Tuesday, December 07, 2010

THINKING POSITIVELY

THINKING POSITIVELY
with thanks to wayne dyer

****

Excuse: It will be difficult.


Try This Affirmation:
I have the ability to accomplish any task I set my mind to with ease and comfort.


Excuse: It will take a long time.



Try This Affirmation: I have infinite patience when it comes to fulfilling my destiny.



Excuse: I don’t deserve it.



Try This Affirmation: I am a Divine creation, a piece of God. Therefore, I cannot be undeserving.



Excuse: I can’t afford it.



Try This Affirmation:
I am connected to an unlimited source of abundance.



Excuse: I’m not strong enough.



Try This Affirmation:
I have access to unlimited assistance. My strength comes from my connection to my Source of being.



Excuse: I’m too busy.



Try This Affirmation:
As I unclutter my life, I free myself to answer the callings of my soul.



Excuse: I’m too scared.




Try This Affirmation: I can accomplish anything I put my mind to, because I know that I am never alone.








"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

HOW you look at things


the first thing is
about life
its perspective
HOW you look at things
affirmations work wonders
as long as you believe them
and negative inner dialog tears you down
in ways no one else ever could
so how you look at things matter more than we suspect as we breathe in and out ...
each moment ... what we input
is then experssed in how we live the next moments


Manifestation

yes there is bug spray for that but it rarely works

hahahaha
everything begins with a thought, Choose the good ones

so how you look at it
matters
and what you put into your brain matters
which brings us to entertainment
and what qualifies as entertainment
nonetheless... we humans need it how ever one defines it
and we like to imagine that exciting things are going on all around us... it makes us feel important and vital and part of something bigger
when actually sitting still and feeling God's present in you... is just as helpful and healing
so for example.... in reality, life is like
the Mississippi river
wide and slow and boring
but we take our cameras to the water's edge
and zoom in
and then it looks like things are really happening now....eh?
even the boring and bored have to admit it looks cool when things get blowed up... for example
we worry about sharks
very few die of sharks and snakes
we don't worry about car accidents
we die ... lots of us every day in cars
boring
not that's what I call something about everything




I worry about cars and not sharks...
does this make me odd





well lets say not the majority




I find entertainment in the obscure and the simple




its how you look at it
voila




I find beauty in pretty much everything i see



Perspective - Use It or Lose It. If you turned to this page, you're forgetting that what is going on around you is not reality. Think about that says Richard Bach











"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

a glass half full kind of guy






I struggle

I try to laugh and I take things to seriously
I care deeply and don't give a f*ck too quickly

bittersweet

I love her but I hate her
I believe in love
I am love
but I can't achieve the love I crave
try to be the giver
and find the truth is I want to take
try to take and find no pleasure in taking
only giving
I struggle to find God
I am a child of God
I am never alone
always lonely
I am angry
and I am not very quick to anger
I am taught to love my enemies
to share the truth
to be a good man
to be honest
and to love God with all my heart
and I fail everyday
and ask forgiveness
and start again
a simple man
a glass half full
kind of guy













"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

mixtape


the pic is from my days in the band QUEEN...
to inspire your choices...


Your mixtape should be ten tracks long and consist of five tracks on each "side".
Side ‘A’ should represent the positive, happy bits.
Side ‘B’ should represent the not so happy bits, but end on a good note.
Songs can be by any artist.
You can choose whether or not to explain your song choices.
When you are finished, post and tag friends whose mixtapes you want to hear!

SIDE ‘A’
Track one: a song that you think represents your life/view on life at present. Unbreakable by Katrina Elam
Track two: a song that makes you think of your favorite person at present. September Grass by James Taylor
Track three: a song that represents your love life at present. Runaround by Blues Traveler
Track four: a song that always cheers you up. Big Chance by Patty Loveless
Track five: a song that you will always associate with a good memory. All You Need Is Love by The Beatles
SIDE ‘B’
Track one: a song that makes you think of your least favorite person past or present. She *ing Hates Me by Puddle Of Mud
Track two: a song that represents your love life in the past 1-5 years. Beautiful Wreck by Shawn Mullins
Track three: a song you love, but can’t listen to without feeling sad. One Moment More by Mindy Smith
Track four: a song that you will always associate with a negative memory. Jenny Jenny 867-5390 by Tommy Tutone
Track five: a song that inspires you to power through the bad and make the most of life. A Step Away by the Lonesome River Band
BONUS TRACKS: song(s) I'd make you listen to if you had to learn about ME in a song (and I didn't already list it)
Come Down To Me by Saving Jane
Beyond the Sea by Bobby Darrin


**I would never put Tommy Tutone on a play list I intended to listen to more than 3 times...I got a ticket while hearing that song.

If you're curious about song choices, feel free to ask.













"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

another duck joke

A man walks into a bar with a metal box under one arm and a duck under the other. The man walks up to the bar and asks the bar tender "if you give me a free bottle of beer I'll show you my dancing duck". The barman is surprised, but gives the guy a bud and asks the bloke to show him the duck dancing. So the guy puts the metal box on the bar, and stands the duck on top of it. A few seconds later the duck starts to jump around, as if he's doing an Irish jig. Everyone in the bar is now watching this duck dancing, and the barman offers the guy $50 for the duck and the box. The bloke accepts, and the pub is filled day and night for 3 days with people watching the amazing dancing duck. So 3 days after he sold the barman the duck, the guy walks back in to the pub and sees his duck dancing on the box on top of the bar. The barman sees the guy and offers him a bottle of bud on the house. As he gives the guy the bud, the barman asks, "Could you tell me how you stop the duck from dancing on top of the box?" The man replies, "Oh that's easy, you just take the hot coals out."



"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Pong Ball




Long before there was such a thing as Calvin Ball(R), and when there just wasn’t a nice enough day for curb-ball, my brother and I played baseball in the basement of our house, using a ping-pong ball and ping-pong paddle.

Of course, curb-ball was limited not only to nice days, but summer vacation. In it, we would use a rubber ball and the curb in front of our house. One person would be the batter and the fielder would position themselves across the street. The batter would bounce the ball against the curb, in an effort to get it past the fielder. We had scoring setup for all different scenarios, angles, where it landed, whether or not we caught it and even had little scorecards designed by yours truly.

However, to waste the hours of the fall, winter and long early spring that dominated the skies of Allen Park, Michigan, we played baseball in the confines of our home. The entire basement was forty feet long by twenty feet wide. At the bottom of the stairs leading down from the kitchen, to our immediate right, was the laundry area. It took up a small ten foot by ten foot area that consisted of a washer, dryer, two ironing boards and lots of hanger space. Eventually, our father built some closets to house some of the clothes we weren’t wearing during whatever season it was.

Beside that area, also on the right side, was our father’s workshop area. He was always driving us places, looking for rocks or boards. We had a large rock garden on the front lawn. It included sixteen railroad ties, which bordered the entire garden. There were a few cacti, some dry-bed flowers and the rest was rocks of varying sizes, shapes and colors. Dad would be driving home from a bowling night, or giving a sermon to some of the poorer of our neighborhood. He’d spy a rock in the headlights, and simply would have to stop and grab that stone.

One time, while he had a brick-red Cadillac, he spotted a particularly iridescent rock that he thought would look perfect at the front of the garden. He hauled it into his trunk and drove home. In the morning, after he remembered the thing, he went out to the trunk, opened it up and discovered he couldn’t lift the thing out! He enlisted the help of his two sons, Mr. Maximovic and Mr. Gillum, our across-the-street neighbors. With ropes, boards and a lot of grunting, we got that darned rock out. All the while, the neighbors were wondering how in the heck he had gotten the rock picked up in the first place, let alone plopped into his trunk. Later, he would admit during retelling that he must have been drunk at the time. Horrors! A drunk minister?

Anyway, one day, we were all driving along in the countryside of nowhere-Michigan, when he spotted a broken-down barn in the middle of an unused field. He pulled the car to the side of the road and strode into the field, his two young sons frolicking along behind him. His wife, our mother, decided to stay in the car for this little jaunt. We brought back board after board of beaten-up and weathered barn, eventually stuffing the boards into the trunk and using twine to fasten the lid down so the wood wouldn’t spill out.

Around the spot where Dad kept his main thrill in life - his upright jigsaw complete with safety boards and goggles - he built his own little barn. The boards we’d stolen from that field in broad daylight became the foundation for his own little home away from home. Inside those walls, he could build whatever his heart desired. I really don’t recall anything he did build, but that doesn’t really matter, does it? The door couldn’t just be another board. Oh no. It was custom-made by someone other than him though. It was just like those swing-doors you always saw in the western movies that were the main entrance to any saloon that dotted the wild west. Yes, we had saloon doors, barn wood walls and our own little (large) jigsaw puzzle maker in the basement.

Since my father was always a Methodist minister when we were growing up - and mom was always an elementary-school teacher - there was always someone home. One of my father’s greatest passions was writing. He used to have a smallish desk that had myriad drawers from pencil-sized to file-cabinet-sized designed to hold everything from erasers to old typewriters. In fact, his prized possession during most of my life was an old typewriter, black and difficult to use, unless you sat perfectly upright directly in front of it - and you had big strong hands that could effectively punch those keys hard enough to strike the paper held in the roller.

Very soon after we moved in to the house, my father brought home a very large purchase: a pool table. He’d always wanted one and look - here it was! We had to take the entire thing apart though. And when we got one section to the bottom of the stairs and turned to the right...it wouldn’t fit through the door! So we had to remove the door frame, the overhead tiles, everything, just to get it into the basement. As I remember it now, I think there was enough of that barn left over to panel the far left wall of the basement. Hanging from that wall, in the far corner, was a stuffed deer head, a strong eight-point buck, which overlooked the pool table.

Now, in the left corner as one peered at it from the bottom of the steps, was our little play area. My brother and I had a small record player, long before something was called a “stereo”. It had a top that opened on hinges and we’d play one of our fifteen records on it whenever it was raining outside. We had The Chipmunks, The Partridge Family and The Cowsills, I recall. We also had a fold-up ping-pong table. It was our happiest possession growing up in that house.

My brother is twenty months older than I am. After we tired of ping-pong, we invented our own version of baseball. First, the ping-pong table had to be folded up, rolled over to the laundry-room side of the basement and most breakables covered or shoved into the drawers of our father’s desk. There was a ten-foot by ten-foot rug on the floor in some kind of Oriental pattern. We also had a rug that was basically one spiral of thick cord material wound round and round, that we’d push under the pool table, to give us plenty of room.

I recall the first few games where we’d pretend there was a strike zone. Then my brother got our father’s permission to use white chalk on his precious barn board to make the actual strike zone. For us, it was about eighteen inches off the floor, as wide as a standard-sized baseball home plate and as tall as the ‘letters’ of our ‘uniforms’. Of course, we didn’t have real uniforms, but we both knew where the letters were. Growing up just outside of Detroit, we loved, even lived and died with, the Tigers. But we also had National League teams we loved. My friend Todd Gillum, who was one year younger and lived directly across the street, loved the Cincinnati Reds.

My brother Joel was an L.A. Dodger fan. That left me rooting for the Pittsburgh Pirates. If there had been a team way back then with purple in their uniform, I’d have chosen them. But black-and-yellow was the farthest thing from Dodger Blue I could get. We’d attend baseball games at old Tiger Stadium at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull. With money we’d earned through chores and weekly allowances, we’d each purchased our own ‘batting helmet’ which was basically just made out of breakable plastic. But back then, we didn’t know better.

I was always the scorekeeper. Once I learned how to do it correctly, nobody else could ever tell me I was doing it wrong. My brother and I started fantasy baseball way back then, without even realizing that what we were doing would become a national phenomenon. We’d have our own little draft of players from around both leagues and create our own teams. Neither of us could be the Tigers, of course, because to allow one brother to be the favorite team, would only upset the other brother.

So Joel’s Dodgers might have one or two actual Dodger players on it, but usually had whoever else he wanted. My Pirates team had more American League players on it than Nationals. We’d draft based on a huge list of players we all followed. I had Roberto Clemente one year and he had Hank Aaron. It wasn’t as if these were our actual players and we’d use their game-by-game stats from actual games played. In fact, during the winter, we’d have no actual statistics to use. No, we’d assemble our team and I’d write up the scorecards for each team, for each game we’d play in the basement.

My brother stood as far away as he could, which was about twenty feet, and he’d practice throwing the ping-pong ball at the target - our chalk outline of the strike zone. He’d throw while I drew up the scorecard, complete with columns for each inning, and the totals at the end - runs, hits, errors. When I was ready, he’d let me bat first. As I recall even now, my brother had a wicked curve. It would come right at my head and I’d duck out of the way. But he’d throw it hard enough to leave a little mark on the wall and we could both see he’d hit the strike zone.

“Strike one,” he’d call out with glee. I would dig in and grit my teeth, anxious for the next pitch. The orange rubber side of the ping-pong paddle was my favorite. My brother preferred the red, smooth side of the paddle. Maybe he did it just to be different, I don’t know. We were great competitors even in our youth. But being only twenty months apart in age gave us a lot of closeness in our formative years. My brother’s curve ball was more like what they call a slider these days. It felt like a fastball, especially when I’d stand in there and “take one for the team”. But when it dipped down into or just out of the strike zone and I’d swing at it, it truly curved.


Here’s a typical game. I’m batting, right-handed usually for the right-handers in my lineup and I’d switch to back-handed for the left-handed batters. If I got my ‘bat’ on the ball, and it stayed within the foul lines, we’d assess whether or not it would have been fielded by one of his players. Eventually, we’d put down bright yellow masking tape to mark the foul lines. My brother even added a bit of tape out there at the twenty-foot mark for the pitcher’s “rubber”. I recall having tile ceiling with fluorescent light tubes interspersed throughout the basement, lighting the entire place.

If I got the ball past him, it would be considered anything from a double to a home-run, depending on where it had gone. Also, we were required to “run the bases” which we decided based on marks around the basement. The record-player was first-base. The ping-pong table behind the pitcher’s mound was second-base. The pool table was third-base. If I got to second before my brother retrieved the ball, I’d get to say Roberto was on second, as Brooks Robinson was up to bat. He’d even intentionally walk some of my sluggers, to setup a double-play combination. If I were to hit a ground-ball directly to him, he would call out “double-play” and both my runners would be out, possibly ending the inning.

I think the best home-runs were those where we lost the ping-pong ball! But we always had a spare. If he could field where I’d hit it, it would be an out. Most of the outs on my side of the game were strikeouts. Most of his were bouncers that would hit me in the gut or hands. The sound of the ball striking the wood behind the batter would give our mother fits upstairs. But she let us play, day after day, without once complaining of the sound. We ran the bases, switched sides for batting and pitching and in-between each at-bat, I’d go to the scorebook and write down what had happened.

When it was my turn to pitch, I was allowed to move up closer, because I wasn’t that consistent with getting it to the plate, let alone over it! I had my own wicked curve ball. I learned how to throw from my brother’s teachings. All you have to do is snap your wrist and the thing breaks about a foot down if you throw it overhand. Of course, I couldn’t throw nearly as hard as my brother, so he’d be hitting just about anything I pitched. But he was an erratic batter, so not a lot of his hits were in-play.

Sometimes, we’d hear our mother turn up the television louder, or the piano would get a little more adamant in its key-strokes. She’d be my father’s accompaniment at church on Sundays, until he finally got a qualified organist to take over one year. A ballgame would typically end our day. But there were the rare days when we’d take the entire afternoon and play a doubleheader. I think we played pong-ball more often than actual ping-pong. As far as I can recall, we never broke one lamp, one lightbulb or any of my parents’ collection of antique red glass bowls.




...thanks to my brother Greg for writing this






"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Friday, January 30, 2009

It Felt Good, You Said

the body language says it all right?
survey says
not that into Me
so fine...
fine, I'm not at my best just now
even fate doesn't change
so quickly
what this hurt has nurtured

words are now strange harsh sounds
like a foreign language
I never planned to learn.

but what else is there to do
when its "never, for right now"
some kind of twisted torture every night
what you had and what you lost
until through some grace or mercy
sleep overtakes the insanity
until it starts again sweetly in half light
over coffee, in forgiveness and newness
I want to say such sweet things to you

until you push away again
and I sink into spiteful, hateful diatribes
that take me farther out of town
when I wanted to be closer
and throw away to strangers

what I treasured

what I lost

as I sink into the skin of the devil
Damn
How you Stir Me
It felt good, you said
and you don't want more.





1/3/09





Current mood: creative


"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Sunday, December 28, 2008

16 random things


1)Writing makes me happy in general... getting something written that moves people; from comedy to poems to stories to commercials.
2) baseball makes me fell most LIKE ME... takes me to a place that is peaceful and good for my head and body
3) kissing rocks I like to think about kissing all the time
4) romance... I love the idea of my chest as if fills with passion and the sound I make when I say mmmmmmmmmmmmmm
5) music I LOVE MUSIC all kinds it affects me emotionally and physically
6) I love to google and read song lyrics
7) work - getting work doen and getting ahead at work feels good
8) sleeping late... I am a pillow pig... and Love to sleep in
9) making ppl laugh in general .. telling a joke or funny story
10) eating ice cream donuts or cheesecake IS a reason for living another day
11) puppies and kittens make me smile ... well, duh!? remember to inject some in your life from time to time
12) filet mignon rocks
13) you can't throw your fastball by Me - you can try but you will never get it by me.
14) stubborn? yeah... I define stubborn
15) God spoke to me once... and asked me to "Love your enemies" wow, go try that sometime.
16) facebook is a current addiction... but I'm sure sex will cure that.



"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Monday, December 08, 2008

I could be well-er if I was with you

I could be well-er if I was with you
Current mood: smitten


roses are red
violets are blue
she smiles in sweetness
when she smiles
like she do

she's busy you see
and she's got all these things
she's humming, only
the song that SHE sings

still that's fine and that's good
she's HER after all and...
that's all that she should

not always in laughter
not always on top
not always so willing
to listen or
stop

things you can count on ?
there are few, if there's any
with perspective we see though
the blessings are many

like roses are red
and violets are blue
or her being her
and that smile that she do

cute Pictures, Images and Photos





"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

backstage? center stage? what do I deserve?

Where is the reason to be good? What's the point?

Hey lets look at this way.... I am a good guy and I deserve good things to happen to Me...

if I fill a blog with how I really really REALLY REALLLLLLLLLLLY need and want something will it come true?

is that creative visualization? Who can judge whether I deserve "backstage passes" or even to be "centerstage" in any stage of life.

How about the word --> Deserve?

who deserves good things?

Good Things Happen to Bad People too, right?

Life isn't always fair ... you've heard that, I'm sure.

Sometimes the news is bad and we are outraged.

Philip Yancey quoted a man who had endured Job-like suffering as saying, "You can't confuse God with life." Our life here on earth is imperfect. Tragedy happens. The bad guys sometimes win. The world is not just, but God is. God will deal with the wicked: "

So, when we speak of "good things" happening to bad people, we often mean material reward, achievement, worldly success. And if you think about it, dwelling on others' good things diminishes what God's given me."

A pastor and his wife lose six children in a fiery car crash, while others gain fame and forture from bad behavior... A child is wrested from loving Christian adoptive parents to be returned to birthparents who are virtual strangers. And what about ungrateful athletes signing million-dollar contracts while teachers and schools struggle financially? Seems like our values of what is fair and right are all screwed up when it comes time to collect our reward for being our best selves. Some people seem to live only for their selfish pleasures become multimillionaires-while some of my most faithful Christian friends live one paycheck away from homelessness. What about people who engage in shady business practices who never get caught-they only get richer? People lie and lust and gossip and seem to go on their way.

Okay cliche time ...Life isn't fair.

I know bad things happen to good people.

But what about when good things happen to bad people... those who don't seem particularly worthy.

"For I envied the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the wicked. They have no struggles; their bodies are healthy and strong. They are free from the burdens common to man; they are not plagued by human ills ... This is what the wicked are like-always carefree, they increase in wealth. Surely in vain have I kept my heart pure; in vain have I washed my hands in innocence" (Psalms 73:3-5;12-13).

Jesus told a parable about vineyard workers who received the equivalent of a day's pay even though some worked since nine in the morning and others weren't even hired until five in the afternoon. Those who signed on the earliest "began to grumble against the landowner." After all, they argued, they'd toiled in the heat of the day.

So....all of "us sinners" engage in envy, resentment, even scorekeeping.

Sometimes I'm tempted to think of myself as MORE worthy but again its baloney. All have sinned. None is "worthy" except God alone.- Romans 3:23
Appearances cause us to hastily type people as "good" or "bad." But we don't always know what's going on inside a person. That's God's business.

Think Before You Judge.

I try to remember everyday to thank God for each of my blessings, after all he is with me always.






"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Why Men, Women and Generalizations SUCK~!

Current mood: indescribable

okay I wrote this bloggy as the 203rd reply to "Stephanie's Blog". She's great -- good writing and lots of fun notions and definitely a female perspective.
Recently she wrote about the lovin' time men and women share.
so for reference here is what she wrote:



Stephanie's myspace blog
April 26, 2008 - Saturday
IT'S CALLED FOREPLAY. LOOK INTO IT.
Category: Romance and Relationships


If you are a man, I'm addressing this to you. Yes, you. The one who proudly boasts that what I'm about to write doesn't apply to you. You know how to please a woman. You do everything right. No woman ever complains about you. Not to your face anyway.
Women talk. And if there's one thing I've learned from listening to these talks, it's that no matter what you're doing, you need to do it longer. Yes, LONGER. As in taking your time. Slowing the heck down. Kissing her. Touching her. Engaging her mind.
What?
What does her mind have to do with it?
Everything. Foreplay starts here.
(Picture me pointing to my brain.)
It's the way you look at her when you tell her she looks beautiful. It's the way your fingertips settle into the small of her back as you guide her through a doorway. It's the way you whisper in her ear what you want to do to her later that evening...
You could drag foreplay on for hours before you even hit the bedroom. And then, once you're in the bedroom, your natural inclination will be to throw her down on the bed and go straight to it. After all, that's what passion is all about, isn't it?
Sure. Unbridled passion has its place. We all like to be shoved against a wall and taken every now and then. But there is a difference between passionate impatience and just...impatience. And if you're expecting her to enjoy things, you might want to stop. Take a breath. Slow it down a notch or ten.
First, kiss her. And keep kissing her. Touch her face. Touch her hair. Touch...everything else. And I do mean EVERYTHING ELSE. Remember when you were fifteen and you couldn't do anything more than make out so you'd kiss and touch for hours on the sofa? We aren't asking for hours but how about a minute or two? And, while you're at it, add ten minutes to that.
Then, since you're kissing her, kiss her all over. Tease her. Count to a thousand and you still probably haven't been teasing her long enough. Make her beg.
I'm going to say all this but you still aren't going to listen. I think, when it comes to sex, there's man time and woman time and I think a man thinks he's been doing something for ten minutes when it's really only been ten seconds. Kinda like if I had an ice cream sundae in front of me and was told I couldn't eat it until ten minutes had passed.

According to Mars and Venus in the Bedroom, we make love to the other person the way we want to be made love to. Notice how women are all kissy and touchy and you're just thinking, "Why doesn't she get there already?" There's one spot you want her attention to be focused on and it isn't your left ribcage. Well, we're doing what we want YOU to be doing. Hint, hint.
Women have hot spots all over our bodies. You kiss our left calf and it's going to do something to us. You touch that spot on the inside of our elbow and we'll squirm. But you don't touch that because you think only one spot really matters. Okay, maybe a couple of other spots too. And you're ready to get down to business before you've even hit the bedroom door. So you rush...and then later, if someone asked if you engaged in foreplay, you would say:
"Well...yeah. I kissed her."
For twenty seconds.



****
Now my bloggy:

one thing I can say that might add something to the discussion is that ALL GENERALIZATIONS have two components.
One - the statistical back up (I've talk to a lot of "whomever" and they say OR a recent study says most... ) Now, Stephanie I love your writing and your view and insights but I have to agree with an earlier post and say LADIES you GET what you accept. More on that in a moment.
Two - they can't apply to the individual. Just because some or mostly ALL people in a group act or "do something" in a particular way DOES NOT MEAN that Me or the guy down the street is the actual person you are addressing. We are all individuals and a generalization can't truly address the problem. Its not a a path to victory.

In this blog you "call out" every man saying "yes, You". So, LADIES... If ALL of us were lousy in bed you'd be alot angrier I suspect. So while I am GLAD there are so many Male idiot types out there doing it "wrong". It makes ME look like a real man. What you CAN hope to achieve with a generalization complaint delivered in this manner is that the men who actually care will "bring up their game some" and those that you wanted to hear it will simply continue to ignore it. That becomes the bigger question ...doesn't it? Why ignonre her words?
LADIES you GET what you accept. There I said it. I have tons of female friends and they go on and on about how the man they want ...sucks. I just shake my head and think why ARE you with him? ...rewarding him with your soft feminine ways, your pretty smile, your shining eyes... your adorable giggles... Why do you waste the only gifts God gives you (YOUR TIME - being the biggest) on stupid men types that don't acknowledge you the way you'd like?
Whether the issue is foreplay (however you define it) or simply acknowledging what's important to you (like the movie that made you cry on HBO last week) in a positive caring way... it does not matter. Yep I said it again. It seems to me. over and over... that women want the "bad boy" who doesn't care and then are suprised as can be when he in fact "doesn't care".
ITS FOREPLAY, LOOK INTO IT.
I looked into it. I'm good at what I do. That ain't the issue. The issue is you ladies are loving and rewarding bad behavior. (heheheh, "in general", anyway)

Here's 3 more generalizations to close on...
NICE GUYS FINISH LAST
SHE ONLY CARES ABOUT MONEY
HE'S REALLY SWEET BUT I DON'T WANT HIM LIKE...(FILL IN THE BLANK)
its GENERALIZATIONS that don't heal.... just stir the discussion.
Which, I assume, was the whole point?
ugh! boys and girls should play nice.
we got to be better to each other

and that's
Why Men, Women and Generalizations SUCK~!
(check one and move on)



"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

tolerance in "lifestyle section" or why it makes no sense to hate

Chris Rock said:
racism makes no sense because whoever you hate... will end up in your family.


the words below were a response to those posting in a yahoo group that features a monthly play party with a BDSM focus...
it addresses the annoying habit of "trolling for girls" online
and the intolerance of others just because a favorite "kink" is not a shared interest.



I don't like trolls... but I've trolled
I don't like users... but I've used others in my weakest moments
I am against violence in general but I am damn good at giving you the spanking you need...

I'm this and that...
I don't conform...
and yet I love rules and things to be fair.
ain't life a grand challenge?

ah, to delete and ignore or type and bore? Is that the question?

here are some statements to consider:
"you're not doing it the right way"
"that's not how 'we' do it around here"
"yeah, well that's just sick, isn't it?"
"you like that? ewww, and you like what on your pizza? ewww"


guess what?
I DON'T like mushrooms on my pizza...
does that mean you won't have pizza with Me?
does that mean we can't be friends...
sometimes... that is how it goes.

So, I'm not a swinger... I'm not gonna be anytime soon...
but I'm not here to judge what works for someone else...
On the other hand if you are into what I'm into... I will probably award "style points"... *chuckles

I love what I love
and I believe time is the only currency of value that we are given...
so to waste My time doing things that I don't love
is a waste of the gift I've been given.

we are not all the same
but the GOOD news is that the world will never be boring
because everyone is NOT like you or Me.

we don't live the same lives with the same histories...
life has a "staggered" start for all of us...
we start with different advantages and disadvantages. ..
and so, we each have our view points, our kinks, and the things we love.

the world is a big place
room enough for everyone to be themselves
if I don't do it your way... oh well...
if you don't do it my way... oh well...
its been said before but its worth saying again...
the rules of life still apply...
play nice and be good to others...
guys... treat every girl like YOU'D want someone to treat your mom, your sister, your daughter...
gals... treat every guy like you'd like someone to treat your dad, your brother, your son....


intolerance sucks no matter how or when its delivered...


U2 said it best for Me in the song "One"

Were one
But were not the same
We get to carry each other



*****

Is it getting better
Or do you feel the same
Will it make it easier on you
Now you got someone to blame

You say
One love
One life
When its one need
In the night
Its one love
We get to share it
It leaves you baby
If you dont care for it

Did I disappoint you?
Or leave a bad taste in your mouth?
You act like you never had love
And you want me to go without

Well its too late
Tonight
To drag tha past out
Into the light
Were one
But were not the same
We get to carry each other
Carry each other
One

Have you come here for forgiveness
Have you come tor raise the dead
Havew you come here to play jesus
To the lepers in your head
Did I ask too much
More than a lot
You gave me nothing
Now its all I got
Were one
But were not the same
We hurt each other
Then we do it again

You say
Love is a temple
Love a higher law
Love is a temple
Love the higher law
You ask me to enter
But then you make me crawl
And I cant be holding on
To what you got
When all you got is hurt

One love
One blood
One life
You got to do what you should

One life
With each other
Sisters
Brothers

One life
But were not the same
We get to carry each other
Carry each other

One








"how your soul learns... blessed and burned in the fire of your life!"

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

ITS ALL ABOUT ME

I'm all about music... NO... the player won't AUTO START... but if you listen to my playlist... you get to know me.
















how do you thank someone that takes you from crayons to perfume? I am a Dog kinda guy with 3 cats.
Experienced friendly and REAL life always but good with typing too.




myspace

















Add Me

Haven't we met before?


no joke



$$$

myspace








add me


pinch


Funny



stupid



idle hands serve the devil





INTERESTS?

go

myspace

WARNING: I'm ONLY interested in HONESTY

I love writing
writing

Baseball
Detroit Tigers Fan
Detroit MSBL Logo

baseball


comedy
comedy
D/s




U2
u2
Beatles
Beatles
Pop
blastinipod
Hip Hop
Hip Hop
Motown
motown
Alternative, Nat King Cole....hey, its all ...Good Charlotte :P
(Girls don't like boys girls like cars and money)

ProTools






















Casablanca
Casablanca

Maltese Falcon
Airplane
airplane
A Little Romance
a little romance
tons of others











sick
The Simpsons
simpsons
The Office, Smallville, History Channel




BOOKS?

tons, yep I know how to read
Reading



stupid





baseball




never had a hero, never met a saint... but I love the '68 Tigers


Al Kaline

Mickey Lolich



Tiger Stadium




Bono Cartoon



traffic



Pledge of obedience



myspace

Government



hero



hero


WHAT? I AMUSE YOUZ?joe pecsi



gnomes



Man



CONAN O'BRIEN!!!funny ass man



Groucho



monty python



Monty Python



Monty Python



Monty Python



Showin' the "O-face"
OFFICE SPACE



Joke



stupid



Behind every woman




lol icon



funnyshit







funny poster



twisty cone





BEST MOM






MySpace URL:

http://www.myspace.com/sirwlove