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There's always Hope...


 Rachael...
 

“Ohh… what a beautiful day!”

It wasn’t something she thought to say, it was a natural impulse that ‘happened’ as she reached the top of the hill. Standing there awhile, catching her breath and absorbing the view. A breeze breathed on her heated skin, moistened with sweat from the effort of climbing the hill’s steep incline. Looking out at the surrounding landscape; the green slopes pushing down to the gently undulating farm land in the valley below.

 

 Closing her eyes, standing in the long stringy grass as it gently brushed her skin, the sun warmed and as though receiving a loving kiss on her cheek, she tilted her face up toward the sky. On either side of her body her hands gradually lifted of their own volition, her mind chose to have no say in the action of her body’s willingness to display such happiness. They were fully extended, fingers spread out, teasing the breeze as it washed over her; slowly a smile dawned on her lips as the creases in her brow smoothed and the worries of her life were tossed away like leaves dancing in the wind. Gone are the cares of yesterday; tomorrow will come with its worries and woes, but that’s for tomorrow. Today was hers to live; and live it she shall.

Unaccustomed as she was to being free, the urgency of needing to be somewhere at any given time barked at her heels and as habit does, it forced her to turn rushing back down the hill. She could feel the pressure of the need and weight of responsibility pulling at her. Worry - creases returned to her brow, her heart beat differently; the beat of fear and unrest and the skin in her face tightened. Strain began to pull at her neck as every muscle became taut, threatening to tear her frightened little body apart.

Her feet began to take her down the hill heeding the urgent call when suddenly something inside grabbed at her, locking her legs together rendering them immovable. Panic rose in her throat and a sound harsh and forlorn leapt from her lips.  A cry of hopelessness ebbed and waned as her breathe ran its moment of release, and the small frame of a girl crumpled to the ground in a sob, shuddering - alone and crushed.

 

 “Rachael! Rest and think!”

 

To be continued…

 

 

Posted by Rosie at 12:20 AM - 32 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Transformation...
 

Ouch! Night Light tagged me – 5 things I’ve been told and never forgotten?

 

1)      Humans taste like pork. I have no idea whether it’s true or not but I’ll never forget it.

 

2)      I’m stupid and lazy. For some strange reason this one has gotten into my noggin and I just can’t forget it. I guess when it’s thrown at us so often it’s difficult to dodge them all and eventually you just stand there and allow it to get in. I know I’m not the only one who has had these words thrown at me with monotonous regularity, so I understand where lots of people are coming from a lot of the time. I choose to always remember the hopelessness these words turn into during life and how I feel when standing under them.

1)      Our marriage will never last because it never works out when you marry your first and only. When we were young and in love and about to have our first baby, this one flue around our heads like vultures around a body in the desert. Mind you, I think vultures only feed on death. It’s so strange, the things that people will say to young hearts filled with hope isn’t it? I choose to remember how these words feel too.

 

2)      “You can’t do that!” This one took on lots of different forms. Some times it just reminded me of number 2 ‘I’m stupid and lazy’, or number 3 ‘our marriage will never last’, where as other times it means ‘it’s against all the rules’. They inhibit our ability to move on in life for fear others will be left alone. This apparently is not a kind thing to do – to them - apparently. The words – ‘you can’t do that’ – are kind of like post its covering our life; post it’s are simply little pieces of paper that are easily removed by the way. If you will…

 

1)      You are of great value and importance. Within you smoulders the embers of power, intelligence and strength of will to navigate any of life’s challenges set before you. If you really want it, go for it! When you feel as though you paid too great a price in reaching your life goals, count your losses as investments into your life that will be passed on for generations to come giving you a future and a hope; now for then and each one of them. YES! YOU DO DESERVE THE BEST and yes, it’s ok to work hard to get there. You don’t need to give up but while working things out, take a break and rest! – a true friend says all this to me regularly.

We are much, much more than we seem to be. Oneday we'll change the world you know...

 

Posted by Rosie at 10:46 PM - 15 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Who's Einstien...?
 

This is so ... well ... Awwwwww! Hope you enjoy it as much as I do. Cheers...



Have a very happy day!
Posted by Rosie at 8:09 PM - 17 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Who are we really?
 

A post taken from "Lucy"

Please read it and for more information or links go to Lucy's blog and find your way from there...

Ghosts of Abu Ghraib

The familiar and disturbing pictures of torture at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison raise many troubling questions: How did torture become an accepted practice at Abu Ghraib? Did U.S. government policies make it possible? How much damage has the aftermath of Abu Ghraib had on America's credibility as a defender of freedom and human rights around the world? Acclaimed filmmaker Rory Kennedy looks beyond the headlines to investigate the psychological and political context in which torture occurred. Premieres Thursday, February 22 at 9:30pm.
Read more.

There is no such thing as a little bit of torture." -- Alfred W. McCoy, author "A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror"

The familiar and disturbing pictures of torture at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison raise many troubling questions: How did torture become an accepted practice at Abu Ghraib? Did U.S. government policies make it possible? How much damage has the aftermath of Abu Ghraib had on America's credibility as a defender of freedom and human rights around the world?

Acclaimed filmmaker Rory Kennedy (HBO's "Indian Point: Imagining the Unimaginable") looks beyond the headlines to investigate the psychological and political context in which torture occurred when the powerful documentary GHOSTS OF ABU GHRAIB.

"How could ordinary American soldiers come to engage in such monstrous acts?" Kennedy asks. "What policies were put into place that allowed this behavior to flourish while protections granted to prisoners under the Geneva Conventions were ignored?"

"These photographs from Abu Ghraib have come to define the United States," says Scott Horton, chairman, Committee on International Law, NYC Bar Association. "The U.S., which was viewed as certainly one of the principal advocates of human rights and...the dignity of human beings in the world, suddenly is viewed as a principle expositor of torture."

For the first time, GHOSTS OF ABU GHRAIB features both the voices of Iraqi victims (interviewed in Turkey after arduous attempts to meet with them) and guards directly involved in torture at the prison. Conducted by Kennedy, these remarkably candid, in-depth interviews shed light on the abuses in an unprecedented manner.

Through these interviews, the film traces the events and the political and legal precedents that led to the scandal, beginning with the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001.

While the White House and Pentagon claimed that the situation at Abu Ghraib was "a kind of animal house on the night shift," other on-site participants and observers maintain that the abuses at Abu Ghraib were part of a general pattern of a "gloves off" interrogation policy that had been put in place after 9/11.

GHOSTS OF ABU GHRAIB strongly suggests that, far from being an unauthorized, isolated event by rank-and-file soldiers acting on their own initiative, the physical and psychological torture employed at the prison was an inevitable outgrowth of military and government policies that were implemented in a climate of fear and chaos, inadequate training and insufficient resources.

The interviews with soldiers who took part in and observed the torture at Abu Ghraib show them to be intelligent and articulate young men and women, not gun-happy, sadistic torturers - challenging what viewers may think they know about what took place at the prison. For the most part, soldiers stationed at Abu Ghraib were not trained as prison guards, yet as few as 300 of them were put in charge of up to 6,000 prisoners, who were held in squalid and dangerous conditions.

"If there were no photographs, there would be no Abu Ghraib," said Javal Davis, an MP stationed at Abu Ghraib, who was later court-martialed.

After numerous investigations, 11 low-ranking MPs and Military Intelligence corpsmen were court-martialed. Only one high-ranking officer has been penalized to date: Brigadier General Janis Karpinski was demoted to colonel and has since retired from the military. At the same time, other high-ranking officials associated with the scandal have been promoted and the chain of command has not been subject to an independent investigation.

Ultimately, the film raises serious questions about what happened, why it happened and whether it was an isolated incident, as the government continues to maintain. Using footage from famous obedience experiments performed at Yale by eminent social psychologist Stanley Milgram in the 1960s, the film suggests that under orders most people are capable of perpetrating inhumane and unjust acts against others.

As one of the Abu Ghraib MPs says in the film, "That place turned me into a monster." Another remarks, "It's easy to sit back in America or in different countries and say, 'Oh, I would have never done that,' but, until you've been there, let's be realistic: You don't know what you would have done."

The feature-length special was an official selection in the American Documentary Competition at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival.

Rory Kennedy, co-founder and co-president of Moxie Firecracker Films, is one of the nation's most prolific independent documentary filmmakers, focusing on issues such as poverty, domestic abuse, human rights and AIDS. Kennedy's work has been featured on numerous broadcast and cable outlets, including HBO, A&E, MTV, Lifetime and PBS. She has directed and produced more than 20 films, including the HBO specials "Indian Point: Imagining the Unimaginable," which examines the potential for a nuclear disaster in New York City's backyard; "Pandemic: Facing AIDS," a five-part series that follows the lives of people living with AIDS throughout the world (nominated for two primetime Emmy® Awards); "American Hollow," which documents an Appalachian family caught between tradition and the modern world (nominated for a Non-Fiction Primetime Emmy® Award and Independent Spirit Award); and "A Boy's Life," about the troubling forces shaping the life of a young child in impoverished Mississippi. She executive produced "Street Fight," which was nominated for an Academy Award® for documentary feature in 2006.

Posted by Rosie at 11:38 PM - 6 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Love it...
 

They team up nicely don't you think?



Love it! Cheers...
Posted by Rosie at 12:14 AM - 12 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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