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You searched for: Age: less than 18/
PapaFoote
80, Male, Michigan, USA - 193 entries
22
Jul 2012
12:34 PM EST
Good Thinking from The Sisters!
http://www.npr.org/2012/07/17/156858223/an-american-nun-responds-to-vatican-condemnation?ft=3#commentBlock
I like to see and hear good thinking - especially, from "Sisters"!
-The Old Goat-
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RonPrice
80, Male, Canada - 60 entries
22
Jul 2012
4:27 AM AEST
MEMORIZING: The Major and Minor Leagues
The Anatomy of Influence: Literature as a Way of Life
is a new book by Harold Bloom.
1
Bloom at 82 is, arguably, the most famous American literary critic; he is also the Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University
.
Bloom says that his theory of literature
“
was the offshoot of his own reading habits, principally his freakish capacity for memorization.
He discovered this ability to memorize in childhood, and it never left him. In the early 1960s, after hearing the prolific American poet W. S. Merwin’s poem
Departure’s Girl-Friend
, a poem of some 40 lines, he was able to repeat it verbatim.� “Even now,” he says, “I possess almost all of the poetry of one of my favorite poets, Hart Crane, by memory.”
The ability to grasp poetry in this way is rare but not unprecedented. Bloom’s hero, the English author Samuel Johnson(1709-1784), had this ability as well. “His memory was so tenacious,” Boswell writes in his great biography of Johnson, “that he never forgot anything that he either heard or read.” �One of Johnson’s schoolmates remembers having recited to him 18 verses which, after a little pause, he was able to repeat, varying only one epithet, by which he improved the line.”
The scientific study of memory is part of cognitive neuroscience, an interdisciplinary link between cognitive psychology and neuroscience. Some principles and techniques that have been used to assist in memorization include: rote learning, mnemonics, mnemonics link systems, peg systems, cramming, vedic chants, and oral traditions.-Ron Price with thanks to
1
Sam Tanenhaus,
Harold Bloom: An Uncommon Reader
, �in
The New York Times
, May 20, 2011.
I had a good memory as a student
in primary and high school & was
able to go to the top of my class...,
but I was not in your league, Mr…
Bloom or Mr Johnson……I had to
work to get that information & facts
into my brain for future use usually
in exams: 99% perspiration and 1%
inspiration.� I am in a minor league,
a minor poet but, as the years went on
and my interests widened, I was able to
develop an architecture of information
in which to place a burgeoning quantity
of details as I headed through the stages
of adulthood and into old-age and its 3
phases: 65-74, 75-85 and beyond, if I
last that long!
Ron Price
26 June 2012
�
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PapaFoote
80, Male, Michigan, USA - 193 entries
22
Jul 2012
10:33 AM EST
Try Again - To Be Better!
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/22/joe-paterno-statue-penn-state_n_1692683.html?igoogle=1
For my own "thinking" of "monuments", and any other "memorabilia's", they should always be "left" as a "reminder" - as it looks to be like this one will probably be able to be "remembered" too! It's important to "remember" both the "good" and the "bad" - so "we" can "try again" to be better!
-The Old Goat-
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PapaFoote
80, Male, Michigan, USA - 193 entries
22
Jul 2012
10:29 AM EST
Again, Again, and Again!
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/07/22/colorado-shooter-james-holmes-family-history-goes-back-to-the-mayflower.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=cheatsheet_morning&cid=newsletter%3Bemail%3Bcheatsheet_morning&utm_term=Cheat+Sheet
I guess this "paragraph" needs" to be remembered - "AGAIN", "AGAIN", and "AGAIN" in this article, and other-ways!
-The Old Goat-
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snorkelinglover
69, Female, California, USA - 2 entries
22
Jul 2012
4:39 PM
opportunities
I love the Sir Francis Bacon quote. Life will point the way to new opportunities if one is sensitive, prayerful, maintain a positive spirit. I am trying to forge new paths-- Susan, a single mom raising three teen daughters, two with heart transplants, divorced this August... I've been dealt some tough blows, but have been introduced to incredible people
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RonPrice
80, Male, Canada - 60 entries
21
Jul 2012
4:59 AM AEST
THE OLD TESTAMENT and ME
Note: I have tired to edit-out all the capitalization, but could not figure-out how to do it.-Ron
----------------------------------------------
The
Hebrew Bible
, called
The Old Testament
by Christians, is an extraordinarily difficult sequence of books.
1
This difficulty, too easily underestimated, is greater now than it ever was, partly because no contemporary reader, however specialized, shares in the psychology of the original readers and writers of
The Bible.
The first millennium in which anyone read any of the words in any of the books from 1000 B.C. to the time of Christ or, perhaps more accurately, 600 B.C. to 400 A.D.
2
�
My first memories of
The
Old Testament
come from
Bible
readings in grade six when I was 11 and my mother reading passages from little booklets from the Unity School of Christianity as early as the mid-1950s. �Although some of the quotations had a broad ethical appeal to me even as a boy in my late childhood and early teens, I found the stories abstruse and distant: goats, sheep, tribes, and curious names like Balthazar and Nebuchadnezzar. They all occupied another universe far removed from my little town of 5000 in Ontario in that post-WW2 world of the 1950s. This distance existed then, as it does now, nearly 60 years later.
My individual understanding of
The Bible
, my biblical interpretations, rely primarily at the age of nearly 70 on my experience of nearly 60 years of intimate association with the Baha’i Faith. My interpretations and those of the Baha’i teachings are provocative, if nothing else.� But I have always found there to be a vast distance from the psychic universe of the biblical writers beginning as early as, say, 900 B.C.
2
and the contemporary society that is my world. I know I have lots of company; indeed I rarely meet anyone who actually reads
The Old Testament
any more.
However abstruse the language of biblical prophecy and eschatology, the prophets of
The Old Testament
, I believe, were given a foreknowledge of the events of our times in their visions, visions which I’m sure they hardly understood themselves.� �Still, there lies a sure presentation of the times we are living-through, as long as one does not take those prophecies literally.
Yahweh's choice of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and their descendants as part of the Chosen People story was a permanent decision, intended to prevail into a time without boundaries, into our time.-Ron Price with thanks to
1
Harold Bloom, “Prose and Poetry,” in
The New York Times
, 17 October, 1982: a review of Dan Jacobson’s
THE STORY OF THE STORIES: The Chosen People and Its God
, and
2
the final editor, or redactor, after the return from the Babylonian Exile in the 6
th
century BC, put all the books of
The Old Testament
into something like their present form.
3
When this review appeared in
1
The New York Times
I had just
arrived in Australia’s Northern
Territory & the heat of summer
was just beginning to make me
run for cover to air-conditioning �
in my office, my home & the cool
air of the car....The Old Testament �
was on my universe’s far-periphery.
�
There it had always been in heat and
cold since those first stories when I
was in grade six in that little town in
Ontario’s Golden Horseshoe where
everyone I knew was Catholic or Jew
or Protestant, or nothing; yes, mostly
nothing and there they have remained
with that Old Testament far removed
from everyone’s everyday life. Still…
�
I have time now to try to get into it in
this the evening of my life; �however
complex and abstruse it may be, I want
to make-up for the decades when it had
to remain far out on my life’s periphery.
1
Harold Bloom, “Prose and Poetry,” in
The New York Times
,
17 October, 1982: a review of Dan Jacobson’s
THE STORY OF THE STORIES: The Chosen People and Its God.
3
See Frank Kermode, “God Speaks Through His Women,” in
The New York Times,
23 September 1990: a review of Harold Bloom’s
The Book of J.
Ron Price
5 July 2012
�
�
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- 05:03 AM - 07/21/2012
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RonPrice
80, Male, Canada - 60 entries
21
Jul 2012
4:49 AM AEST
A MINOR PLAYER WITH TOO MUCH TO READ
David Halberstam(1934-2007) arrived in Vietnam in the middle of 1962 to be a full-time Vietnam specialist for The New York Times. I was an 18 year old matriculation student in Ontario at the time and hoped to get into an arts degree program in 1963; I knew nothing of Halberstam. I also began my travelling-pioneering for the Canadian Bahai community in that year. I did not come to read Halberstam until I retired after a 50 year student-working life: 1949-1999. In the first decade of my retirement from FT work, 1999 to 2009, I began to read a host of essayists that I never had time to read in my working life as a teacher and tutor, lecturer and adult educator.
My reading-and-teaching load as well as my responsibilities as a member of the Bahai community, as a parent of three children, as a volunteer for various associations from the Lions Club to the Rec Cross, to say nothing of the inevitable social responsibilities that come from family and community activity also kept me far away from the major and famous essayists in the last half of the 20th century. Halberstam was always about a dozen years ahead of me, having graduated as he did in 1955 with an arts degree from Harvard University. I graduated in 1967 with a similar degree and so began my 60+ hour weeks involved as I indicated above until my retirement.
I wont tell you about Halberstams working life, nor mine other than to say: his literary life was highly distinguished. He wrote many books and received: (i) the Norman Mailer Prize in 2009 for Distinguished Journalism, and (ii) the Pulitzer Prize in 1964 for International Reporting.-Ron Price, Wikipedia, 7 July 2012. I read what I had to all through my primary, secondary, & post- secondary education: 1949-1967.
My interests began to fly at uni, but there were always so many books that had to get read if one wanted to pass & go to the next stage: & that was the way it was until I became a permanent flier in my role as a college teacher in several schools and universities in the continent of Australia: 1974-99. But I was & never will be in the race with people like Halberstam. I found my niche in the years: 1974 to 2012, but it was always a niche tangentially connected with so many other things in life that I will remain a minor poet, a minor player in the publishing game. On the internet ones writing gets lost among 380 million sites, and 2 billion players: time found in nanoseconds!!! Ron Price 7 July 2012
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PapaFoote
80, Male, Michigan, USA - 193 entries
21
Jul 2012
8:47 AM EST
FOLKS from the BOTTOM to the TOP need it to WORK!
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/21/us/politics/in-black-liquor-a-cautionary-tale-for-deficit-reduction.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120721
Dear Reader
,
Just a short memo about "Tax Holes", and any other "Tricky" way around the "Truth" or the "Good Intent" that "Leaders" use to get around "Corners" - their is NO WAY, if you want to be HONEST!
This means YOU, and ME, as well as the LEADERS - their is NO WAY, if anyone wants to be HONEST -
remember, it takes the FOLKS from the BOTTOM to the TOP to make it WORK!
-The Old Goat-
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NoDeadenz
22, Male, New York, USA - 84 entries
20
Jul 2012
1:04 PM CST
Busted disgusted and cant be trusted
. Thought�u respected me clearly not the case. All�the innuendos about sex proved to me thats what you were after all along. I hate men who treat me like an object. I told him from jump I aint fucking nobody outside of my marriage. he did that same shit larry did. I dont understand men who dont get no means no. So what he offered to eat my pussy! I have told him on several occasions what my stance is no comprising period. He claims he is a christian not so, a christ like man wouldnt tell me to tempt god or sin "because he will forgive me." that shit is crazy god is not� a freaking joke nor should I sin believing he will forgive what if after the act I die and go to hell. perhaps that seems extreme but it is possible. As i told him Iam not perfect I just want to live what I say, dont want to stand in the way of sinners. What have I got myself into? He hung up on me when I told him I was going to church versus spending time with him and his kids whom I dont particularly care for. He also claims he wants to marry me that is just game to get him closer to his goal which is to have sex with me. Iam not going for any bullshit. I would rather be alone than live a lie and be a hypocrite. I told him several time who I was and what I stand for. he would like me to forget that Iam married. Regardless of the fact that were not totally together john is still my husband. I dont have a right to give curtis something that doesnt belong to me, I made a vow to god til death and unless i definitivley decide to get a divorce Iam going to live a life void of sex. Except for with my husband of course.
spent the night was too tired to get up and did it just to pacify him. didnt want to hear all that fucking wining like a bitch, what kind of godly man wants you to desert your first love and sin instead crazy. Since I met him havent been going to church as much, got to get back to where I was. He claims he wants to marry me but in truth I dont want to marry again. I am not healed nor do I have closure. John and I are suppose to be reconciling according to him, that is. If he� were aware of how I am hiding my true thoughts he would probably shc.
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PapaFoote
80, Male, Michigan, USA - 193 entries
20
Jul 2012
8:58 AM EST
Try Again!
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/22/arts/design/bronx-river-now-flows-by-parks.html?pagewanted=3&hp
One of my "family" just sent this article to me - now, I need to send "others" that want to take the time too "thoughtfully think"! Then, if you want to "care", just "try again" - it's only two "choices" that you need to balance out, "care" or "not care"! -The Old Goat-
From a paragraph of the article:
"... The transformation has involved an alphabet soup of public entities and local organizations like Rocking the Boat, Sustainable South Bronx, Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice, Partnership for Parks and the Bronx River Alliance.
The Bloomberg administration has made the project a special priority.
The South Bronx illustrates how government, although it can be obstructionist and infuriating, is also indispensable to urban improvement.
Different federal administrations have mandated cooperation by often competing agencies.
Dozens of community groups have subordinated their own pet interests to cleaning the river and creating parks..."
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