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Linking up with Wordless Wednesday, Keith, Catsynth, and Sandee at Comedy Plus.
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Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and has become a moveable feast of word or picture or music prompts to encourage us to write stories, poems, or whatever strikes our fancy.
This month the words/prompts are supplied by Sean Jeating and they will appear on River's blog.
This week's words/prompts are:
1. absolution
2.Auschwitz
3.love
4. resistance
5.without
and/or:
1. dancing
2.dreams
3.ears
4. eyes
5.talking
use either list or both, or mix and match, just have fun.
Charlotte's colour of the month is Carmine.
DANCING was one of the DREAMS for my life. To be on stage or dance the tango in a Carmine dress at a championship contest, it was what I hoped for and worked toward.
Then came the accident.
It truly was an accident, his brakes failed although he'd had his vehicle serviced regularly. "One of those things," which can happen without warning.
It left me with EARS which can hear, EYES which can see, and a mouth that can do plenty of TALKING, hands which can do whatever I need to do, and feet which can walk with a cane, but my dancing days were done.
Many of us who go to church learn God's LOVE is WITHOUT limit, He forgives those who ask and let His love change their hearts, and forgiveness is a blessing, one we give ourselves as much as the other person.
In the immediate aftermath I felt such anger and I wondered why, as others have been through so much more, and those things done much more deliberately. It's not like he's a Nazi asking a Jew for ABSOLUTION for AUSCHWITZ. He didn't mean it, and he was horrified it happened at all and would have taken it back if he could have.
But at first, I refused to forgive, then I realized my refusal was standing in the way of my own healing.
There's an experiment scientists did with a gadget which pushed a person's hand with a certain amount of force, and then they asked the person to push it back with the same amount of RESISTANCE, as closely as they could.
No one could do it. Every person, even the experimenters who knew the results and tried not to, pushed back harder than they had been pushed.
It's normal, it's what we do, seeing what the other did as worse than what we ourselves have done. In light of it, the Mosaic Covenant laws which say, "eye for eye and tooth for tooth" are a good limit, so no one takes vengeance beyond their own hurt.
Forgiving doesn't mean he and I become buddies. It doesn't mean what he did doesn't matter even if it was truly an accident. It means I leave any question of punishment which might be due up to God Almighty, who knows better than I do just how much to push back.
It means I take my hands off his throat in my own mind and if he learns from it to love God and ask forgiveness and his heart is changed, and then we end up together praising God in eternity, then so much the better for both of us.
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It's National Hugging Day™, which includes the announcement of the Most Huggable Person of the Year. National Hugging Day was established, among other reasons, to encourage consensual hugging for better mental health.
This year's Most Huggable Person is Rev. Dr. Michael B Beckwith of Agape Spiritual Center in Beverly Hills, California. He is the founder and spiritual director of Agape, which is a transdenominational community that aims to promote life, peace and positive influence. He is an active hugger and has grown to be a positive supporter of National Hugging Day.
Thanks to Barb Kowalik and The Cat Blogosphere for the event badge.
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Today is:
Celtic Tree Month Luis (Rowan) begins
Errol Barrow Day -- Barbados
International Bon Jovi Day -- they released their first album this date in 1983
Lady of Altagracia Day -- Dominican Republic
National Hugging Day™ -- includes the announcements of the Most Huggable People of the Year
New England Clam Chowder Day
Quebec Flag Day -- Quebec, Canada
Squirrel Appreciation Day -- sponsored by Christy Hargrove of the Western North Carolina Nature Center
St. Agnes' Day (Patron of betrothed couples, bodily purity/chastity, crops, gardeners, Girl Scouts, girls, rape victims, virgins; the Colegio Capranica of Rome; Manresa, Spain; Rockville Centre, NY)
St. Meinrad of Einsiedeln's Day (Patron of hospitality; Einsiedeln, Switzerland; Swabia, Germany)
Anniversary Today:
Kiwanis International is founded in Detroit, 1915
Birthdays Today:
Robby Benson, 1956
Geena Davis, 1956
Billy Ocean, 1960
Jill Eikenberry, 1947
Mac Davis, 1942
Placido Domingo, 1941
Jack Nicklaus, 1940
Wolfman Jack, 1939
Benny Hill, 1925
Telly Savalas, 1924
Benny Hill, 1924
Paul Scofield, 1922
Barney Clark, 1921
Karl Wallenda, 1905
Christian Dior, 1905
Roger Nash Baldwin, 1884
John M. Browning, 1855
Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, 1824
Ethan Allen, 1738
Debuting/Premiering Today:
"The Kid"(Film), 1921
"The Daily News"(first issue, edited by Charles Dickens), 1848
"Power of Sympathy"(publication date of WH Brown's novel, considered the first American novel), 1789
Today in History:
Philip II, Henry II, and Richard the Lionheart initiate the 3rd Crusade, 1189
The Swiss Anabaptist Movement is founded, 1525
The first American novel, WH Brown's "Power of Sympathy," is published, 1789
After being found guilty of treason by the French Convention, Louis XVI of France is executed by guillotine, 1793
Edward Jenner's smallpox vaccination is introduced, 1799
The envelope-folding machine is patented by Russell Hawes, Worcester, Massachusetts, 1853
The first US sewage disposal system that is separate from storm drains opens in Memphis, Tennessee, 1880
The first slalom ski race is run in Murren, Switzerland, 1922
The Flag of Quebec is adopted and flown for the first time over the National Assembly of Quebec, 1948
A B-52 bomber crashes near Thule Air Base, contaminating the area after its nuclear payload ruptures. One of the four bombs remains unaccounted for after the cleanup operation is complete, 1968
The current Emley Moor transmitting station, the tallest free-standing structure in the United Kingdom, begins transmitting UHF broadcasts, 1971
Commercial service of Concorde begins with the London-Bahrain and Paris-Rio routes, 1976
Production of the iconic DeLorean DMC-12 sports car begins in Dunmurry, Northern Ireland, 1981
NASA's MER-A (the Mars Rover Spirit) ceases communication with mission control. The problem lies in the management of its flash memory and is fixed remotely from Eart, 2004
Black Monday in worldwide stock markets. FTSE 100 had its biggest ever one-day points fall, European stocks closed with their worst result since 11 September 2001, and Asian stocks drop as much as 14%, 2008
The Eyak language in Alaska becomes extinct as its last native speaker dies, 2008
LA Lakers forward Kobe Bryant becomes the youngest NBA player to reach 25,000 career points at 31 years, 151 days, beating Wilt Chamberlain by 35 days, 2010
Gambian Dictator Yahya Jammeh finally concedes office and leaves Gambia 2 months after losing the presidential election, 2018
The journal Nature Communications reports a study of the world's oldest known meteor impact from an estimated 2.2 billion years ago in Yarrabilba, Western Australia, implicating the impact in the ending of an ice age at that time, 2020
Tara VanDerveer, age 70, becomes the winningest college basketball coach with her 1,203rd victory as Stanford University defeats the Oregon State Beavers, 65-56, 2024
The US experiences a deep freeze, with snow in the deep south, the first ever blizzard warnings in Louisiana and Texas, and record snowfalls in those areas, 2025



















