Showing posts with label love gifts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love gifts. Show all posts

Apr 22, 2011

Passion for Loving

Perhaps it’s time to look again at the ways and power of love. For many, just the thought that love is a real possibility gives hope to what could otherwise be an empty life. What harm can come from mutual respect, gentleness, goodness, trust and peaceful coexistence? Think about it. Only love has the power to unite without taking away another’s dignity, another’s self. Only love holds no jealous possession over people and nations. Only love is capable of putting humanity before ideology or race. Only love can supply the endless energies required to overcome hunger and despair. “Love one another”. These words were spoken more than two thousand years ago. Powerful though this command is, many of us have succeeded in ignoring it for these many years. We all give lip service to it but few of us expect anyone to really practice it. We leave that to madmen and saints. In fact, we have become suspicious of lovers and either dismiss them as naive and irrelevant, or we see them as phonies. We are certain that no one could really care about anyone else without having some ulterior motive. The qualities of love such as tenderness, commitment, concern, generosity, and trust are relegated to the realm of platitudes and are ignored. Today the phrase “lone one another” takes on a more urgent tone. It seems to me that we must love one another or die. Modern society shrugs off still another plea for love. It is amused by the suggestion that the world could be cemented together, not by the threat of holocaust or an arm race, but through a deep respect for life. No one will deny that we have reached a critical point in our history. In fact, there are growing numbers of fatalists who believe we have reached a point of no return. 
One thing is painfully obvious. Conventional methods to bring peace and understanding to our world have failed. The more we look about us, the more we find hate, violence, prejudice and disregard for human life, more than one hundred million people were killed just alone in the 20th century alone, this doesn’t include the people who died in natural disasters. We listen to newscasters and read columnists who deal out statistics about war dead, starvation, children being abused and sacrificed, disregard for human dignity and human rights. And all with about as much feeling as report of the day’s football scores. We have become conditioned to a whole spectrum of wasted human potential. still, we continue to ignore love as possible alternative. A friend of mine was telling me a story that happened during one of his trip to the old Soviet Union, he met a man in Moscow that said to him,”Why do you want to kill us?” he tried to make him understand that he wanted to kill no one, that he celebrated life, not death. Somewhere buried in our respective ideologies were two people trying to relate their very real and very human concerns-not only for the world, but for each other as individuals. Through the magic of caring communication, they accomplished a victory of sorts- they both forgot about all the things that separated them and were soon lost in one another. At that instant all contradictions and symbols were refuted. They both choose life. I am sure that many would respond to this as naive and unrealistic; that love is barely strong enough to maintain most close family relationships and beyond that, the heart is strained to its limits. So it is ridiculous for anyone to count on the power of love for a solution to international problems. I’ve often been told that in my zeal to love everyone I risk ending up loving no one. Nothing can be farther from the truth. Universal love is not only possible, it is the most complete love of which we are capable as human beings. But love can only work when we give up the antiquated mindsets which continue to paralyze us. We need to challenge the sophisticates who view it as romantic nonsense, idealistic bosh, unscientific and anti-intellectual. We need to accept love in our live as the most universal force for unification and good, accessible to all who really want it. Only then we will discover that love, fully realized, has the power to lay aside the petty things which separate us and reveal the fact that our enemy has a face and a heart. It is at this point that all things again become possible.

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Jan 13, 2011

TIA MOWRY is expecting her first child with husband CORY HARDRICT

 TIA MOWRY
 TIA MOWRY, the American actress and star of the hit sitcom 'Sister, Sister', is expecting her first child with husband CORY HARDRICT, reports People Magazine. The child is due in the summer and a source close to the couple said, "This is something that they've wanted for a long time and they're thrilled".

Mowry married actor Cory back in 2008 in an outdoor ceremony in Santa Barbara, California. The wedding planner ROBYN GOLDBERG said at the time, "You can tell they're really in love". The 32-year-old, who appeared with her identical twin TAMERA MOWRY in 'Sister Sister', is currently starring in the BET comedy-drama series 'The Game' which is produced by 'Frasier' star KELSEY GRAMMER. Mowry plays a first-year medical student who ignores the advice of her parents and gives up an offer of admission to Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine to follow her boyfriend to San Diego. The show aired its season four premiere on Tuesday (11th January 2011) to an audience of over 7 million. Speaking on her Twitter page, Mowry said, "7.7 million viewers last night!!!! Wow!! we r speechless!!! Lets keep it up next week!!!!"

According to reports, Mowry's pregnancy will be documented on a reality television show on the 'Style Network'.
TIA MOWRY and CORY HARDRICT

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