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now or never

07.26.08 at 3:56 pm in life, in the news, love

"Barack has been in Europe, as you know, and they have gone wild for him.
How's it being perceived in the USA.
Are people happy about it, think he is showing off, or glad that he is showing he can do foreign politics."

the masses showed up
they still believe in america
that dream lives on
in human hearts

its about time for a super hero
to show up and save the world

here he is
now it is up to us
support the light
focus

all over europe
lets hear it for the rainbow tour
for real
powerful stuff

the kind of huge truth
the media cannot shape
like katrina
we saw it - we felt it

change is needed
he has arrived
believe what u know
america



ZEFRANK.COM

07.09.08 at 1:50 pm in life

obsession
complete and total
where have i been
no one told me

the scribbler - zefrank.com

zay as in say
a decade younger
way way cooler
web art blog

the key
4 real
4 free
imagine

the scribbler
1 of many
more fun than ask ro
try it














Army Pfc. Joseph Dwyer

07.07.08 at 7:20 pm in life, generic

After being lionized by many as the human face of the U.S. effort to rebuild a troubled Iraq, Dwyer brought the battlefield home with him, often grappling violently with delusions that he was being hunted by Iraqi killers.

 

His internal terror got so bad that, in 2005, he shot up his El Paso, Texas, apartment and held police at bay for three hours with a 9-mm handgun, believing Iraqis were trying to get in.

 

Last month, on June 28, police in Pinehurst, N.C., who responded to Dwyer's home, said the 31-year-old collapsed and died after abusing a computer cleaner aerosol. Dwyer had moved to North Carolina after living in Texas.

 

Dwyer, who joined the Army two days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and who was assigned to a unit of the 3rd Infantry Division that one officer called "the tip of the tip of the spear" in the first days of the U.S. invasion, had since then battled depression, sleeplessness and other anxieties that military doctors eventually attributed to post-traumatic stress disorder.

 

The war that made him a hero at 26 haunted him to the last moments of his life.

 

"He loved the picture, don't get me wrong, but he just couldn't get over the war," his mother, Maureen Dwyer, said by telephone from her home in Sunset Beach, N.C. "He wasn't Joseph anymore. Joseph never came home."

 

Dwyer's parents said they tried to get help for their son, appealing to Army and Veterans Affairs officials. Although he was treated off and on in VA facilities, he was never able to shake his anxieties.

 

One soldier from Long Island -- Newsday.com




we pray

06.26.08 at 12:06 pm in life


with the intention to attain
the ultimate supreme goal
that surpasses even the wish granting jewel
may i constantly cherish all living beings

whenever i associate with others
may i view myself as the lowest of all
and with a perfect intention
may i cherish others as supreme

examining my mental continuum
throughout all my actions
as soon as a delusion develops
whereby i or others would act inappropriately
may i firmly face it and avert it

whenever i see unfortunate beings
opressed by evil and violent suffering
may i cherish them as if i had found
a rare and precious treasure

even if someone i have helped
and of whom i had great hopes
nevertheless harms me withot any reason
may i see him as my holy spiritual guide

when others out of jealousy
harm me or insult me
may i take the defeat upon myself
and offer them the victory

in short - may i directly and indirectly
offer help and happiness to all my mothers
and secretly take upon myself
all of their harm and suffering

furthermore, through all these method practices
together with a mind
undefiled by the stains of  conceptions
of the eight extremes
and that sees all phenomena as illusory
may i be released from the bondage
of mistaken appearance and conception

- buddhist prayer -



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