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Archive for September, 2009

Relax Into Wellness, Volume 2: A Guided Journey Into Deeper Relaxation

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Product Description
Suggested for use after mastering the relaxation exercises in Relax Into Wellness Volume 1. These two advanced relaxation techniques – 61 Points and Yoga Nidra – will bring you deeper into your body-mind connection and assist you in balancing the breath/ energy circuits and achieving yogic sleep. Your energy and vitality will increase significantly and your need for sleep will decrease. With practice, any sleeping problems will be ameliorated. A perfect compliment t… More >>

Relax Into Wellness, Volume 2: A Guided Journey Into Deeper Relaxation

Civil War Photo : Petersburg Virginia. Blandford church and graveyard

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

  • Typical Image Size: 11×14″, Glass: 14×17″. Add frame selected to glass size for final dimensions.
  • Decorate with history or give a tasteful gift.
  • Only premiere quality framing materials used.
  • Image and passage source: Library of Congress

Product Description
This is a museum-quality, reproduction print on premium, acid-free, semi gloss paper with archival/UV resistant inks.The print is framed with a single ivory matte under acrylic glass, and shipped insured, ready to hang and enjoy.Original, c. 1865.Topics: US History 1861-1865.HISTORY OF THE CIVIL WAR PHOTOSA majority of the Civil War photos come from the original glass plate negatives in the holdings at the Library of Congress. The plates depict the activiti… More >>

Civil War Photo : Petersburg Virginia. Blandford church and graveyard

Yoropiko x Headstone Limited Edition Star Wars t-shirt HEAD3772, LRG

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

  • Yoropiko x Headstone Limited Edition Star Wars t-shirt HEAD3772

Product Description
Yoropiko x Headstone Limited Edition Star Wars t-shirt HEAD3772 Limited edition collectors item, black crew neck regular fit t-shirt Printed Trooper head on front, printed logo back Short sleeve, fine ribbed crew neck, taped inner neck and shoulder seams Turned back waist and sleeve with double stitched hems SKU-HEAD3772… More >>

Yoropiko x Headstone Limited Edition Star Wars t-shirt HEAD3772, LRG

“black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail Graveyard

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

“black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail Graveyard


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Home Page Relationships “black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail Graveyard
“black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail Graveyard

Posted: Nov 3rd, 2007 | Comments: 0 | Views: 41 |












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“black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail GraveyardAuthor: Claude Johnson

Certain principles of life and business never change. Like with the law of gravity, for example, its just plain better to know how it works even if you


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Home Page Relationships “black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail Graveyard


“black Kids Don’t Read” Last Words Before Retail Graveyard





C1850 View Hawarden Church Graveyard Antique Print

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

  • Genuine Historic Print as history was recorded
  • Original old antique print, not a modern reproduction
  • Size and details in description below
  • Choose from the selection available

Product Description
Old Antique Historical Victorian Prints Maps and Historic Fine Art ———-. C1850 View Hawarden Church Graveyard Antique Print Print C1850-1890Genuine Clearance Now Up To 90% Off Retailfrom A Quality Lot. That Was Purchased From An Old Antique Print Dealer At An Auctionsize Varies From Aprox 9 X 6 Inches ( 230 X 150 ) So Check The Size With The Background Dots Which Are 0.5 Inches (12.5 Cm ) Apart So Size Of Smaller Prints Can Easly Be Verified. All Are Genu… More >>

C1850 View Hawarden Church Graveyard Antique Print

Picture of Health

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Album Description
1993 album for Canadian act who deliver Western-tinged, hard-edged rock. 13 tracks including a cover of The Travelling Wilburys’ ‘Tweeter & The Monkey Man’. MCA. 2003…. More >>

Picture of Health

The only cemetery of its kind in the world “Key Underwood Coon Dog Memorial Graveyard.”

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

The only cemetery of its kind in the world “Key Underwood Coon Dog Memorial Graveyard.”

By Dick I

The only cemetery of its kind in the world, Key Underwood Coon Dog Memorial, lies of the beaten path 7 west of Tuscumbia, AL. Here in a small grassy meadow lies the final resting place of over 200 authentic coon dogs from all across the United States.

Who started the cemetery and why, you might ask. On Labor Day September 4, 1937 Key Underwood said good-bye to his legendary coon dog, Troop. For 15 years they had been close friends and hunted together. The burial spot was a hunting camp where coon hunters from all over came to tell tall tales, chew tobacco and compare coon hounds. Troop loved the camp and it was only fitting that he spend eternity there.

Troop was special; he was the best in the region. He was said to be “cold nosed,” being able to follow cold coon tracks until they became fresh. He never left a coons trail until he treed him.

It wasn’t long after Troop was laid to rest that other hunters started bring the favorite dogs to be interred in the cemetery. Even Ralston Purina’s Dog of the Year in 1984 was buried here, Hunters Famous Amos.

Among the dead you’ll find names like, Night Ranger, Patches, Bomma, Preacher, Bean Blossom and Smoky. Etched on the tombstones not only are the names and dates but tributes like “A joy to hunt with,” He wasn’t the best but he was the best I ever had.”

There are strict standards for burial in this unique cemetery:

The owner must declare that their dog is an authentic coon dog. A witness must declare that the dog being buried is a coon dog The local coonhunters’ organization must view the coonhound and declare it is a coon dog.

When ask why other dogs can’t be buried here the answers is ”You must not know much about coon hunters and their dogs, if you think we would contaminate this burial place with poodles and lap dogs.”

Each Labor Day, the Tennessee Valley Coon Hunter’s Association host a celebration at the cemetery. Entertainment includes music, dancing, food and a liar’s contest. Time: 1 p.m. – 4 p.m. Official Coon Dog T-shirts and camouflage caps available to purchase.

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to visit; The only cemetery of its kind in the world “Key Underwood Coon Dog Memorial Graveyard.”

Dick I is an active RVer, having traveled extensively in U.S, Canada and served as a wagon master for the Piggy Back train through Mexico’s Copper Canyon. Learn more about the RV lifestyle view our travel photos when you visit http://www.irvrvs.com/ RVing the RV lifestyle .

Hello From Nova Scotia – Part 6 – The Annapolis Royal Graveyard Tour

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

After a day packed with explorations and a lovely dinner at the Garrison House I was ready for my final discovery of the day: the famous Annapolis Royal Graveyard Tour. Punctually at 9:15 pm I showed up across the road from the my bed and breakfast at the south entrance of Fort Anne where local historian and expert guide Alan Melanson was ready to give his performance. About 15 people, hailing from places such as North Carolina, California and Saskatchewan, were equipped with candle-lit lanterns and after a brief introduction we were ready to head out.

Alan enlightened us that his outfit was an authentic funeral suit, the black sash and the black scarf tied around the hat were symbols of mourning. We learned that when children died the scarf on the hat would be white. Alan told the group that he has been doing this tour four nights a week, every week from June to October for 15 years and he has only missed one evening. The $7 donation for the tour goes to the Historical Society of Annapolis Royal, and over the years Alan has collected about $60,000 for this non-profit organization. Alan has been a park ranger and guide at the Fort Anne National Historic Site for about 27 years now and in addition to historical interpretation he also does outreach to bring history into local classrooms.

We started walking towards the cemetery, up and down through Fort Anne’s “earthworks”, fortifications constructed from mounds of earth which were intended to protect Annapolis Royal from potential intruders. The cemetery is just a few steps away from Fort Anne, and Alan collected the group at the largest gravestone, an obelisk and started the official tour.

Our first stop was the oldest gravestone in the cemetery, dating back to 1720, which belonged to a 37 year old woman. Alan explained that gravestones feature a lot of symbolism: death was represented for example by a winged skull, young children and babies who passed away would be symbolized by pictures of flowers, lambs or rose buds. Weeping willows were often used to represent death and mourning. Alan also educated us that different types of stone were used as gravestones over the centuries: slate, sandstone, granite and marble were all used to immortalize the dead.

Many of the residents of the graveyard had interesting stories: an 83-year old woman got cheated out of her fortune by a bad husband. Some soldiers were also buried here and Alan shed light on life in the army in the 18th century: out of 100 soldiers only six were allowed to bring their wives with them during deployments from England in the colonies. The wives and children who were allowed to come did not fare well either as they had to share bunk beds with their husbands. Conditions for soldiers only changed during the Crimean War when press coverage made the general public aware of the poor living conditions of soldiers, resulting in general outrage. The power of the press was already in evidence in the 1850s…

We also learned that large groups of volunteers regularly clean the gravestones, carefully using wooden tools and soap to scrape off the moss and then finishing the job with a solution made of vinegar and water. Alan reported that very little vandalism happens here in this historic graveyard since the local residents are extremely proud of their heritage. As a ninth generation Acadian, as a historic interpreter at Fort Anne and as the President of the Annapolis Royal Historical Society, Alan Melanson can personally attest to the importance and appreciation of history that characterizes this area. Annapolis Royal has the biggest National Heritage District consisting of 135 heritage buildings, it features the oldest gravestone and the oldest National Historic Site in Canada.

The pride in local history also includes reenactments of historic events and lifestyles. Alan told us about various historical reenactments which served moose nose soup and smoked beaver tail, dishes very similar to those that would have been savoured in the early 1600s by the settlers of the Port-Royal Habitation, incidentally the place where Wayne Melanson, Alan’s identical twin brother, introduced me to early French history this afternoon.

Annapolis Royal is one of the most historic towns on the east coast and the oldest house in town, just east of the Historic Gardens, dates back to 1708. Alan explained the town’s history was based around shipbuilding and of 13 wharfs only one is still in existence. The Garrison Graveyard houses 234 gravestones and more than 2000 people are buried here. Early Acadian settlers are also interred here, but their graves did not have gravestones – their wooden crosses have long since rotted away.

Our local expert also informed us that a soldier dating back to the 1780s was found buried in the riverbed. Based on historical accounts and the burial technique, this person must have been a criminal which is the reason why he was buried in the river. Alan Melanson, himself a ninth generation Acadian who can trace his own lineage back to a certain Charles Melanson who arrived in this area in 1664, certainly has a passion for history and it shows. His theatrical voice conveys enthusiasm for the history of this town and he injects his presentation with humour and wittiness. Former Prime Minister Paul Martin also enjoyed his Garrison Graveyard Tour with Alan Melanson.

After the tour was over I returned the lantern and received a certificate attesting that I had attended the Annapolis Royal Graveyard Tour. I came back to the Garrison House B&B and peeked out into the dark cemetery, wondering what life must have been like in this town in the 1700 and 1800s. I laid down to rest up for another full day of explorations tomorrow which would include the Tidal Power Generating Plant, the Bear River Heritage and Cultural Centre and a coastal drive down to Yarmouth on the western tip of this province. Nova Scotia sure has a lot of history, interesting personalities and many fascinating human stories…

For the entire article including photos please visit
http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos/annapolis_royal_graveyard_tour.htm

Susanne Pacher is the publisher of Travel and Transitions (http://www.travelandtransitions.com), a popular web portal for unconventional travel & cross-cultural connections. Check out our brand new section featuring FREE ebooks about travel.

Gaza’s Growing Graveyard

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Gaza?s slow slide into the network of weapons smuggling tunnels built under its foundations has now turned into a headlong rush into hell.

Heavily armed factions now battle each other in a deadly civil war for political power and control of the billions of dollars in humanitarian aid and reconstruction funds flowing into the territory by courtesy of the European Union and the United Nations.

200 people have been killed and almost 2000 injured so far this year as a result of this rapidly escalating internecine violence that now has sucked Israel in once again, as scores of Kassam rockets continue to be fired indiscriminately into civilian centres in Israel from a well stocked arsenal smuggled into Gaza through Egypt.

Israel?s unilateral evacuation from Gaza in August 2005 was intended to signal Israel?s readiness to find a peaceful solution to competing claims by Jews and Arabs to sovereignty in Gaza and the West Bank.

Instead we are now witnesses to scenes of death and violence in Gaza that no one could have predicted when the world?s broadcasting networks showed their images of thousands of distressed and anguished Israeli soldiers and police removing 7000 crying and in some cases defiant Jews from their homes and livelihoods after a presence of almost forty years.

Certainly the trashing and eradication of the Jewish presence in Gaza, the continued violence against the Jewish State and the hatred and incitement of Gaza?s civilian population against Jews were foreseen by many, as Israel was roundly criticised in many quarters for acting unilaterally as it did.

But no one could have reasonably expected to see Arab killing Arab in Gaza in an unending cycle of violence over the past twelve months.

It is pointless to assign blame for Gaza?s failure to grasp the baton handed to the Palestinian Authority by Israel. Others can and will no doubt do so as the situation continues to worsen.

However, having dropped the baton and allowed Gaza to reach the stage of lawlessness it now has, the Authority has shown itself to be a lame duck without any power or authority to conclude any kind of agreement with Israel on Gaza and the West Bank.

The late Abba Eban, Israel?s first Ambassador to the United Nations, famously said in 1973:

?The Arabs never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity?

The Palestinian Authority has become the latest example of that most apposite statement.

As the carnage continues, those supporters of the Palestinian Authority and its President Mahmoud Abbas – the 22 Arab League States, America, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations – look on and, as usual, wring their hands, say a lot, but as usual do nothing to stop it.

They continue to promote and cling to the two state solution formulated by them in 2002 and 2003 that remain unimplemented in even the slightest detail and have no prospects of ever being successfully concluded – as if nothing has happened in the meantime.

They place their faith in Abbas being able to deliver the Palestinians on those completely flawed plans – totally ignoring the shift in power caused by the ascension of Hamas in Gaza that calls for Israel?s total destruction.

They still fail to understand that the only negotiating address in Gaza today is Prime Minister Haniyeh of Hamas. No amount of fiction or make believe by the Arab League, the Quartet or Israel for that matter can possibly change that current reality.

Abbas does not have enough power to fill his fountain pen let alone put his signature on any agreement with Israel that he can enforce.

Perhaps as they ponder their next step the Arab League and the Quartet should carefully heed the less quoted words of Abba Eban which appeared in Newsweek on 2 December 1974:

?But in addition to warnings about the futility of war should we not reflect together on the availability of peace? Palestine comes into modern history as a region extending on both sides of the Jordan, comprising the present sovereign territories of Israel and Jordan and the administered areas of the West Bank and Gaza. Of this original Palestine, 80 per cent became an exclusively Arab domain through the separation of Transjordan from Palestine.?

Jordan has always been and still continues to be the only negotiating address for anyone interested in seeking a solution to the West Bank and Gaza between Israel and the Arabs.

Division of the West Bank and Gaza between Jordan and Israel is the only possible outcome that has any reasonable prospect of success.

In an interview published in the Khaleej Times on 11 October 2006, King Abdullah of Jordan declared:

?I really think that by the first half of 2007 we might wake up to reality and realise that the two-state solution is no longer attainable, and then what??

Until the Arab League and the Quartet understand and act on this reality, the graveyard will continue to grow in Gaza and ultimately and unfortunately extend to the graveyards in the West Bank and Israel.

David Singer is an Australian Lawyer and Convenor of Jordan is Palestine International ? an organization calling for sovereignty of the West Bank and Gaza to be allocated between Israel and Jordan as the two successor States to the Mandate for Palestine

The Graveyard Shift

Monday, September 28th, 2009

“Grab me some water, would ya? How are you doing?”

Michael and I had arrived at the graveyard and were moments from exiting his van to visit his chosen burial site.

“How do you think I’m doing?” I asked, holding the water bottle to his lips. I find keeping my hands busy and his mouth occupied with food and drink is an excellent way for me to ease myself into challenging conversations. You have to learn things like this when simple questions like, “Can I ask you a question?” are met with a sincere “Can you handle the answer?” My lame attempts at avoidance don’t fool Michael for a second, but the gestures give me comfort nonetheless, and he indulges my little game.

Helping me out, he took am extra long drink, never taking his eyes from me.

“I don’t know. Tell me.”

“Well, I don’t know either.”

He accepted that answer because it was true.

“First I want you to listen to this.” He indicated that I should play the tape he had cued up on a talk by Wayne Dyer. What he played deserves it’s own blog post, which will follow shortly, but for now I can say it set the tone for what was to follow. Michael led me to his gravesite, which lay at the foot of his mother’s. At his request I placed a wreathe for her and then I offered to clean away the evidence of the Canadian goose migration which had soiled the stone.

Despite my wiping the marker clean I found when I returned home that I couldn’t, for the life of me, recall seeing any last name on the gravestone. I could remember the years of birth and death, I could recall her first name, her middle initial. Even “Wife, Mom, Grandma” and the engraved image of the cross with two angels kneeling in prayer beside it. My mind, that day, simply would not register “Schwass” carved in granite.

I sat on the ground which he reserved for himself the day after 9-11 and then laid back to reflect on the oak branches arching over the site.

“I’ll give you some time here.” Michael began to make his way to the large statue of Mary, whose outstretched arms encompass this section of the cemetary. After some moments I sat up and watched as he made his way, slowly, over the uneven earth peppered with grave markers, trying to minimize the jostling of his aching, November-chilled frame.

As always happens when I am with Michael, I am aware that my time with him occurs on two levels. There is the gross level of the senses, which get bound up with the emotions of the moment and have no apparent end to their creative ways of dealing with them, as evidenced by their blatant refusal to see his last name on the gravestone. These emotions that have tortured me endlessly and have tried many times to make a project out of saving him from his suffering (read: my suffering) and ultimate death (read: my further suffering).

But, through relentless dedication to learning how to recognize and take responsibility for my emotions and inner turmoil, I have been increasingly aware that another calmer part of me is able to take in everything around me for deeper reflection later. This visit to the graveyard was no exception.

As I watched Michael inching his way to Mary, even with teary eyes, I was aware of just how much I love his being. It’s very unique for me, what I feel. I can only describe it as kaleidoscopic. I love my husband as a husband and a friend. I love my brother as a brother and friend. I love my nieces and nephews as nieces and nephews. Those all feel clear for me, and the love may be huge but it also has a sense of definition, a sense of relationship to it. With Michael, I can honestly say that sometimes I look at him and he feels very much like a son to me. I mean this literally. By contrast, I have been able to see the “little boy” very clearly in my husband many times, but he never feels like he is my son. Probably makes the shared bed arrangement less complicated, so I’m not weighing one against the other! Other times Michael feels like a brother. Sometimes like a beloved teacher. He feels like a childhood friend in the strongest way, even though I was nearly 30 when we met.

Sitting by his mother, I looked out at this son of hers, son of ours, who has grown to be quite an extraordinary man and all the pain of facing the loss of him started to dissipate. It would take another full day and much reflection for the rest of my emotions to catch up, but it is undeniable that my love for him brings me joy, not sadness.

My sadness comes from wanting to extend what we all know is temporary: our earthly connection. The sadness comes from denial and my outright refusal to “love what is” as Byron Katie would say.

I couldn’t quite name the shift and the feeling that came over me watching Mike from a distance but the next day, reading Yogananda’s The Divine Romance, I found it encapsulated in his discussion on friendship in the chapter, “How to Cultivate Divine Love.”

He states:

“Love cannot be had for the asking;it comes only as a gift from the heart of another. Be certain of your feelings before you say to anyone, “I love you.” Once you give your love, it must be forever. Not because you want to be near that person, but because you want perfection for that soul. To wish for perfection for the loved one, and to feel pure joy in thinking of that soul, is divine love; and that is the love of true friendship.”

It’s a fierce journey to get to this place with another person. It’s been hard won for Michael and I, I can assure you. I can also tell you that it is a treasure without price. May you all have the courage to cultivate such friendship in your own lives and blessed to find someone equall up to the task. Nurturing one’s capacity to give and receive true love, I fully believe, is the only way to fully face the reality of and conquer the fear of death.

Actually, I no longer have to believe it. I know it.

I returned to the cemetary by myself two days later, to polish the “Schwass” on his mother’s gravestone.

Laura Young, M.A. is a personal development coach specializing in helping individuals restructure their lives after significant loss or transition. Laura has written extensively on such topics as relationships, love, loss, marriage, communication, intimacy, friendship and how to cope with life changes. Please visit her blog and website to tap in to her extensive resource base.