to get out of the car." After the parade, Owens was not permitted to enter through the main doors of the Waldorf Astoria New York and instead forced to travel up to the event in a freight elevator to reach the reception honoring him. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) never invited Jesse Owens to the White House following his triumphs at the Olympics games. While the Democrats had bid for the support of Owens, Owens rejected those overtures: as a staunch Republican, he endorsed Roosevelt's Republican opponent, Alf Landon, in the 1936 presidential race.
Owens, who joined the Republican Party after returning from Europe, was paid to campaign for African American votes for the Republican presidential nominee Alf Landon in the 1936 presidential election. Speaking at a Republican rally held in Baltimore on October 9, 1936, Owens said "Some people say Hitler snubbed me. But I tell you, Hitler did not snub me. I am not knocking the President. Remember, I am not a politician, but remember that the President did not send me a message of congratulations because, people said, he was too busy."
Later life
Owens was quoted saying the secret behind his success was "I let my feet spend as little time on the ground as possible. From the air, fast down, and from the ground, fast up."
After the games had finished, the Olympic team and Owens were all invited to compete in Sweden. He decided to capitalize on his success by returning to the United States to take up some of the more lucrative commercial offers. United States athletic officials were furious and withdrew his amateur status, ending his career immediately. Owens was angry, saying, "A fellow desires something for himself." Owens argued that the racial discrimination he had faced throughout his athletic career, such as not being eligible for scholarships in college and therefore being unable to take classes between training and working to pay his way, meant he had to give up on amateur athletics in pursuit of financial gain elsewhere.
Prohibited from amateur sporting appearances to bolster his profile, Owens found out that the commercial offers had all but disappeared. In 1937, he briefly toured with a twelve-piece jazz band under contract with Consolidated Artists, but found it unfulfilling. He also made appearances at baseball games and other events. Finally, friend and former competitor from the University of Michigan, Willis Ward, brought Owens to Detroit to work at Ford Motor Company in 1942 as Assistant Personnel Director, later becoming Director, where he worked until 1946.
In 1946, Owens joined Abe Saperstein in the formation of the West Coast Baseball Association (WCBA), a new Negro baseball league; Owens was Vice-President and the owner of the Portland (Oregon) Rosebuds franchise. He toured with the Rosebuds, sometimes entertaining the audience in between doubleheader games by competing in races against horses. The WCBA disbanded after only two months.
Owens helped promote the exploitation film Mom and Dad in African American neighborhoods. He tried to make a living as a sports promoter, essentially an entertainer. He would give local sprinters a ten- or twenty-yard start and beat them in the 100-yd (91-m) dash. He also challenged and defeated racehorses; as he revealed later, the trick was to race a high-strung thoroughbred that would be frightened by the starter's shotgun and give him a bad jump. Owens said, "People say that it was degrading for an Olympic champion to run against a horse, but what was I supposed to do? I had four gold medals, but you can't eat four gold medals." On the lack of opportunities, Owens added, "There was no television, no big advertising, no endorsements then. Not for a black man, anyway."
Owens ran a dry cleaning business and worked as a gas station attendant to earn a living; he eventually filed for bankruptcy. In 1966, he was successfully prosecuted for tax evasion. At rock bottom, he was aided in beginning his rehabilitation. The government appointed him as a US goodwill ambassador. Owens traveled the world and spoke to companies such as the Ford Motor Company and stakeholders such as the United States Olympic Committee. After he retired, he owned racehorses.
Owens initially refused to support the black power salute by African-American sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Summer Olympics. He told them:
The black fist is a meaningless symbol. When you open it, you have nothing but fingers – weak, empty fingers. The only time the black fist has significance is when there's money inside. There's where the power lies.
Four years later in his 1972 book I Have Changed, he moderated his opinion:
I realized now that militancy in the best sense of the word was the only answer where the black man was concerned, that any black man who wasn't a militant in 1970 was either blind or a coward.
A few months before his death, Owens had tried unsuccessfully to convince President Jimmy Carter to withdraw his demand that the United States boycott the 1980 Moscow Olympics. He argued that the Olympic ideal was supposed to be observed as a time-out from war and that it was above politics.
Death
Owens was a pack-a-day cigarette smoker for 35 years and had been hospitalized with an extremely aggressive and drug-resistant type of lung cancer on and off beginning in December 1979. He died of the disease at age 66 in Tucson, Arizona, on March 31, 1980, with his wife and other family members at his bedside. He is buried in Oak Woods Cemetery in Chicago.
Legacy
The dormitory used by Owens during the Olympics has been fully restored into a living museum, with pictures of his accomplishments at the Games, and a letter (intercepted by the Gestapo) from a fan urging him not to shake hands with Hitler.
Awards and honors
1936 AP Athlete of the Year (male)
In 1936, four English Oak saplings, one for each Olympic gold medal, from the German Olympic Committee, were planted. One of the trees was planted at the University of Southern California, one at Rhodes High School in Cleveland, where he trained, and one is rumored to be located on the Ohio State University campus, but has yet to be identified. The fourth tree was located at the home of Jesse Owens' mother, but was removed when the house was demolished.
In 1970, Owens was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame.
In 1976 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Gerald Ford.
In 1976, he was made part of the Olympic Order for his fight against racism in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.
In 1980, a new asteroid was discovered by Antonín Mrkos at Kleť Observatory which was named as 6758 Jesseowens in honor of Jesse Owens.
USA Track and Field created the Jesse Owens Award in 1981, which is given annually to the country's top track and field athlete.
In 1983, Owens was part of the inaugural class into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.
In 1984, an Emmy Award-winning biographical television film of his life, The Jesse Owens Story, was released, with Dorian Harewood portraying Owens.
In 1984 a street near the Olympic Stadium in Berlin was renamed Jesse-Owens-Allee, and the Jesse Owens Realschule/Oberschule (a secondary school) in Berlin-Lichtenberg, was named for him.
On March 28, 1990, Owens was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal by President George H. W. Bush.
Two U.S. postage stamps have been issued to honor Owens, one in 1990 and another in 1998.
In 1996, Owens's hometown of Oakville, Alabama, dedicated Jesse Owens Memorial Park and Museum in his honor, at the same time that the Olympic Torch came through the community, 60 years after his Olympic triumph. An article in the Wall Street Journal of June 7, 1996, covered the event and included this inscription written by poet Charles Ghigna that appears on a bronze plaque at the Park:
In 2001, The Ohio State University dedicated Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium for track and field events. A sculpture honoring Owens occupies a place of honor in the esplanade leading to the rotunda entrance to Ohio Stadium. Owens competed for the Buckeyes on the track surrounding the football field that existed prior to the 2001 expansion of Ohio Stadium. The campus also houses three recreational centers for students and staff named in his honor.
In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Jesse Owens on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.
In Cleveland, Ohio, a statue of Owens in his Ohio State track suit was installed at Fort Huntington Park, west of the old Courthouse.
Phoenix, Arizona named the Jesse Owens Medical Plaza in his honor, as well as Jesse Owens Parkway.
In Markus Zusak's 2006 bestselling novel, The Book Thief, a character named Rudy Steiner idolizes Owens.
Jesse Owens Park, located in Tucson, Arizona, is a staple of local youth athletics there.
At the 2009 World Athletic Championships in Berlin, all members of the United States Track & Field team wore badges with "JO" to commemorate Owens's victories in the same stadium 73 years before.
In early 2010, the Ohio Historical Society proposed Jesse Owens as a finalist from a statewide vote for inclusion in Statuary Hall at the United States Capitol.
On November 15, 2010, the city of Cleveland renamed East Roadway, between Rockwell and Superior avenues in Public Square, Jesse Owens Way.
A novel in French written by Lebanese novelist Alexandre Najjar, Berlin 36, Plon (publisher), Paris, 2009, tells the story of Owens, particularly during the Berlin Olympic games. Najjar visited Chicago, Ohio and Alabama to achieve this distinguished tribute to Owens.
For his contribution to sports in Los Angeles, he was honored with a Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum "Court of Honor" plaque by the Coliseum commissioners.
In the London 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, just after the Olympic cauldron had been lit, the 80,000 individual pixels in the audience seating area were used as a giant video screen to show footage of Owens running around the stadium.
A feature film titled Race about Owens with Stephan James portraying Owens was released February 19, 2016. Shooting began in Montreal on July 24, 2014.
Wikipedia
Megnéztem újra
egy videóanyagot. Elképesztő! Elképesztő miféle változáson mentem át az elmúlt 1-2 évben. A videó a kötődésekről, a sématerápiáról, teljesen mást mondott most mint korábban. Két évvel ezelőtt még az volt fontos, hogy kimondjam, hogy bántanak. Hogy megengedjem magamnak az érzést, hogy nem bánnak velem jól. (amúgy tényleg nem bántak velem jól) Az volt fontos, hogy hangot adjak az érzelmi igényeimnek. Hogy a forma nem elég, a tartalom az amiben hiányom volt és van. Meg kellett neveznem, hogy miben vagyok jó, megismernem, hogy mire vagyok képes és megtanulnom meglátni azt amire valóban vágyom. (engedni az impulziv dolgokat, de nem hagyni cselekvésbe menni) Régen azt mondták nekem, hogy fogjam vissza magam. Az szörnyű érzés. Most nem kell visszafognom magam. Már nem rohanok sehova. Szabad lassabban mennem. Attól nem vagyok se lusta, se halogató, se hanyag, hogy így működöm. Szabad dolgokat nem befejezni! Csak az arány fontos. A dolgaim, ötleteim 60-70%-át befejezem. Van, ami hiába remek ötlet, kevés vagyok rá egyedül és mostanában el szoktam gondolkodni, hogy az adott ötletre rá akarom-e tenni az életem. Mert, ha nem, akkor nem érdemes belekezdeni. Most is féltékeny vagyok például, de mindenféle erölködés nélkül tudok túllépni rajta. Féltékeny vagyok, mert nem akarom elvszíteni azt akit szeretek, és mert bizalmatlan vagyok sajnos nagyon. De valahogy mélyebben ásódott ki a párhuzamosság bizalma, hogy ami az én életemben nem jelentőségteljes az a másikéban sem. Látszólag lett egy vállrándítás, hogy ha becsapnak, becsapnak, ilyen az élet, több meló megelőzni mint átvászelni, ha megtörténik. És megint lett egy kibaszott nagy megerősítésem azon a vonalon, hogy a rossz idők elmúlnak, és nem hiábavaló semmi munka amit magunkért vagy másokért teszünk, csak meg kell látni, hogy hova vezetett.
Tegnap dühömben levakartam a falról 10 négyzetméternyi tapétát. Mondjuk, tervbe volt véve, szóval nem kínomban, de a düh hajtott. És közben ilyen remek dolgokon gondolkodtam. Aztán éjjel érdekes álmom volt, egy pasas egy lyukon keresztül egy piros villanydróttal piszkált a másik szobából. De az egész álom, a féltékenységem, az érintés nélküli közeledés, a villanydrót (nincs világítás most a klotyóban mert a villanyszerelő leszedte a lámpát és nem gondolta, hogy mielőtt elmegy hétvégézni, esetleg vissaszerelhetné), szóval az gész álomra a kiterjedt rálátás olyan megnyugtató volt. Hogy nincsenek itt rejtett tartalmak kéremszépen. Bármi is volt tegnap, ma már nyugi van.
Allen Allensworth
Allen Allensworth (7 April 1842 – 14 September 1914), born into slavery in Kentucky, escaped during the American Civil War and became a Union soldier; later he became a Baptist minister and educator, and was appointed as a chaplain in the United States Army. He was the first African American to reach the rank of lieutenant colonel. He planted numerous churches, and in 1908 founded Allensworth, California, the only town in the state to be founded, financed and governed by African Americans.
During the American Civil War, he escaped by joining the 44th Illinois Volunteers and later served two years in the navy. After being ordained as a minister, he worked as a teacher, studied theology and led several churches. In 1880 and 1884, he served as the only black delegate from Kentucky in the Republican National Conventions. In 1886 he gained an appointment as a military chaplain to a unit of Buffalo Soldiers in the West and served in the US Army for 20 years, retiring in 1906.
In addition to his work in developing churches, he was notable for founding the township of Allensworth, California in 1908; it was intended as an all-black community. Although environmental conditions inhibited its success as a farming community and the residents abandoned it after a few generations, much of the former town has been preserved as the Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park. It marks the founders' dream and the thriving community that developed for some time.
Biography
Early life and education
Born into slavery in Louisville, Kentucky in 1842, Allensworth was the youngest of thirteen children of Phyllis (c. 1782 - 1878) and Levi Allensworth. Over the years, their family was scattered: his sister Lila escaped with her intended husband to Canada by the Underground Railroad; and the older boys William, George, Frank, Levi and Major were sold downriver to plantations in the Deep South, which continued to buy enslaved workers from the Upper South to develop the cotton industry. Mary Jane was his only sibling who grew up in Kentucky and married there; she purchased her freedom in 1849, gaining stability.
His mother was held by A.P. and Bett Starbird. The mistress assigned Allen as a young slave to her son Thomas. When the Starbird boy started school, Allen began to learn from him, although it was illegal. After his father died when Allen was young, his mother chose to be sold as a cook to a neighbor, the attorney Nat Wolfe. When the Starbirds found Allen was learning to read, they separated him from their son and placed him with another family, the Talbots. Mrs. Talbot, a Quaker, was kind to Allen and continued to teach him to read and write; she also took him to a Sunday school for slave children. When Bett Starbird discovered this, she took Allen back. In 1854 she made arrangements with her husband's partner John Smith to send the boy to his brother Pat's plantation down the Mississippi River in Henderson, Kentucky, to put an end to his learning. On the steamboat, the boy was placed in the care of a slave steward rather than being chained with other slaves below deck. They were being transported for sale to downriver markets.
Hebe Smith, Allen's new mistress, assigned him to be a houseboy; she prohibited him from continuing his studies, and whipped him for trying to do so. Also working in the household was a white orphan boy Eddie; the two boys became friends and helped each other. Suffering on the farm from a cruel overseer, in 1855 at age 13, Allen planned to escape to Canada. He spent two weeks hiding at a neighboring farm before returning to the Smiths for punishment. Later he ran away again. The Smiths and Starbirds agreed to sell him on the auction block in Henderson.
Allensworth was sold again in Memphis, Tennessee and shipped to New Orleans. There he was bought by Fred Scruggs, who taught him to work as an exercise boy and jockey in Jefferson, Louisiana. Unlike others, his new master was pleased to learn that the boy could read; he assigned him to race his best horse.
Civil War and freedom
In early 1861 the Civil War loomed, but horse racing continued. Scruggs took Allen and his horses upriver for the fall meet in Louisville. Allensworth hoped to see his mother Phyllis again, as he had learned that her last master, a Rev. Bayliss, had freed her after she cared for his dying wife. He found that she had recently gone to New Orleans with a Union man to look for her sons. (She found Major in prison.) Waiting for her return, Allensworth was reunited with his sister Mary Jane, who had married and had a son. She had purchased her freedom in 1849. When Phyllis Starbird returned to Louisville, she and Allen were reunited.
While working nearby on a farm where Scruggs' deputy had placed him, Allensworth met soldiers from the 44th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment, a Union unit encamped near Louisville. When he told them of wanting freedom, they invited him to join the Hospital Corps. In disguise, he marched with the unit past his old master through Louisville and off to war. After serving as a civilian nursing aide for some time, he was invited to accompany Dr. A. J. Gordon, one of the surgeons, to his home in Georgetown, Ohio. There Allensworth dined with Gordon's family, was given a room of his own, and felt he first walked as a free man. With the war continuing, in 1863 Allensworth enlisted in the US Navy, where he earned his first pay as a free man. He was soon promoted to Captain's steward and clerk, and served on the gunboats Queen City and Tawah for two years.
Postwar years
Allensworth first returned to Kentucky to work and study. In 1868 he joined his brother William in St. Louis, where they operated two restaurants. Within a short time, they received a favorable offer and sold them out; Allensworth returned to Louisville. He worked while putting himself through the Ely Normal School, one of several new schools in the South established by the American Missionary Association. During Reconstruction, Allensworth taught at schools for freedmen and their children operated by the Freedmen's Bureau. Inspired by his own teaching, he began attending courses at the Nashville Institute, later known as the Roger Williams University, but did not graduate. The school later gave him an honorary Master of Arts.
Allensworth became involved with the Baptist Church in Louisville and attended the Fifth Street Baptist Church led by Henry Adams. He was ordained in 1871 by the Baptists as a preacher. In the 1870s, Allensworth went to Tennessee to study theology. During this time he also served as a preacher in Franklin, Tennessee, south of Nashville.
In 1875, Allensworth started working as a teacher in Georgetown, Kentucky. He also served as the financial agent of the General Association of the Colored Baptists in Kentucky. They had joined together to support the founding of a religious school for black teachers and preachers. Allensworth was among the founders of The State University, helped guarantee the salary of the president in the early years, and served on the Board of Trustees.
He returned to Louisville when called to be pastor of the Harney Street Baptist Church, which he reorganized, attracting many new members. They renamed it Centennial Baptist Church; it was selected as a model by the American Baptist Home Mission Society of America. Within a few years, Allensworth had increased the congregation nearly fivefold, and it built a new church.
Marriage and family
In 1877 he married Josephine Leavell (1855–1938), also born in Kentucky; they had met while studying at Roger Williams University in Nashville, Tennessee. She was an accomplished pianist, organist and music teacher. They had two daughters together, Eva and Nella.
The year of his marriage, Allensworth invited his mother to live with him and Josephine. They had several months together before she died in 1878 at the age of 96.
Post-Reconstruction era
Allensworth was called to the State Street Church in Bowling Green, Kentucky. He also gave public lectures. That fall, he went to Boston to give a series of lectures, after studying public speaking in Philadelphia.
On his return, he met people from the American Baptist Publication Society in Philadelphia, who appointed him as Sunday School Missionary for the state of Kentucky. He had always worked to build up the Sunday Schools at his churches, and this gave him the chance to continue to work on education around the state. The Colored Baptist State Sunday School Convention of Kentucky appointed him to the position of State Sunday School Superintendent.
With his leadership positions and public speaking, Allensworth became increasingly interested in politics. In 1880 and 1884, he was selected as Kentucky's only black delegate to the Republican National Conventions.
Military career as chaplain
In 1886, when he was 44, Allensworth gained support by both southern and northern politicians for appointment as a chaplain in the US Army; his appointment was confirmed by the Senate, as necessary at the time, and approved by the president. He was one of the few black chaplains in the US Army and was assigned to the 24th Infantry Regiment, known as the Buffalo Soldiers. His family accompanied him on assignments in the West, ranging from Fort Bayard, New Mexico Territory to Fort Supply, Indian Territory, and Fort Harrison, near Helena, Montana. His wife played organ in the fort chapels.
At Fort Bayard, Allensworth wrote Outline of Course of Study, and the Rules Governing Post Schools of Ft. Bayard, N.M.. The Army adapted these for use as the standard manual on the education of enlisted personnel.
By the time of his retirement in 1906, Allensworth had been promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, the first African American to gain that rank.
Allensworth, California
After the army, Allensworth and his family settled in Los Angeles. He was inspired by the idea of establishing a self-sufficient, all-black California community where African Americans could live free of the racial discrimination that pervaded post-Reconstruction America. His dream was to build a community where black people might live and create "sentiment favorable to intellectual and industrial liberty."
In 1908, he founded Allensworth in Tulare county, about thirty miles north of Bakersfield, in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley. The black settlers of Allensworth built homes, laid out streets, and put up public buildings. They established a church, and organized an orchestra, a glee club, and a brass band.
The Allensworth colony became a member of the county school district and the regional library system and a voting precinct. Residents elected the first African-American Justice of the Peace in post-Mexican California. In 1914, the California Eagle reported that the Allensworth community consisted of 900 acres (360 ha) of deeded land worth more than US$112,500.
Allensworth soon developed as a town, not just a colony. Among the social and educational organizations that flourished during its golden age were the Campfire Girls, the Owl Club, the Girls' Glee Club, and the Children's Savings Association, for the town's younger residents, while adults participated in the Sewing Circle, the Whist Club, the Debating Society, and the Theater Club. Col. Allensworth was an admirer of the African-American educator Booker T. Washington, who was the founding president and longtime leader of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. Allensworth dreamed that his new community could be self-sufficient and become known as the "Tuskegee of the West".
The Girls' Glee Club was modeled after the Jubilee Singers of Fisk University, who had toured internationally. They were the community's pride and joy. All the streets in the town were named after notable African Americans and/or white abolitionists, such as Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, poet Paul Lawrence Dunbar, and Harriet Beecher Stowe, abolitionist and author of Uncle Tom's Cabin.
The dry and dusty soil made farming difficult. The drinking water became contaminated by toxins as the water level fell.
The year 1914 also brought a number of setbacks to the town. First, much of the town's economic base was lost when the Santa Fe Railroad moved its rail stop from Allensworth to Alpaugh. In September, during a trip to Monrovia, California, Colonel Allensworth was crossing the street when he was struck and killed by a motorcycle. The town refuses to die. The downtown area is now preserved as Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park where thousands of visitors come from all over California to take part in the special events held at the park during the year. The area outside the state park is also still inhabited.
Allensworth is the only California community to be founded, financed and governed by African Americans. The founders were dedicated to improving the economic and social status of African Americans. Uncontrollable circumstances, including a drop in the area's water table, resulted in the town's decline.
Legacy and honors
The state has preserved the site and is gradually restoring its buildings. The most important building is the school house, which the community prized as representing the future of its children. In use until 1972, it is furnished as it would have been on a school day in 1915. The park arranges special events to celebrate the former community's history, and the park's visitor center features a film about the site. An annual re-dedication ceremony reaffirms the vision of the original pioneers.
Col. Allensworth's residence is preserved and furnished in the 1912-period style. It contains items from his life in the military service and the ministry. A small display of farm equipment is a reminder of the Allensworth economic base.
Death
Allen Allensworth died at the age of 72, on September 14, 1914. He was killed by a motorcyclist in Monrovia, California.
Wikipedia
Hogyan válik valaki érzelmileg elérhetetlenné
Ezt még lejegyzem ide mert nagyon érdekes, és mert könnyen tanulható a megelőzés. Ha a gyerek érzelmi igényeit annulálják, akkor nem tanulja meg az átélt érzelmeket értelmezni, kezelni, használni. Ha a gyereknek folyamatosan azt mondják, hogy ugyan mi dolga, fájdalma, problémája lehet, ő csak egy gyerek, neki csak tanulnia kell, meg szótfogadni a szüleinek, akkor tulajdonképpen megfosztják attól, hogy magát az érzelmek létét normálisnak élje meg. Akkor le fogja magáról választani a szülők által érvénytelenített részt, és kizárólag a szülők által elfogadottat fogja használni. Megbízható, felelősségteljes, munkájukban problémamentes felnőtteket lehet így létrehozni. Magányos magánélettel. A jó az, ha a szülő visszajelez, hogy a gyerek mit él meg éppen, és támaszt nyújt, segít értelmezni és kezelni a dolgokat. Tudom, hogy most szomorú vagy. Mindenki szomorú amikor veszteség éri. Én is szomorú voltam amikor... (semmiképpen nem egy manipulatív megjegyzés, hogy amikor TE valamit csináltál, hanem valami veszteség) Látom, hogy örülsz. Örülök, hogy boldog vagy! Én is dühös lennék, ha a barátom becsapna! De talán meg tudjátok beszélni, hogy mi történt. A gyereknek joga van az érzelmeihez. A fájdalomhoz, félelemhez, bosszankodáshoz, haraghoz. És tisztelni kell a pozitív érzelmeket. A szerelmet, az együttérzést, a meghatottságot, a szeretet megnyilvánulásait. Nem az a megoldás, hogy a szülő vagy tanár vagy bárki felnőtt elveszi tőle ezt a jogot vagy érvényteleníti, az érzelmeit értéktelennek, túlzónak, nevetségesnek vagy értelmetlennek állítja be. Már ha, a szülő maga egy érzelmileg érett ember, és nem ő is piszokrossz sémákkal rendelkezik. A fiúk nem sírnak! A lányok meg csak lányok. Folyton nyafognak.
2020-09‐16 (水) 🔋
👑 No. 3
⟴ *॰ॱ✍ 公開日記・無料代行サービス・処理係 📖☡
【📷💕夢見ているフォト 【◎】д=) TIME ギャラリー📷💕】
✩⃛ೄ 嘘がつけない美学┌iii┐♡ プレイバック撮影&バイブル ✩୭⋆*✦*⋆୭*✩
´。・・。)ノ☆。. メモ消滅から時間が立ったので、頭を切り替えて投稿に漕ぎ着けました。(。-ˇ.ˇ-。)フゥゥ⤵︎
___ ✍🏻 音のある風景・花の情報局&伝言板の恩返し ♪🎶♪🎶♪🎶♪🎶♪
🖋✨ 仮想空間 🔛 バーチャルスペース ✨📱📲💻⌨️🖥🖨🖱🖲📷📸⌚🔌
〖課題〗あなた or 私は、何故、何のために歌うのか・・・❔
⸜❤︎⸝ 僕はまだ 忘れられずに 🎵
⸜❤︎⸝ あゝ もう一度 確かめあおうよ 🎵
\★/ 奪えば悲しくて ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎
\★/ 捨てれば淋しくて ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎
歌詞セリフ 「ひとりじゃ何も決められない」
___ ✍ 当事者同士が・・・ 進むべき道 ♪♩♬
⿴⿻⿸ ただの友だちで終わらせるのか❔
⿴⿻⿸ 本当の恋愛で終わらせるのか❔
⿴⿻⿸ 付き合う勇気がなくて、誰とも付き合えなくて、仕事しながら歌詞の恋愛のために一生追いかけ回して終わるのか❔
꒰✩˙˟˙✩꒱ 好きな人の側にいたいですか❔
꒰✩˙˟˙✩꒱ 好きな人の側にいたくないですか❔
𐀪𐁑 どれを選んだとしても、ファンは、それを承知で、ひっくるめて面倒見なきゃいけないけどね❕
*:・゚✧(=✪ ᆺ ✪=)*:・゚✧💘✧(=✪ ᆺ ✪=)*:・゚✧
ᐠ ♥︎ ᐟ..!?/// お節介な世話焼き投稿者になりました。勝手に失礼しました!
___ ✍🏻 皆様の返答どしどしお待ちしています
🎤無料代行サービス❣️(何も書けなくなるから怒らないでネ~🔋✨🎤)
⋆͛♡⋆͛ 処理能力にも限界があることをお忘れなく処理係です。❤︎~(`•ᴗ- )⋆.˚✩
(?_?)( -᷅_-᷄ )( ⌯᷄௰⌯᷅ )/(-_-)\🤔🤔🤔😔 。 o O ()
🎤( ー̀֊ー́ )✧芸能リポーター︎︎💕︎梨元勝さん呼んじゃう 😇 🎤
⋆͛☆⋆͛ マイクを向ける際の 「恐縮です!」 が決め台詞(ウィキペディア引用)/☆-☆/
゚+.(*♡Ü(Ü♡*)゚+. いつまでもよりそい夢の中 \ ♪♪ /
⋆͛♡̷♡̷⋆ ねぇ、あなた ふたりはひとりです ♬︎♡
⸂⸂⸜(രᴗര๑)⸝⸃⸃ 君を心変わりさせるだろうか ♬︎♡
(ㅎ.ㅎ ) 俺は失う事の 恐れを知ったよ 🎵
⋆͛♡̷♡̷⋆ さよならと戯れて 一人きり夜を待つよ 🎵
歌詞セリフ 「サヨナラなんて……言えないよバカヤロー!!」
✧✧✧ ╭⍣╮╭✻╮╭♡╮╭◊╮╭⍣╮ ✧✧✧
ʚ♡⃛ɞ まるい月 見ながら ふたり夜道 歩いたね ୧⍢⃝୨
❤︎⃜…// 細い細い糸で きみをつむぎつづけてた ୧⍢⃝୨
―――――――――✁︎キリトリ線✁︎――――――――――
💟🔑 俯いたまま そっと鍵を
💟🔑 差し出した時 動けなかった
💟 ふたつの物語
💟 時は回る また空は変わる
💟 今夜もほだされて舞い戻る腕の中
💟 ドアを開けるよ
💟 鍵をつけたまま
💟 黒いインク 消した痕跡がある
💟 この街に残されて 1人で佇んでいた
💟 最後は君の言葉です
💟 答えを教えて
💟 錆てく心は 変わらない
💟 見知らぬ顔した Actress
💟 炎の中くべた叫び 天を焦がすわ
💟 心に穴があいた真夜中のドア
💟 幽(かすか)な糸を手探りで手繰り寄せたら
💟 たんぽぽ時計の長針&短針
💟 時針&分針&秒針
_((Ф(•᷄ὤ•᷅ )カキカキ
♡⃛ೄ チョークで書いた駐車違反の取り締まりのように駐車場とアスファルトに咲いたたんぽぽ時計です。
¸♥⌒♡⌒♥⌒◇⌒♡⌒♥⌒♡⌒◇⌒♥⌒♡¸
★̇̈⃛⃜ 腹積り(はらづもり)
〖デジタル大辞泉の解説〗
あらかじめ考えておく大体の予定や計画。また、心の用意。心づもり。
「息子に後をまかせる腹積もりだ」
♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 想い出を もしも選んだら ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ あなたと二度と 逢えない ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 君を捨てるか 僕が消えるか ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ いっそ 二人で落ちようか ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 自然なふりして 歌うの 私が… ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 移り行くもの 止められないのよ ʚ♡⃛ɞ
⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ イルミネーション消えたタワー ୧⍢⃝୨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ 消えてくストレンジャーのようだね ୧⍢⃝୨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ うらまないのがルール ୧⍢⃝୨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ ただのものめずらしさで ୧⍢⃝୨
⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨
❤︎⃜…// 背中を見送って そっと外したイアリング ~♩♩
❥·・ なんにも答えない夕陽色のジャケット ~♩♩
❥·・ ムーンライトに 歌う 心の痛み ~♩♩
⋆͛♡̷♡̷⋆ 花のない 女でなど いたくない 🎶
♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~
_φ( °-°)/ 君の心の中でぼくは生きているはず ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎。
「星を買いませんか」 と言われて出会い、誘われるままに 「自分の星を見るツアー」 に参加。
_φ( °-°)/ 愛を失くした手品師などは恋の魔術を使えない ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎
_φ( °-°)/ ラストオーダーは 失恋までのフルコース ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎。
■ 大魔王やアクビが壷から飛び出して来た時の掛け声
■ 「呼ばれて飛び出て ジャジャジャジャーン」(大魔王)
■ 「かわいこちゃんのアクビちゃんですよ!」(アクビ)
■ 呪文 「アラビンドビン ハゲチャビン」(大魔王)
■ 「アラピンカラピン スカピーン」(アクビ)
■ 「アラプンスカプン プリプリプーン」(プゥータ)
■ その他 「ダメなのね〜 ダメなのよ〜」(大魔王)
■ 「あのね、みなしゃん わしゃ かなわんよ」(大魔王)
■ 「なんとかしてくださ〜い!」(大魔王)
■ 「スカンタコメラ ホゲチョメラ」(大魔王)
■ 「それからどうした」(それからおじさん)
📴🆚📳🥤📴🆚📳🍹📴🆚📳🍸📴🆚📳
皆さんは、ついつい深読みしたくなる歌詞を並べて、如何お過ごしですか❔
by お部屋の管理人より ஐ♡🍀~ஐ
♡⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝
(`Д´)´,·.·`ハックション!!! 〖📺♩ウィキペディア情報〗
『女ともだち』は、柴門ふみによる日本の漫画。双葉社『別冊漫画アクション』にて、1983年から1988年にかけて連載、アクションコミックスより刊行された。全6巻。その後、1994年(平成6年)に双葉文庫から文庫化された。一話完結の形式で、各話ごとに異なる女性たちが主人公となり、様々な恋愛模様が繰り広げられる。
✂︎- - - -キリトリ- - - - -✂︎-----㋖㋷㋣㋷線-----✂︎
(`Д´)´,·.·`ハックション!!! 〖📺♩ウィキペディア情報〗
『ハクション大魔王』(英語表記:The Genie Family)は、タツノコプロによるギャグテレビアニメおよびその主人公。
大魔王の好物は当初の設定ではコロッケだった物が、アフレコの段階でハンバーグに変更になった。この理由には以下の説がある。
□ 当時の子供の好物に合わせた。
□ 番組の提供スポンサーが『マルシンハンバーグ』のマルシンフーズだったため。
□ 色指定が濃くなってしまったから。
笹川は 「コロッケと思ってみれば見えなくもない」とコメントし、色指定のミスが原因ではないとしている。初期の調理シーンではハンバーグは衣を浸けてから油で揚げているが、途中からは鉄板で焼く表現に変わっている。
タツノコプロの公式Twitterでは 「ハクション大魔王の大好物 ハンバーグ。ところが作画の際にコロッケを想定していたため、画面上では油で揚げているシーンが作られていた。しかし、レシピ本『空想お料理読本』に『ハクション大魔王』のハンバーグが紹介。油で揚げるハンバーグの作り方も掲載されている」 とツイートしている。
2012年7月29日放送のTBSラジオ『爆笑問題の日曜サンデー』特集 「タツノコプロ 50周年」 での大平透の証言によれば、最初のアフレコ時の台本ではコロッケとなっていたが 「今時、コロッケは無いだろう。今の子供はハンバーグだ」 とその場で、ハンバーグに変更したという。
■ 大魔王が淀川長治の決めフレーズ 「さよなら、さよなら、さよなら」 を、手振りを交えて言ったこともある。頻繁に壷の中と外の世界を行き来すると疲れて、壷の中に帰れなくなってしまう。
■ 「ミス魔法ナンバー1のアクビちゃんのおでましよ!」(アクビ)など色々バリエーションがある。
■ (2020年版は 「出まして来ましてアクビです!」 )
壺の中へ戻る際の決めゼリフ 「ハイチャラバーイ」(大魔王)
■ 「出まして来まして アクビちゃ〜ん」(アクビ)
■ 「ププっと出ちゃってプゥ〜タでし」(プゥータ)
■ 赤ちゃんの言葉しか喋られなくなるので、周囲には 「プゥ〜」 と言っているようにしか聞こえていない。「プゥ〜」(プゥータ)
■ アクビには特に決め台詞は無いが 「イヤーン!」 と言って、壺の中に戻ることが多い。
話のラストはアイキャッチとして、「それからそれから… 何? コマーシャルどうぞ」 と言ってCMへ行くが、最終回はCM前のアイキャッチが挿入されなかった。
■ 2020年版にも登場しており、「それからそれから?止まりなさーい!」 「それからファミレス?」 のように台詞が頻繁に変化している。
✂︎- - - -キリトリ- - - - -✂︎-----㋖㋷㋣㋷線-----✂︎
撮影日:2020-09-16 (水)・14 (月)・12 (土)
ʚ♡⃛ɞ とんぼちゃん登場‼✨
☆彡 星空 ✩°。⋆⸜(*˙꒳˙* )⸝
❤︎⃜…// ムラサキツユクサ(紫露草)🎵 ❥·・ 紫色の月の舟
\❤︎/ (➖):咲いた花を置いて車で出て行く人へ 🎶
\❤︎/ (➖):切り戻ししない省スペースの蛍 *♬೨̣̥
❥ ... (➖):電気のない場所
―――――――――✁︎キリトリ線✁︎――――――――――
by とんぼちゃん『しあわせ色』♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) あなたに今でも逢いたくて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) この店に来てみました ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) あの頃と少しも変らない ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ただあなたがいないだけ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 昔はこうして壁にもたれて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いろんな話をしてくれた ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 些細な言葉に傷ついて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) あなたをなくした 私はひとり ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 悲しみは時がいやすもの ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) そぼふる雨がささやいた ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 淋しさはだれがいやしてくれる ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 笑顔のあなたはいない ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) しあわせ色した楽しい日々が ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 今でもこんなに涙を誘う ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 忘れるために 長い髪を切っても ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 人の足音にさえあなたを想う ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) しあわせ色した楽しい日々が ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 今でもこんなに涙を誘う ♪♪"
♡⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝
by 嶋崎由理『ハクション大魔王のうた』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) うそがきらいで 涙にもろい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) くしゃみされれば どこでもゆくよ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ハ ハ ハクション大魔王 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) だけど数字にゃ ハ 泣けてくる ♪♪"
🎞☀︎☁︎︎☂︎🗼💁✨୨୧୨୧✨💁🗼☀︎☁︎︎☂︎🎞
by イモ欽トリオ『失恋レッスン(A・B・C)』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 君が打った A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) テニスボール I Love you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 「好き」 とサインをして返す ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 運が悪く A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 狙い外れて I need you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 隣の不美人に命中さ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 振られるたびに...ぼくらは... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛の意味を知る ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 午後の部屋(ルーム)は A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ドアを開けたら I Love you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 君は着替えの真最中 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 瞳(め)のまわりの A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 青いあざは I need you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 失くした恋の忘れもの ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 傷つくことを...覚えて... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 生きる意味を知る ♪♪"
🏡 *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ 🏡
by 清水健太郎『失恋レストラン』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 悲しけりゃここでお泣きよ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 涙ふくハンカチもあるし ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛がこわした君の心を ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) やさしく包む椅子もある ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ポッカリあいた胸の奥に つめこむメシをたべさせる ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) そんな失恋レストランいろんな人がやってくる ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 好きな女に裏切られて笑いを忘れた道化師が ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) すがる失恋レストランもうおどけることもない 今は ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ネエー マスターつくってやってよ 涙を忘れるカクテル ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛を失くした手品師などは恋の魔術を使えない ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) だから失恋レストラン失くした恋のふきだまり ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 歌をうたえぬこの俺でも話し合い手になれるなら ♪♪"
🏡 *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ 🏡
by オフコース『僕らしい夏』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 僕は夢中になって風を追いかけていた ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) はだしのまま大地を感じて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 僕は鳥やミドリの深呼吸を聴いてた ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ここちの良い時間に沈んで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 窓辺には移りゆく時が見えるけど ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いつだって僕らしい素顔に戻れる oh... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いま貴女といるだけでいい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 自分だけを守った季節にピリオドを打つ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 窓の外は夏が照り返す ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 僕は貴女と逢って哀しみもときめきも ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 分かち合える喜びを知ったよ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 誰だって愛し合う人を待っている ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) この心も この身体も貴女に届いた oh... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 窓辺には移りゆく時が見えるけど ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いつだって素顔に戻れる きっと oh... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いま貴女といるだけでいい ♪♪"
🏡 *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ 🏡
by 愛本健二『月の舟』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
by 池田聡『月の舟』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) もしも涙 あふれたら ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) この胸に押しあてて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 二度と恋は 出来ないと ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 自分を憎まないで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 思わず抱きしめて 鏡の様に ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 君だけの輝き 映してあげたい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 夜を渡る 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) このままさらわれて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 髪を撫でた 指にさえ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 想い出痛むくせに ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 無理にみせる微笑みが ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) せつなく僕を誘う ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ふれてすぐ離れた 硝子のキスは ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 眩しくて脆(もろ)くて 胸を熱くする ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛に揺れる 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 光の露に濡れ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) みつめたまま 夢の鈴 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 優しく響くまで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 夜を渡る 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) このままさらわれて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 心に降る 銀の糸 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 二人を結ぶまで ♪♪"
☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎。.🐏💭⋆。˚ᎶᎾᎾⅅ ℕᏐᎶℍᎢ⋆。˚✩🌟
#公開日記 #無料代行サービス #処理係
2020-09‐16 (水) 🔋
👑 No. 2
⟴ *॰ॱ✍ 公開日記・無料代行サービス・処理係 📖☡
【📷💕夢見ているフォト 【◎】д=) TIME ギャラリー📷💕】
✩⃛ೄ 嘘がつけない美学┌iii┐♡ プレイバック撮影&バイブル ✩୭⋆*✦*⋆୭*✩
´。・・。)ノ☆。. メモ消滅から時間が立ったので、頭を切り替えて投稿に漕ぎ着けました。(。-ˇ.ˇ-。)フゥゥ⤵︎
___ ✍🏻 音のある風景・花の情報局&伝言板の恩返し ♪🎶♪🎶♪🎶♪🎶♪
🖋✨ 仮想空間 🔛 バーチャルスペース ✨📱📲💻⌨️🖥🖨🖱🖲📷📸⌚🔌
〖課題〗あなた or 私は、何故、何のために歌うのか・・・❔
⸜❤︎⸝ 僕はまだ 忘れられずに 🎵
⸜❤︎⸝ あゝ もう一度 確かめあおうよ 🎵
\★/ 奪えば悲しくて ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎
\★/ 捨てれば淋しくて ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎
歌詞セリフ 「ひとりじゃ何も決められない」
___ ✍ 当事者同士が・・・ 進むべき道 ♪♩♬
⿴⿻⿸ ただの友だちで終わらせるのか❔
⿴⿻⿸ 本当の恋愛で終わらせるのか❔
⿴⿻⿸ 付き合う勇気がなくて、誰とも付き合えなくて、仕事しながら歌詞の恋愛のために一生追いかけ回して終わるのか❔
꒰✩˙˟˙✩꒱ 好きな人の側にいたいですか❔
꒰✩˙˟˙✩꒱ 好きな人の側にいたくないですか❔
𐀪𐁑 どれを選んだとしても、ファンは、それを承知で、ひっくるめて面倒見なきゃいけないけどね❕
*:・゚✧(=✪ ᆺ ✪=)*:・゚✧ 💘✧(=✪ ᆺ ✪=)*:・゚✧
ᐠ ♥︎ ᐟ..!?/// お節介な世話焼き投稿者になりました。勝手に失礼しました!
___ ✍🏻 皆様の返答どしどしお待ちしています
🎤無料代行サービス❣️(何も書けなくなるから怒らないでネ~🔋✨🎤)
⋆͛♡⋆͛ 処理能力にも限界があることをお忘れなく処理係です。❤︎~(`•ᴗ- )⋆.˚✩
(?_?)( -᷅_-᷄ )( ⌯᷄௰⌯᷅ )/(-_-)\🤔🤔🤔😔 。 o O ()
🎤( ー̀֊ー́ )✧芸能リポーター︎︎💕︎梨元勝さん呼んじゃう 😇 🎤
⋆͛☆⋆͛ マイクを向ける際の 「恐縮です!」 が決め台詞(ウィキペディア引用)/☆-☆/
゚+.(*♡Ü(Ü♡*)゚+. いつまでもよりそい夢の中 \ ♪♪ /
⋆͛♡̷♡̷⋆ ねぇ、あなた ふたりはひとりです ♬︎♡
⸂⸂⸜(രᴗര๑)⸝⸃⸃ 君を心変わりさせるだろうか ♬︎♡
(ㅎ.ㅎ ) 俺は失う事の 恐れを知ったよ 🎵
⋆͛♡̷♡̷⋆ さよならと戯れて 一人きり夜を待つよ 🎵
歌詞セリフ 「サヨナラなんて……言えないよバカヤロー!!」
✧✧✧ ╭⍣╮╭✻╮╭♡╮╭◊╮╭⍣╮ ✧✧✧
ʚ♡⃛ɞ まるい月 見ながら ふたり夜道 歩いたね ୧⍢⃝୨
❤︎⃜…// 細い細い糸で きみをつむぎつづけてた ୧⍢⃝୨
―――――――――✁︎キリトリ線✁︎――――――――――
💟🔑 俯いたまま そっと鍵を
💟🔑 差し出した時 動けなかった
💟 ふたつの物語
💟 時は回る また空は変わる
💟 今夜もほだされて舞い戻る腕の中
💟 ドアを開けるよ
💟 鍵をつけたまま
💟 黒いインク 消した痕跡がある
💟 この街に残されて 1人で佇んでいた
💟 最後は君の言葉です
💟 答えを教えて
💟 錆てく心は 変わらない
💟 見知らぬ顔した Actress
💟 炎の中くべた叫び 天を焦がすわ
💟 心に穴があいた真夜中のドア
💟 幽(かすか)な糸を手探りで手繰り寄せたら
💟 たんぽぽ時計の長針&短針
💟 時針&分針&秒針
_((Ф(•᷄ὤ•᷅ )カキカキ
♡⃛ೄ チョークで書いた駐車違反の取り締まりのように駐車場とアスファルトに咲いたたんぽぽ時計です。
¸♥⌒♡⌒♥⌒◇⌒♡⌒♥⌒♡⌒◇⌒♥⌒♡¸
★̇̈⃛⃜ 腹積り(はらづもり)
〖デジタル大辞泉の解説〗
あらかじめ考えておく大体の予定や計画。また、心の用意。心づもり。
「息子に後をまかせる腹積もりだ」
♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 想い出を もしも選んだら ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ あなたと二度と 逢えない ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 君を捨てるか 僕が消えるか ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ いっそ 二人で落ちようか ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 自然なふりして 歌うの 私が… ʚ♡⃛ɞ
٩( ᐛ )( ᐖ )۶ 移り行くもの 止められないのよ ʚ♡⃛ɞ
⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ イルミネーション消えたタワー ୧⍢⃝୨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ 消えてくストレンジャーのようだね ୧⍢⃝୨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ うらまないのがルール ୧⍢⃝୨
ʚ♡⃛ɞ ただのものめずらしさで ୧⍢⃝୨
⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨⌒¨
❤︎⃜…// 背中を見送って そっと外したイアリング ~♩♩
❥·・ なんにも答えない夕陽色のジャケット ~♩♩
❥·・ ムーンライトに 歌う 心の痛み ~♩♩
⋆͛♡̷♡̷⋆ 花のない 女でなど いたくない 🎶
♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~♪♩♬♦~
_φ( °-°)/ 君の心の中でぼくは生きているはず ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎。
「星を買いませんか」 と言われて出会い、誘われるままに 「自分の星を見るツアー」 に参加。
_φ( °-°)/ 愛を失くした手品師などは恋の魔術を使えない ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎
_φ( °-°)/ ラストオーダーは 失恋までのフルコース ☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎。
■ 大魔王やアクビが壷から飛び出して来た時の掛け声
■ 「呼ばれて飛び出て ジャジャジャジャーン」(大魔王)
■ 「かわいこちゃんのアクビちゃんですよ!」(アクビ)
■ 呪文「アラビンドビン ハゲチャビン」(大魔王)
■ 「アラピンカラピン スカピーン」(アクビ)
■ 「アラプンスカプン プリプリプーン」(プゥータ)
■ その他 「ダメなのね〜 ダメなのよ〜」(大魔王)
■ 「あのね、みなしゃん わしゃ かなわんよ」(大魔王)
■ 「なんとかしてくださ〜い!」(大魔王)
■ 「スカンタコメラ ホゲチョメラ」(大魔王)
■ 「それからどうした」(それからおじさん)
📴🆚📳🥤📴🆚📳🍹📴🆚📳🍸📴🆚📳
皆さんは、ついつい深読みしたくなる歌詞を並べて、如何お過ごしですか❔
by お部屋の管理人より ஐ♡🍀~ஐ
♡⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝
✂︎- - - - - -キリトリ- - - - - - -✄---キ リ ト リ ---✄
(`Д´)´,·.·`ハックション!!! 〖📺♩ウィキペディア情報〗
『女ともだち』は、柴門ふみによる日本の漫画。双葉社『別冊漫画アクション』にて、1983年から1988年にかけて連載、アクションコミックスより刊行された。全6巻。その後、1994年(平成6年)に双葉文庫から文庫化された。一話完結の形式で、各話ごとに異なる女性たちが主人公となり、様々な恋愛模様が繰り広げられる。
✂︎- - - -キリトリ- - - - -✂︎-----㋖㋷㋣㋷線-----✂︎
(`Д´)´,·.·`ハックション!!! 〖📺♩ウィキペディア情報〗
『ハクション大魔王』(英語表記:The Genie Family)は、タツノコプロによるギャグテレビアニメおよびその主人公。
大魔王の好物は当初の設定ではコロッケだった物が、アフレコの段階でハンバーグに変更になった。この理由には以下の説がある。
□ 当時の子供の好物に合わせた。
□ 番組の提供スポンサーが『マルシンハンバーグ』のマルシンフーズだったため。
□ 色指定が濃くなってしまったから。
笹川は 「コロッケと思ってみれば見えなくもない」 とコメントし、色指定のミスが原因ではないとしている。初期の調理シーンではハンバーグは衣を浸けてから油で揚げているが、途中からは鉄板で焼く表現に変わっている。
タツノコプロの公式Twitterでは 「ハクション大魔王の大好物 ハンバーグ。ところが作画の際にコロッケを想定していたため、画面上では油で揚げているシーンが作られていた。しかし、レシピ本『空想お料理読本』に『ハクション大魔王』のハンバーグが紹介。油で揚げるハンバーグの作り方も掲載されている」 とツイートしている。
2012年7月29日放送のTBSラジオ『爆笑問題の日曜サンデー』特集 「タツノコプロ 50周年」 での大平透の証言によれば、最初のアフレコ時の台本ではコロッケとなっていたが 「今時、コロッケは無いだろう。今の子供はハンバーグだ」 とその場で、ハンバーグに変更したという。
■ 大魔王が淀川長治の決めフレーズ 「さよなら、さよなら、さよなら」 を、手振りを交えて言ったこともある。頻繁に壷の中と外の世界を行き来すると疲れて、壷の中に帰れなくなってしまう。
■ 「ミス魔法ナンバー1のアクビちゃんのおでましよ!」(アクビ)など色々バリエーションがある。
■ (2020年版は 「出まして来ましてアクビです!」 )
壺の中へ戻る際の決めゼリフ 「ハイチャラバーイ」(大魔王)
■ 「出まして来まして アクビちゃ〜ん」(アクビ)
■ 「ププっと出ちゃってプゥ〜タでし」(プゥータ)
■ 赤ちゃんの言葉しか喋られなくなるので、周囲には 「プゥ〜」 と言っているようにしか聞こえていない。「プゥ〜」(プゥータ)
■ アクビには特に決め台詞は無いが 「イヤーン!」 と言って、壺の中に戻ることが多い。
話のラストはアイキャッチとして、「それからそれから… 何? コマーシャルどうぞ」 と言ってCMへ行くが、最終回はCM前のアイキャッチが挿入されなかった。
■ 2020年版にも登場しており、「それからそれから?止まりなさーい!」 「それからファミレス?」 のように台詞が頻繁に変化している。
✂︎- - - -キリトリ- - - - -✂︎-----㋖㋷㋣㋷線-----✂︎
撮影日:2020-09-13 (日)・14 (月)・12 (土)・10 (木)
❤︎⃜…// ムラサキツユクサ(紫露草)🎵
❥·・ 紫色の月の舟・月の涙
\❤︎/ (➖):咲いた花を置いて車で出て行く人へ 🎶
\❤︎/ (➖):切り戻ししない省スペースの蛍 *♬೨̣̥
❥ ... (➖):電気のない場所
♡⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝ ⍨⃝ ∵⃝♡⍢⃝ ⍤⃝
by 嶋崎由理『ハクション大魔王のうた』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) うそがきらいで 涙にもろい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) くしゃみされれば どこでもゆくよ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ハ ハ ハクション大魔王 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) だけど数字にゃ ハ 泣けてくる ♪♪"
🎞☀︎☁︎︎☂︎🗼💁✨୨୧୨୧✨💁🗼☀︎☁︎︎☂︎🎞
by イモ欽トリオ『失恋レッスン(A・B・C)』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 君が打った A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) テニスボール I Love you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 「好き」 とサインをして返す ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 運が悪く A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 狙い外れて I need you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 隣の不美人に命中さ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 振られるたびに...ぼくらは... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛の意味を知る ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 午後の部屋(ルーム)は A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ドアを開けたら I Love you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 君は着替えの真最中 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 瞳(め)のまわりの A-HA-HA ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 青いあざは I need you ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 失くした恋の忘れもの ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 傷つくことを...覚えて... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 生きる意味を知る ♪♪"
🏡 *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ 🏡
by 清水健太郎『失恋レストラン』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 悲しけりゃここでお泣きよ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 涙ふくハンカチもあるし ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛がこわした君の心を ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) やさしく包む椅子もある ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ポッカリあいた胸の奥に つめこむメシをたべさせる ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) そんな失恋レストランいろんな人がやってくる ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 好きな女に裏切られて笑いを忘れた道化師が ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) すがる失恋レストランもうおどけることもない 今は ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ネエー マスターつくってやってよ 涙を忘れるカクテル ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛を失くした手品師などは恋の魔術を使えない ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) だから失恋レストラン失くした恋のふきだまり ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 歌をうたえぬこの俺でも話し合い手になれるなら ♪♪"
🏡 *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ 🏡
by オフコース『僕らしい夏』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 僕は夢中になって風を追いかけていた ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) はだしのまま大地を感じて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 僕は鳥やミドリの深呼吸を聴いてた ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ここちの良い時間に沈んで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 窓辺には移りゆく時が見えるけど ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いつだって僕らしい素顔に戻れる oh... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いま貴女といるだけでいい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 自分だけを守った季節にピリオドを打つ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 窓の外は夏が照り返す ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 僕は貴女と逢って哀しみもときめきも ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 分かち合える喜びを知ったよ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 誰だって愛し合う人を待っている ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) この心も この身体も貴女に届いた oh... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 窓辺には移りゆく時が見えるけど ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いつだって素顔に戻れる きっと oh... ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) いま貴女といるだけでいい ♪♪"
🏡 *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ *:..。oƒ 🏡
by 池田聡『月の舟』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) もしも涙 あふれたら ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) この胸に押しあてて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 二度と恋は 出来ないと ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 自分を憎まないで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 思わず抱きしめて 鏡の様に ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 君だけの輝き 映してあげたい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 夜を渡る 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) このままさらわれて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 心に降る 銀の糸 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 二人を結ぶまで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 髪を撫でた 指にさえ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 想い出痛むくせに ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 無理にみせる微笑みが ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) せつなく僕を誘う ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) ふれてすぐ離れた 硝子のキスは ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 眩しくて脆(もろ)くて 胸を熱くする ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛に揺れる 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 光の露に濡れ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) みつめたまま 夢の鈴 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 優しく響くまで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 夜を渡る 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) このままさらわれて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 心に降る 銀の糸 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 二人を結ぶまで ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 愛に揺れる 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 光の露に濡れ ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) みつめたまま 夢の鈴 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 優しく響くまで ♪♪"
🌛~☪·̩ ‥‥⋰★⋰‥‥▒⋰☪·̩‥‥⋰★⋰‥‥▒~🌛
by 愛本健二『月の舟』 ♪̊̈♪̆̈
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 【歌詞】
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 逢えない夜は 永すぎて ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 昨夜の名残 抱きしめながら ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 心にたぎる 恋心 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 何度背中に 私の名前 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 刻み付けても 叶わない ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) どんな世間の 冷たい風も ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 耐えて沈まぬ 月の舟 ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 傷つくことも 怖くはないの ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 誰より愛しい 人だから ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) もしもあるなら 許してほしい ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 二人添いたい 次の世で ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 私一人の あなたを探し ♪♪"
(ღ•ㅂ•๐) 闇を彷徨う 月の舟 ♪♪"
☆*ɢᵒᵒᵈ ɴⁱᵍʰᵗ *☪︎。.🐏💭⋆。˚ᎶᎾᎾⅅ ℕᏐᎶℍᎢ⋆。˚✩🌟
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