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Sunday, November 26, 2017

Meet Lydia Kemunto Cutler

November 26, 2017 0 Comments



It doesn't seem quite fitting to simply describe  Lydia Kemunto Cutler as multitalented. She's one for the ages with a résumé that will have you shaking your head and wondering how one person does so much- and so well. She's a fashion designer, who has ambitions of delving into politics someday.
All of this is part of Kemunto's master plan. She's on a calculated mission, having involved herself in so many different activities. 
She has  many interests and has dabbled in a lot of experience. Her fashion technique has a touch of reality that everyone can relate to, whether they're old or young, Black or White.
Q. When did you realize you could come up with something fashionable?
A. At the age of 8, sketching wedding dresses
Q. Do you have a screen name/nick name ? 
A. Not really. I showcase by my middle name Kemunto 
Q. What's/was Aberdeen Fashion Week?
A. A fashion trade show, founded by me in 2003, we cater for designers and buyers.
Q. How can you describe your hussle?
A. I am a fashion designer and don't see that as a hassle at all.
Q. In the film version of your autobiography, who would you like to play yourself? 
A. Myself.
Q. What quality or talent do you wish you could cultivate? 
A. Acting.
Q. How do you see the fashion industry in UK in the next 20 years?
A. Evolving too fast.
Q. Who is your favorite fictional character ever? 
A. I have no favourite fictional character 
Q. If you could have the career of any author, who would it be and why? 
A. JK Rowling.
Q. What inspires you? 
A. More like who.... my mother.
Q. When did you first realize you were a fashionista? 
A. At the age of 6.
Q. What turns you off creatively, spiritually or emotionally? 
A. Non-originality.
Q. What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?
A. Politics.

She has a knack for sensing where the market is going, a knack that can't be book learned.

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Emotions through photos

November 19, 2017 0 Comments
“I’ve been incarcerated for almost all my life. I used to be an alcoholic and an addict, but now I’ve been sober for 2 years and 11 months—one day at a time. I don’t drink no more, I have a job, and I try to go to church.”
“How did you change?”
“I got tired of living like that.”

“I want to be a comedian. A lot of people in my class think I’m funny. Sometimes it can be hard to think of a good joke that isn’t about Trump. But even if you don’t get any laughs, you can usually just keep silent for a few minutes and try again. Sometimes I accidentally make jokes that only I get. Like the other day I tried to tell a joke about that lady who handed out cashews instead of candy for Halloween. But only my friend Aiden knew about the Cashew Lady so nobody laughed. But then later my teacher asked where I got my sources for my constitutional rights paper. And I told her I got them from ‘a sorcerer.’ Even she laughed at that one.”

“I normally don’t tell people I’m a Christian because they assume you’re a zealot, or parochial, or close-minded. And I don’t think I’m any of those things. I go to a progressive church. We bring in great speakers and do a lot of volunteering. My religion is just a centering part of my life. It gives me guideposts. It gives me a code of ethics and helps me see dignity in other people. Sure, there’s a storybook nature to it. And it can be a shame that people focus so much on the story. I'd rather focus on the message the story conveys."

"A lot of younger people pass by me while I’m running. It’s a bit of a metaphor for the rest of my life. I turned forty-seven in October. I’m starting to have bosses that are younger than me. It’s causing me to question what my experience is worth. I’m noticing that my younger colleagues are more adventurous and take more risks—either because they don’t know about failure or they don’t care. As I get older, I feel like more and more of my life is outside my control. That’s why I started training for the marathon. I want to be in control of something. I can’t control current events. I can’t control politics. I can’t even control my personal relationships. But I can control my legs. I can put one leg in front of the other. I can decide the miles that I run each day, each week, each month. And it feels great. I get a rush every time I make it to the top of a hill."

“I’ve been at the same company for nine years. I should have moved up by now. But I’ve just never been good at office politics. I assumed my work ethic and performance would be enough. But some people are just better at getting recognized. They ingratiate themselves with the boss. They have no problem taking credit for other people’s work. They’ll diminish your accomplishments and inflate their own. I’d never go that far. But I’m not waiting to get noticed anymore. If I beat a deadline, solve a tough problem, or get great feedback from a customer—I’m copying upper management on the email.”

“I found out on my 21st birthday that my dad was leaving my mom. At first I was angry with him. It seemed extremely selfish. But when I finally agreed to talk to him, he told me that he’d been depressed for five years. He told me that he’d felt trapped in his life and his marriage. He even told me that one night he drove out to a bridge, thought about killing himself, and only changed his mind at the last minute. Part of me empathizes with him. I never realized he was hiding this depression from us. But at the same time he made choices that really hurt our family. So I’m trying to figure out what blame he deserves. At what point is a person with mental illness still responsible for their choices?”

Tender Mercies

November 19, 2017 2 Comments
The chinning bar is on the door,
The boxes are on the garage floor,
Memories linger everywhere,
Of happy times we used to share.

Dear people you'll never know,
Of the love I couldn't show,
It wasn't coz love wasn't there,
I just didn't know how to share.

The years went by too fast for me,
I'm just beginning now to see,
That in my quest to be the best,
I burned out young- you know the rest.

You'll see some reasons why,
I did things that would make you cry,
I failed you so over the years,
But God reached down to dry your tears.

My heart rejoiced now as I,
See how His love helped you get by,
You've grown to be a blessing too,
Others will thank God for you.

So I share this  with love,
What happens when our Lord above,
Takes a messed up life like mine,
And make ashes begin to shine.

Naked Against the Night🌛🌃

November 19, 2017 0 Comments
By Gerrishon Sirere
The jungle night was still and black. Only the slightest breeze rippled through the tall grass of the countryside. Then, suddenly, at a quarter past twelve, not ten miles west of Ndola Airport, a big airliner fell from the skies and crashed in a blazing wreckage.
This was the Albertina. The treetops ripped away her left wing as she struck. Yet, on she rode, shakily and with a terrible speed, cutting a wide swath of devastation along her wooded path.
Those who were not instantly killed by the impact does soon enough in its fiery aftermath.
Only two survived the moment of disaster: the Secretary General of the United Nations, Dag Hammarskjold, and an aide. Hammarskjold himself, thrown safely clear of the crash site, was left to linger in the still of night and perhaps to pray for help. The other crawled some distance then collapsed.
At length, a pair of native men approached, looking cautiously about them all the while. But they offered no help. They had come only for looting. One of them espied a small machine that looked much like a typewriter still in working order. It would be of considerable value to them in the market place. So they took it with them and were quickly gone.
Now all was still once more and hopeless. Straining, Hammarskjold clutched at the dead brown leaves on the ground and held them in the fish of his left hand. Then he died.
The moon was caught in the branches:
Bound by its vow,
My heart was heavy.
Naked against the night
The tress slept. "Nevertheless,
Not as I will...."
The burden remained mine:
They could not hear my call,
And all was silence....

Dag Hjalmar Agne Carl Hammarskjold was a mystery in his own time. His poetry and private correspondence reflected a constant preoccupation- some called it obsession- with the image of himself on Calvary.
He was the intellectual of the international set. And few pretended to understand him- the way he went about agreeing with those who spoke against him, the way he insisted on negotiating important policy from a position of weakness rather than from one of strength. But few as well denied the success of his accomplishments. By the age of 31, he had become the youngest man ever to serve as Sweden's undersecretary of finance. Ten years later, he entered the foreign ministry, raising to cabinet rank as deputy minister. 
At 46, he was appointed chairman or his country's delegation to the United Nations. The next year, he was elected Secretary General of the U.N General Assembly, a post to which he was reelected for a second 5 year term in 1957.
He took on the job with the zeal of religious mission. To him that world organization was more than a forum among men. 
As things stand, there are and will always be too many unanswered questions surrounding the mysterious and tragic death of Dag Hammerskjold that September night.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

If You're Using These Words, Then You're Showing Hidden Signs of Stress

November 11, 2017 0 Comments

While headaches and mood swings are often indicators of stress, turns out the way we speak is, too.

From mood swings to being unable to fall asleep at night -- some things are clear symptoms of stress. However, it turns out stress manifests in many forms, like in the way we speak.

A recent study published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United State of America found that when people are stressed, they overuse certain words, like “really,” “incredibly” and “very.” By analyzing over 22,000 voice recordings of 143 people who wore audio recorders for two days, the researchers looked at how stress might be reflected in people’s speech patterns.

Transcribing the recordings and looking out for “function words,” such as adjectives, adverbs and pronouns, the researchers found that people under stress tend to use more of these function words like “really” or “incredibly.” “By themselves, they don’t have any meaning, but they clarify what’s going on,” study author and University of Arizona psychologist Matthias Mehl told Nature. Unlike “meaning words” such as nouns and verbs, which people use more consciously, function words “are produced more automatically, and they betray a bit more about what’s going on with the speaker.” Therefore, how people use function words changes when they are facing stressful situations, like a terrorist attack, social dilemmas or personal crises.

And while people use of words like “really” and “incredibly” went up during stress, their use of third-person plural pronouns like “they” or “their” went down, which was likely because people tend to focus on themselves when tensions are high, researchers suggest.

While the clinicians examined each participant’s self-reported stress and anxiety levels, they found that studying language’s connection to 50 genes that are known to be affected by stressful situations was a more accurate way to probe the language-stress relationship. Participants whose genes showed a disposition toward stress, not only used more function words like “really” and “very,” but they also talked less overall.

“Language reflects how people connect with their world, but who would ever have thought that gene expression would be related to language?” said University of Texas at Austin psychologist James Pennebaker to Nature. “It’s such an exciting new way of thinking.” 

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Colorado Springs woman spent 27 days in jail because she couldn’t pay $55 fee

November 09, 2017 0 Comments

“I didn’t think you could jail someone just because they were poor.” — Jasmine Still

A Colorado Springs woman who has a newborn child was jailed for 27 days because she couldn’t pay an unrelated pretrial court processing fee of $55 despite a judge’s order that she be released on her own recognizance, a civil lawsuit says.
In its attempt to recoup the $55 cost of pretrial services, El Paso County spent about $2,400 holding Jasmine Still, according to the lawsuit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Denver by American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado attorneys Rebecca Wallace and Mark Silverstein. 
Still, arrested Jan. 11 on a felony narcotics possession charge when she was caught with 0.3 of a gram of methamphetamine, is now seeking compensatory and consequential damages, and attorneys’ fees.
A judge determined that she should be released on her own recognizance because she was not a flight risk and posed no threat of harm to others, the lawsuit says.
“Every day I was in jail, I thought there had to have been some kind of mistake. I didn’t think you could jail someone just because they were poor,” Still said in a news release. “I am fighting back not just for me, but for all of the other people who El Paso County has kept in jail because they couldn’t scrape together $55.”
Still was held because El Paso County has a policy of charging crime suspects a $55 pretrial fee. That fee has kept people who should have been released on their own recognizance in jail for up to 119 days solely because of personal poverty, the lawsuit says.
“Jailing someone because of their poverty is not only cruel, it is unconstitutional,” Silverstein said in a news release.
In 2016, Colorado passed a law that closed a loophole critics contended gutted efforts to prevent the jailing of poor people who can’t pay fines for low-level offenses. The law specified that jailings could occur only after a court hearing determined the fines were not an undue hardship.
As recently as Friday, the El Paso County jail was holding six pretrial suspects released on their own recognizance who couldn’t pay the fee, the lawsuit says. The defendants should have been released after signing an agreement that promises they will return to court for future proceedings.
People throughout Colorado are released from jail immediately when a judge places them on personal recognizance.

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