Very well written. You live. You win. Don’t have to die, If you are conscious enough, you continue not only to live but accomplish new heights and goals. And if you are smart enough, calculate appropriate priorities from the get go, and you realize as victorious as you maybe, marked by the any extreme, defeat can only survive when you fail the urgent journey where the most important adventure occurs, thus a portal of death appears.
It's funny that your first lines are You live, you win, don't have to d... because i was going to call this post "Adapt ... or Perish" but was thinking "too dark" , good clickbait material but not accurate
Great sacrifice in your consciousness considering a ram is always in the bush. It begins with us and it ends with us. What we want for ourselves we should want for others.
Sacrifice for others as we would for ourselves.
I would rather encourage always the best in myself, I want for others. As I think of Kikole Hannah - Jones, The 1619 Project, while interviewed discussing her premise for her work in the the public school system, speaking to an audience of parents, teachers, and administrators, when she was asked, why she sent her daughter to integrated public high school in her Brooklyn, NYC when she could have sent her daughter to any segregated white school, she dared to define her reason.
Author Kikole Hannah - Jones clearly explained, her parents sent her to an all semi-white school, she felt some sort of way, which she didn’t feel like the semi-white school was any better or the students any smarter than the less deprived Black schools, but the disparities were a social engineered by city politics because white student’s parents
weren’t ready to sacrifice.
What they wanted for their children were not what they wanted for the negro students. Creating a certain social cleansing mentality, consensus and abandonment in the communities when their children were socialized with Black and Hispanic students. They abandoned the communities creating a social and economic vacuum in what were communities, became neighborhoods cross the national spectrum.
Author Kikole Hannah - Jones clearly told parents, teachers, and administrators “you should want for your children what you want for mines.” Thus her premise, her philosophy.
In closing, as you mentioned, “ ... above, “because i was going to call this post "Adapt ... or Perish" but was thinking "too dark"
Great sacrifice you made above similar, indeed, to the author Kikole Hannah - Jones’s premise, her philosophical drive. We want the best for ourselves as we want for others.
Funny at discourse with my daughter, amusing conversation about listening. How to listen for and to her voice? To find continuity of self by listening to the inward man/woman shows upon each morning at the same time to intersect with pen,paper, and the spirit.
I agree Trent Cole,
“Continuous improvement (kaizen) is the path we must take in this life.”
To reach the “higher good,” George G. M. James (Stolen Legacy), writes about to improve man, woman, and child.
Very well written. You live. You win. Don’t have to die, If you are conscious enough, you continue not only to live but accomplish new heights and goals. And if you are smart enough, calculate appropriate priorities from the get go, and you realize as victorious as you maybe, marked by the any extreme, defeat can only survive when you fail the urgent journey where the most important adventure occurs, thus a portal of death appears.
Thank you Preston
It's funny that your first lines are You live, you win, don't have to d... because i was going to call this post "Adapt ... or Perish" but was thinking "too dark" , good clickbait material but not accurate
We can always win as long as we try
Great sacrifice in your consciousness considering a ram is always in the bush. It begins with us and it ends with us. What we want for ourselves we should want for others.
Sacrifice for others as we would for ourselves.
I would rather encourage always the best in myself, I want for others. As I think of Kikole Hannah - Jones, The 1619 Project, while interviewed discussing her premise for her work in the the public school system, speaking to an audience of parents, teachers, and administrators, when she was asked, why she sent her daughter to integrated public high school in her Brooklyn, NYC when she could have sent her daughter to any segregated white school, she dared to define her reason.
Author Kikole Hannah - Jones clearly explained, her parents sent her to an all semi-white school, she felt some sort of way, which she didn’t feel like the semi-white school was any better or the students any smarter than the less deprived Black schools, but the disparities were a social engineered by city politics because white student’s parents
weren’t ready to sacrifice.
What they wanted for their children were not what they wanted for the negro students. Creating a certain social cleansing mentality, consensus and abandonment in the communities when their children were socialized with Black and Hispanic students. They abandoned the communities creating a social and economic vacuum in what were communities, became neighborhoods cross the national spectrum.
Author Kikole Hannah - Jones clearly told parents, teachers, and administrators “you should want for your children what you want for mines.” Thus her premise, her philosophy.
In closing, as you mentioned, “ ... above, “because i was going to call this post "Adapt ... or Perish" but was thinking "too dark"
Great sacrifice you made above similar, indeed, to the author Kikole Hannah - Jones’s premise, her philosophical drive. We want the best for ourselves as we want for others.
Crazy how close your name is to mine...
@trentonfcole on Twitter
Wanted to pull the spiderman meme but no pics here lool
Funny at discourse with my daughter, amusing conversation about listening. How to listen for and to her voice? To find continuity of self by listening to the inward man/woman shows upon each morning at the same time to intersect with pen,paper, and the spirit.
I agree Trent Cole,
“Continuous improvement (kaizen) is the path we must take in this life.”
To reach the “higher good,” George G. M. James (Stolen Legacy), writes about to improve man, woman, and child.
The Ultimate goal, for higher good.
Stagnation is death.
Continuous improvement (kaizen) is the path we must take in this life.