Most of us have experienced hearing that people have said unkind things about you...gossipy, mean-spirited, small-minded comments that come from their own smallness, thin-skin ego, and cry for attention.
What Meghan Markle has heard or read that dysfunctional members of her estranged family have said about her is unfortunate...and perhaps not surprising in our rude world of Trumpery.
Read this article by Brittany Wong for HuffPost: "How Meghan Markle Should Deal With Her Family, According to Therapists" to be reminded of handling such cruelty...or like Michelle Obama said amidst the mean and crude comments from Donald J. Trump: "When they go low, we go high!"
"Violence flourishes unchecked when the feminine withdraws. This world needs the feminine now, more than ever." ~Regena Thomashauer
Friday, August 31, 2018
Thursday, August 23, 2018
{seekers of truth}
“Youth
are natural seekers of truth. Time to empower them with the needed clarity,
commitment, and courage to find their truth.”
Thursday, August 16, 2018
{Goddess Aretha}
RIP 1942-2018
Aretha helped define the
American experience. In her voice, we could feel our history, all of it and in
every shade—our power and our pain, our darkness and our light, our quest for
redemption and our hard-won respect. May the Queen of Soul rest in eternal
peace.
~Barack Obama {on Twitter today}
Aretha Franklin spent the turbulent 60s building her career, and in 1967 released her most famous song, and one that became inextricably linked to the civil rights and feminist movements of the time. “Respect” was originally released in 1965 by Otis Redding; Franklin’s cover of the song came out in 1967, and soon became the most popular version.
“I was stunned when it went to No. 1,” Franklin told Elle in
2016, “and it stayed No. 1 for a couple weeks. It was the right song at the
right time.”
Franklin, who Elle noted had it written into her contract in
the 60s that she would never perform for a segregated audience, was glad that
the song became linked to feminist and civil-rights movements. She added that
the line “you know I’ve got it” has a direct feminist theme.
“As women, we do have it,” she says. “We have the power. We
are very resourceful. Women absolutely deserve respect. I think women and
children and older people are the three least-respected groups in our society.”
[Excerpt from Hilary Weaver's "Aretha Franklin’s History with Civil Rights, from Martin Luther King Jr. to Barack Obama" for Vanity Fair - August
16, 2018]
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