Ougghh.., that energy drinkk...
I feel so drained and drowsyyy, i think this is how they get you to buy and drink more (I'm just happy that i didn't get a migraine!!) Maybe my little pet bird will let me take a nap without screaming at me T.T
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Ougghh.., that energy drinkk...
I feel so drained and drowsyyy, i think this is how they get you to buy and drink more (I'm just happy that i didn't get a migraine!!) Maybe my little pet bird will let me take a nap without screaming at me T.T
Eminem – “Framed” (Video)
Although the reception hasn’t been the greatest for Eminem’s Revival album, “Framed” seems to be one of the fan-favorites, as it’s the closest resemblance of Relapse, which many consider to be his best album since his epic three album run of The Slim Shady LP, The Marshall Mathers LPand The Eminem Show in the late 90’s and early 00’s. After extending “Nowhere Fast” with a verse aimed at the NRA, Em follows up videos for “River” and “Walk On Water” with a horror-filled clip for the Fredwreck-produced single. Starting with a breaking news segment, Em escapes from an insane asylum and is holed up in a Detroit home with various drugs, a dead man, and lots of blood. Check out the James Larese-directed video above.
#HOYENLAESCENA 15 de abril de 1966 se lanza el album de the rolling stones llamado ''(Aftermath)'
#HOYENLAESCENA 15 de abril de 1966 se lanza el album de the rolling stones llamado ”(Aftermath)’
15 de abril de 1966 se lanza el album de the rolling stones llamado ”(Aftermath)’ es el cuarto álbum de estudio de The Rolling Stones en el Reino Unido y su sexto álbum en los Estados Unidos, lanzado en 1966, el primero integrado exclusivamente por composiciones originales de Mick Jagger y Keith Richards, lo que demostró la consolidación artística y creativa de la banda. El álbum se destaca por…
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Updates from a "Galaxy" far, far away... This book if finally getting better! It's been hard to read it after the other 4, that are absolutely amazing by the way. But the Force is with me and I will finish it soon! 😁 I also started Blue is the warmest color, but I only read 2 pages until now... 😁 Now a surprise: I haven't realized how dehydrated my skin is until I applied this oil generously into my face and it dried out in minutes! Hope it will get better in some weeks. 😱 🌌✨🌌✨🌌✨🌌✨🌌✨ Atualizações de uma "galáxia" bem, bem distante... Esse livro finalmente está melhorando! Vou te contar que está sendo difícil de ler depois que li os outros 4, que são ótimos. Mas a Força está comigo e devo terminar logo, logo! 😁 Também comecei a ler Blue is the warmest color, mas só li duas páginas até agora... 😁 Agora uma surpresa: não tinha percebido que a minha pele estava tão desidratada até passar generosamente esse óleo no rosto e o negócio secar em minutos! Na torcida para melhorar em algumas semanas. 😱 #starwars #starwarstheforceawakens #maytheforcebewithyou #aftemath #skincare #dryskin #olionutrientenotte #santamarianovella #omiyage
Finding faith amid disaster
Article taken from cnn.com
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/03/20/finding-faith-amid-disaster/?hpt=C2
By Jessica Ravitz, CNN
Around the world, people are still struggling to come to terms with the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, which have left more than 8,000 dead, thousands more missing and hundreds of thousand others homeless. The threat of a nuclear crisis only adds to the uncertainty.
In times like these, many people find comfort in their faith. But disasters can also challenge long-held beliefs. The CNN Belief Blog asked some prominent voices with different views on religion how they make sense of such suffering, where they see inspiration amid destruction and how they respond to people who wonder, “How could God let this happen?”
Rabbi Harold Kushner, author whose books include “When Bad Things Happen to Good People”
Whenever a disaster like this occurs, I go back to the Bible, to the First Book of Kings. Elijah, in despair over the situation in Israel, runs to the desert, back to Mt. Sinai to find the God of the Revelation to Moses.
"And lo, the Lord God passed by. There was a mighty wind, splitting mountains and shattering rocks, but the Lord was not in the wind. There was an earthquake but the Lord was not in the earthquake."
To me, that is the key: the Lord was not in the earthquake.
Natural disasters are acts of nature, not acts of God. God cares about the well-being of good people; Nature is blind, an equal-opportunity destroyer.
Where is God in Japan today? In the courage of people to carry on their lives after the tragedy. In the resilience of those whose lives have been destroyed, families swept away, homes lost, but they resolve to rebuild their lives. In the goodness and generosity of people all over the world to reach out and help strangers who live far from them, to contribute aid, to pray for them.
How can people do such things if God were not at work in them to lend a counterweight to a natural disaster?
The Rev. Tesshu Shaku, chief priest of Nyoraiji Temple, a Jodo Shinshu (True Pure Land sect of Buddhism) temple in Ikeda City, Japan
Buddhism is called a religion with no god. So we don’t think God caused this, according to the Buddhist way of thinking. We think of the law of cause and effect, searching for a cause. It is the same approach as science. The cause of this earthquake is the friction between the North American plate and the Pacific plate.
The Japanese are more focused on relationships as opposed to faith, feeling the pain of others. I have witnessed this at the time of the Hanshin Awaji earthquake. [In 1995, the Great Hanshin earthquake on the island of Awaji killed about 6,500 people.] There were many people who came to the affected area to help and volunteer.
There is a word, “earthquake children,” for people whose perspectives were affected by the disaster. They became very active in community service or became Buddhist monks. So people will be more spiritual, feeling the pains and joys of others.
The Rev. James Martin, Jesuit priest, culture editor of America magazine and author of “The Jesuit Guide to Almost Everything”
For the believer, there is no satisfactory answer for why we suffer. Each person has to come to grips with that. It’s not as if some magic answer can be found. But the idea of God suffering along with us can be very helpful.
The Christian believes that God became human and that God underwent all the things we do. Jesus on the cross cried, “My God, my God, why did you abandon me?” Christians do not have an impersonal God, but a God who understands what it means to suffer. People can relate more easily to a God who understands them.
Where is God? God is right there with the people who are grieving and sorrowful. In my own life, when I have felt great sorrow I have trusted that God is with me in this and that I’m not facing my struggles alone.
Oftentimes people become more religious in times of sorrow. They find that they are able to meet God in new ways. Why? Because when our defenses are down and we’re more vulnerable, God can break into our lives more easily. It’s not that God is closer, it’s that we’re more open.
Dr. Sayyid Syeed, national director of the Islamic Society of North America’s Office of Interfaith and Community Alliances
These sort of natural disasters become the collective responsibility of all mankind to mobilize our compassion and resources to ease the pain of the people who have suffered.
This disaster is not the result of any sins of these people; we need to be clear that there is no belief that these victims “deserved” it for any of their actions. Rather, Muslims see these kinds of tragedies as a test from God. Muslims believe that God tests those he loves, and these tragedies also serve as a reminder to the rest of us to remain grateful to God for all our blessings and cognizant that we must support those in need.
These kinds of calamities should push us in positive ways. They should strengthen our faith in God and in his goodness. We attribute the things we don’t understand to his limitless wisdom and comfort ourselves that he is with us and he loves us, so there must be some meaning in what has happened, even if it is beyond our comprehension here at this time.
We are trained by our faith that every suffering, whether big or small, brings us closer to God’s mercy and forgiveness, to the extent that the Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him) said, if you are walking and feel a thorn pierce your foot, you should know that even this little bit of pain brings you divine blessing and God’s forgiveness. These times of suffering give us an opportunity to demonstrate patience and faith, and therefore, become closer to God.
Every natural phenomenon challenges us as God’s trustees on this Earth, showing us that we should continue to study and explore ways of safeguarding humankind and all creatures from being subjected to this kind of devastation. It is the collective duty of all humankind to put resources in this and advance our understanding of how to respond to these disasters in a scientific way.
Thich Nhat Hanh, Vietnamese Buddhist monk, writer and activist who founded the Unified Buddhist Church in France, and Plum Village, a Buddhist community in exile
As we contemplate the great number of people who have died in this tragedy, we may feel very strongly that we ourselves, in some part or manner, also have died.
The pain of one part of humankind is the pain of the whole of humankind. And the human species and the planet Earth are one body. What happens to one part of the body happens to the whole body.
An event such as this reminds us of the impermanent nature of our lives. It helps us remember that what’s most important is to love each other, to be there for each other, and to treasure each moment we have that we are alive. This is the best that we can do for those who have died: We can live in such a way that they can feel they are continuing to live in us, more mindfully, more profoundly, more beautifully, tasting every minute of life available to us, for them.
Sam Harris, author of books including “The End of Faith,” and co-founder and CEO of Project Reason, dedicated to spreading scientific knowledge and secular values
Either God can do nothing to stop catastrophes like this, or he doesn’t care to, or he doesn’t exist. God is either impotent, evil, or imaginary. Take your pick, and choose wisely.
The only sense to make of tragedies like this is that terrible things can happen to perfectly innocent people. This understanding inspires compassion.
Religious faith, on the other hand, erodes compassion. Thoughts like, “this might be all part of God’s plan,” or “there are no accidents in life,” or “everyone on some level gets what he or she deserves” - these ideas are not only stupid, they are extraordinarily callous. They are nothing more than a childish refusal to connect with the suffering of other human beings. It is time to grow up and let our hearts break at moments like this.
Elizabeth Tinsley, ordained Buddhist nun and doctoral student of Buddhist culture at Otani University in Kyoto, Japan
Japanese religious life is characterized by the fusion of systems: aspects of Shinto, Buddhism and Christianity all have their place in the life of the average Japanese person, and there are numerous so-called 'new religions' too, many of which, incidentally, sprang up in the aftermath of World War II, which was another disaster (though not a natural one) for the Japanese and left great psychological scars. I expect to see an increased need for spiritual sustenance in the aftermath of the quake/tsunami.
One aspect of kami (deity) worship [in the Shinto religion] is the conception of kami as life-forces in nature which can be generative - kami of rice, of rivers, of the sun, and such. … Because of this quality [they] are equally capable of retracting their blessings and destroy.
One reason the Japanese have so many kami … is because they are so vulnerable to frequent earthquakes and typhoons, tsunami, and other extreme weather. So throughout their history they have known the ferocity and unpredictability of nature and thus have a strong relationship, often one of fear and respect, to kami. Though, perhaps this tells you something of how their geology and climate affect their religious convictions and expressions rather than how religion will relate to the earthquake/tsunami disaster.
The Rev. Franklin Graham, president and CEO of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and Samaritan's Purse, an international Christian relief organization
I don’t believe God does want this to happen. I don’t think it was ever God’s intention.
We know that there are going to be storms in life. No matter what happens we need to keep our faith and trust in almighty God. And I want the people of Japan to know that God hasn’t forgotten them, that God does care for them and that he loves them.
We care and God cares, and we’re standing by them.
CNN's Carol Costello contributed to this report