TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
Esperanza - My Blog
Esperanza Garcia's Friends


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

Meeting Royalty in Canada: Will, Kate – and Tom

Photo by Stella Rothe

Ottawa, Canada

I was tired, it was very hot outside, and soon to be my birthday … the last thing I wanted (despite my usual eagerness to travel) was an invite for a long bus ride to see the Royal Couple, Kate and Will, in Ottawa (a place I’d never been to before). I never was one to suffer much for royalty, but my daughter (far more princess-like than her mother) really, really, wanted to go! I could not possibly say no to her wish.

To my further surprise, my daughter next informed me Charles De Lint lived there, a creative writer of urban fantasy she herself introduced me to (not in person, of course). Chances were nill I’d meet him there (which proved true), but the hope was a big bonus.

After a night bus ride we arrived in a super-sun-drenched city (I had packed my entire suit case for colder Canadian weather).  I was impressed with the elegantly old and wondrously English parliament buildings resembling small castles.  One building has two gargoyles on top.  There’s a two-spired church, steeples glistening like huge upside down icicles, along with a giant spider sculpture uncommonly beautiful. Nearby is a small waterfall where one can see Quebec across the river.

300,000 visitors filled the streets the next day, almost doubling the population.  The searing sun seemed to melt everyone and everything down into one bronzed entity.  Light glittered off the buildings and on the lawn where we all stood … waiting, waiting, waiting … sweating and hot.  Bells kept chiming out the hours.

What we don’t do for our kids …

Feeling innovative, I gathered my scarf around my hat so it resembled a burqa-like tent flowing around me, a protection against the solar glare.  I stood out in the crowd, invisible as I was, and very soon, other people (even men) had spare clothing wrapped around their heads draping down their backs and shoulders.  We all were Arabian that day, with new understanding and deep appreciation for their traditional clothing.

Then came the time.  Suddenly, the roar of cannon fire … again and again, while big jets zoomed low overhead (reminding me instantly of a plane that crashed right into the audience at an airshow years ago).

The sound of bagpipes floated on the still, simmering air followed by an entourage of decorated police and black, armored motor cars. Elegant troops of horses came, manes and tails bouncing, naturally royal.  They proudly pulled dainty carriages.  Somebody noticed snipers (dressed in apropos black) standing on nearby roofs which gave everything an eerie overcast.

All this glorious pomp and glory, though, could not possibly compete with the first memory I had of that city.  I was on a jostling public bus going toward the hotel in the morning.  There, on the sidewalk racing alongside the street, I thought I saw someone I knew.  Except that person died fourteen months ago.  Nevertheless, there he was again, for one split second:

A First Nation Indian fellow about my age had materialized within the frame of the dusty bus window.  He had lovely copper skin which stood out immediately from the swirling blur of people.  I’m not sure anyone else on that bus even saw him – perhaps he was invisible to everyone but me.  Slender, with high cheekbones and an earring, he was roaring down the street – in a wheelchair!  His long hair was flowing like blown black feathers while his strong hands turned the big wheels of his chair.  Oddly, he seemed to have the stick of a candied sucker poking out the side of his lips – that’s when I thought for sure it must indeed be the man I knew, who would have done all those same things.

“Look!” I caught my daughter’s attention (this all happened in a flash). “Do you see that handsome Native in that wheelchair over there?  He’s Tom Soto’s doubleganger, like his angel!”

She looked, but already he was gone.  Disappeared, as if he’d easily slipped right back into heaven.  My daughter shook her head, disappointed she missed the Canadian version of our beloved friend (an Aztec Indian) of thirteen years.  The bus drove hastily on while the outdoor crowds changed our view like a turning of the Kaleidoscope.

“Why, I could swear it was Tom!”  I told her.

Smiling, my girl wisely replied, “Well, Mom, remember this is “De Lint-ville,” it’s enchanted.  Here anything is possible!  Maybe he really was Tom.”

Yes, I think so - kind of - it was love, and Tom’s memory.  I would never have noticed that stranger in such a crowd without my huge love for him.  Tom made his reappearance that day through my memory.


July 13, 2011 | 10:07 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


anandk   anandk Anand Koti's TIGblog
Anand Koti's profile

Share the journey of Colorss | Lets walk together

It's been quite sometime I have not shared the developments of Colorss. First of all I am really thankful to everyone without whom we could not reach here at this stage. Still remember the day when we started 2 years nine months ago we had only ONE child and today we realize that we have grown up.. at a speed, with progress, with dedication, with your support and trust. Yes, not to mentioned those countless hurdles, difficulties and moments that gave us sleepless nights. 

Today we are present at four schools and two cities in two states:

  1. Mahadji Shinde High School, Pune Municipality School at Pune Cantonment Board
  2. Dr. Ambedkar Memorial School, Pune Municipality School at Pune Cantonment Board
  3. Guru Rabindranath Tagore School, Pune Municipality School, Pune
  4. Navprerna - a care club of Navrachana School, Baroda, Gujarat (Navrachana is an independent, co-educational, English medium school. It is one of the premier schools of Gujarat. Each year it attracts the brightest students who wish to follow the Central Board of Secondary Education, New Delhi (CBSE) curriculum.)

Projects:

Project Enhance :- Project Enhance uses sport and the arts as tools to promote physical well-being while improving mental health. Mental health is not just the absence of mental disorder; rather, it is a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own potential, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively, and is able to make a contribution to her or his community.
In India, even today girl child is considered as a liability and is often ignored; even harassed and molested. Project Enhance is targeted at empowering the girl child through a blend of martial arts and creative arts resulting into increased self-confidence and improved academic performance as a result.

Project 'Colors of Life' :- Project 'Colors of Life' provides an answer to one of our nation's most troubling problems. Although more children are staying in school than in previous years, there are still too many students dropping out, even at the very earliest levels. This problem is especially prevalent among the poor and the disabled. Some studies estimate that as many as 50% of children will drop out before finishing the higher secondary stage. More than half of all children leave school before ninth grade. To reduce these rates, we have to figure out why so many children aren't finishing their studies.

Project Urja - igniting the fire within :-Project Urja - igniting the fire within is our first vocational training program started in Baroda, Gujarat. The project aims at the empowerment of women. It aims at providing vocational training to women especially for women from underprivileged sections of the society. Project Urja is an initiative to make Colorss a self-sustained model.

Number of students: 
Project Enhance :- 100 girls
Project 'Colors of Life' :- 65 children 
Project Urja - igniting the fire within :- 15 women from slums under-going training
Holistic Programs for a child - specially for Guru Rabindranath Tagore School - 50 students

Today we have approximate 215 children and 15 women at Colorss. The numbers are fluctuating due to unstable family cohesiveness, poor financial condition of the family, child is asked to work and avoid school, broken-family, distance between the school and home and other factors.. We have our limitations as we are still very young and we need a lot of support to address these grass-root level problems. 

Small steps leads to Big Change
For Love
Anand 


July 9, 2011 | 2:07 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


anandk   anandk Anand Koti's TIGblog
Anand Koti's profile

Teacher Training Workshops | Pune

The Colorss Foundation recently conducted a series of teacher-training workshops in order to better understand the problems that teachers and the children they teach face in their daily lives. The workshops aimed to provide  teachers with a background in how to help students and parents get the best out of their education, as well as  provide support in how to handle the stress that sometimes comes with teaching.


The workshops divided participating teachers into groups of 6 or 7, where they were free to discuss some of the  frustrations and problems they encountered in their teaching careers. Many brought up issues with children not completing homework and not paying attention in class. Additionally, they felt that rowdy children disturbed the class as a whole, and many students who came from a background of abuse and violence brought such behaviors with them into the classroom. Furthermore, teachers agreed that there was a general attitude of pride in misbehaving and disrespect and ingratitude towards the teacher and the teaching facilities.

The groups then discussed possible solutions to these problems. They suggested that there should be more discipline in classes, and that their students should be taught the value of a free education. The teachers also agreed that training teachers in how to control difficult children and in how to better motivate children in class would be helpful.

The general reception of the workshop was mixed – some teachers were pessimistic and reluctant to learn new teaching methods, while some were eager to welcome new ideas.

~Krystal


July 8, 2011 | 6:07 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


anandk   anandk Anand Koti's TIGblog
Anand Koti's profile

Calling Volunteers for Project 'Colors of Life' at Navprerna - a care club of Navrachana School, Baroda - Gujarat

Project 'Colors of Life' provides an answer to one of our nation's most troubling problems. Although more children are staying in school than in previous years, there are still too many students dropping out, even at the very earliest levels. This problem is especially prevalent among the poor and the disabled. Some studies estimate that as many as 50% of children will drop out before finishing the higher secondary stage. More than half of all children leave school before ninth grade. To reduce these rates, we have to figure out why so many children aren't finishing their studies.

Project 'Colors of Life' is going to start for the students of Navprerna a care-club of Navrachana School, Vadodara Gujarat. `NAVPRERNA`a programme to educate Less Privileged - a care-club of Navrachana School. The children come from slums of Sama Village. The women particiapnts of 'Project Urja - igniting the fire' our first vocational training program started in Baroda, Gujarat also belong to the slums of Sama Village. 

Students of 6th and 7th grade would be the part of our Project 'Colors of Life' and we aim to launch the first E-zine of Baroda chapter on 15th August. 

We are requesting volunteers to join us at Navrachana School. The timings are 12:00 pm to 2:00 pm on weekdays (twice a week - days would be confirmed soon) and on weekends i.e Saturday (1st and 3rd - 4:00pm to 5:30 pm)

Psychology students/ Psychologist/Students and any one who can contribute to this project are most welcome. Send us your resume at contact@colorss.org . Deadline 10th July 2011 latest by 6:00 pm

Thank you
For Love
Anand 

July 7, 2011 | 1:07 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

The Power of Nonviolence

Check MPT’s Newsletter Blog!

http://michiganpeaceteamnewsletters.blogspot.com/

Just click the blogspot Link, then select the MPT 2011 Spring Newsletter. It was posted on June 30,2011- a bit late for Spring but well worth checking out!
Also, thank you so much for whatever you can do to help distribute the MPT 2011 Spring newsletter …
Your MPT Newsletter Working Group: Nancy Ayotte, Paula Marie Deubel, Barbara Nolin, Kim Redigan, Annette Thomas, Liz Walters

In this newsletter we lift up the power of nonviolence and celebrate the
growing number of nonviolent movements around the planet that are seeking social
change. At the same time we acknowledge that Earth Community is facing some of
the most serious economic, social, and political problems imaginable. As people
increasingly experience their lives being stressed by violence, unemployment,
eviction, debt, and malnutrition, our responsibility to help them understand the
power of nonviolence and the possibilities of nonviolent action becomes ever
more important.

July 4, 2011 | 1:07 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

If King Michael is a traitor … then what is Basescu?

Click here to view the embedded video.

Romanian President Traian Basescu called HMS King Michael of Romania a traitor…. How far can a *supposedly* democratic president go when expressing personal opinions and such in public?
ActMedia Romanian News Agency:http://www.actmedia.eu/2011/06/24/top+story/royal+house+will+not+comment+on+p…
Yahoo News:http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110623/ap_on_re_eu/eu_romania_basescu_king
The Kansas City Star:http://www.kansascity.com/2011/06/23/2969149/romanian-president-launches-atta…
Romania Report Blog: http://romania-rep.blogspot.com/2008/02/president-basescu-in-timisoara-i-will…
Find out more: http://www.google.ro/search?sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=basescu+about+…

I didn’t plan to take on this subject at the beginning. But, at the same time, a so-called democratic president … sings the tunes of the Securitate & co? (Securitate was the Romanian secret police during the belle epoque – for the unitiated, before 1989, when it was a Communist dictatourship under Nicolae Ceausescu) Bashing the Royal Family was en vogue then, for obvious reasons. But what does this prove?

Going beyond the obvious insult (recited a la carte from the How to Be a Good Boygirls are obviously left out, they are supposed to stay at home and breed a future glorious generation for the Party and for the country -  handbook printed in the brains of so many people…), this is an intriguing – and terrifying – Freudian (Stalinist?) slip from a person who is supposed to promote a certain set of morals, convictions and act as the representative of the many. What is even more disturbing is the thought that, even though he has lost a whole bucket o’ points in the hearts of his *cough* subjects, Basescu still shows no sign of stopping his destructive ways. He’s like on a bloody rampage with nothing to lose!

Well, anyway, this is from the point of view of an insider who can pledge alliance to the King at any time. How does this appear from the outside? I’m really interested to see if this little slip will hurt Basescu (and Romania?)’s international image. My question is … is a president supposed to recite such offensive poems?

Related articles
Enhanced by Zemanta

June 24, 2011 | 1:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

The Literary Party: Growing Up Gay and Amish in America – All Romance Ebooks


June 22, 2011 | 9:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

Foreign language radio: link to home and learning tool for language learners

Tune in and learn a language!

I’m in a Brazilian hiking group and new hikers always ask me how I learned Portuguese with a Portuguese accent. My response is always: KSQQ, Rádio Comercial Portuguesa 96.1FM in San Jose, CA, a Portuguese Community Radio. I listened through a lot of ads for funeral homes and Catholic masses while driving. And low and behold, I learned Portuguese.

Judy Keen of USA TODAY published an article on foreign language radio stations in the US and their problems to stay in business, Foreign-language radio stations provide connection to home . Another addition to the article should have been that those radio stations not only keep foreign nationals and immigrants in the US connected to each other and in tune with what’s going on in their home countries, but they also serve as a resource for language learners to have a constant source of information in their target language.

If it weren’t for my intermittent tuning into Portuguese radio, I probably would not speak the language as well as I do. Now my accent is mixed between a Brazilian and Portuguese one but my continental Portuguese vowels and “sh” sounds are distinctly from the Iberian peninsula and I’ve never lived there.

Keep those radio stations on and help language learners pick up a new language while in traffic.

 


June 21, 2011 | 9:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

The Literary Party e-books

The Literary Party: Growing Up Gay and Amish in America

by James Schwartz

 

e-books here:

http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/67999

 


June 21, 2011 | 9:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

The Pale City

by James Schwartz

 

 

From the pale city
Beside the pale sea
I traveled once more home
To the fields in hues of tea

 

I left behind abandon lovers
They did not see me go
I keep my silence still
I have nothing left to show

 

No goodbyes were called out
As the pale city fell behind
Only silence reigned
Of the indifferent kind.

 


June 21, 2011 | 7:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

Evitar el Spanglish utilizando canciones y los medios

Entrevista en el programa matutino de Univision San Francisco (KDTV) con la autora del libro, El Idioma es Música” acerca de los temas de como hablar inglés y español sin mezlcarles en Spanglish y como utilizar canciones, televisión y películas para aprender idiomas. El 13 de junio 2011. (Interview in Spanish about how to avoid speaking Spanglish and speak both English and Spanish correctly and how to use songs, TV, movies and other media to learn languages.) June 13, 2011.

1ra entrevista (1st interview)

2da entrevista (2nd interview)


June 20, 2011 | 1:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

Вы хотите говорить на иностранном языке?

Вы хотите говорить на иностранном языке?

Слушайте музыку, смотрите телевизионные программы и кинофильмы.
Сусанна Зарайская, автор книги «Язык – это музыка», считает, что каждый язык имеет свою тональность, как и музыкальное произведение.


June 18, 2011 | 9:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

Tourist, Tourist Couples, and Visiting Without Seeing Anything

Even though it may seem this post is a rant, it most certainly isn’t. These are some thoughts about travelling and tourism that have been bugging me for some time.

I don’t dislike travelling – in fact I love it and, in one way or another, I’ve been on the road all my life – but I tend to dislike tourism. What I mean by tourism? The kind of *cough* travelling done through an agency that plans everything from lodging to itineraries. That is, one’s visit is filtered through the eyes, opinions and narrow-mindedness of some travel agent who decides what you should see, where you should eat, whom you should meet. Of course, these things are also planned according to that particular city, region or country’s intentions: for example, you can’t visit – say North Korea, perhaps even China or Cuba – freely. These two coupled, you get to see what some other people – Big Brother, maybe? – want you to see. I remember that in 2007, I went to Turkey with a very good friend of mine and, as we have Balkan Flexi-Pass tickets and some days off, we decided to stroll around the country as well (We were headed towards Eskisehir, but before that, we spent a few days in Istanbul and most part of a day in Ankara). While we were still in Istanbul, we went around the town, meeting people, and talking with them, we told them about our plans to visit Ankara too and everybody told us not to go there, “better go to Izmir or some other place like that”, they said. Then we realized what they meant: there was a contrast – I’m not saying in the bad sense, but in the sense of a great difference – between the former Constantinople and the country’s capital. We still loved it, and it was an incredible experience – knowing the real soul of a country cannot be achieved by only visiting the touristic attractions and suggestions!

On the other hand, I very much dislike narrow-minded people and those with a superior attitude towards everybody else because they come from a place or another. I don’t want to hurt anyone, but these people are usually the ones that haven’t left their safe-zone bubble much or the ones that have complexes and are so insecure that they put on a high-horse mask to anybody who doesn’t know their true situation.

Travelling should be a fun experience. I’m not going to start a psychological or marriage counseling blog, but, if you are going to live with somebody, make that somebody with whom you have at least a common subject or passion! Tourist couples that sit in restaurants face to face looking at everything else – except their partners – does not only make them feel awkward and disgusted, but everybody else too! I’m not saying that, if you don’t have a wife or husband with whom you can talk at least about the weather or the latest tennis match, you shouldn’t go out and about, but at least try to make the trip pleasant for your partner, everybody else – that way, you’ll see your own time will be pleasant – and maybe even fun – too!

Getting to know a society or culture is exactly like getting to know a person: you can’t do that only by going through its public image. For example, England is not only Trafalgar Square or Buckingham Palace, France is not only the Eiffel Tower (and – if you’re more cultured, or intend to seem so – Louvre or Cannes), Romania is not only Dracula, Japan is not only geisha and samurai, China is not only The Great Wall, etc. You should at least read about the inner workings of that society: a bit about the language(s), food, history, etc. You should also see if there are special requirements (like if you go to Saudi Arabia or Iran, for example). You should always abide by the saying When in Rome, do as Romans do.

Don’t hesitate to meet people and listen to their stories. Don’t be afraid to make friends. You can risk a bit and try new streets, shops or foods (of course, not too much, as some places can be really dangerous). Ask the locals. If you can live with a family, that’s even better! Don’t be afraid to enjoy your visit!

That being said, I’m just hoping that ideas like Slow Travel or Couch Surfing get more into the mainstream and will be tried by people who – until now – never went out of the “Travel Agency – Hotel – Tourist Attractions – Travel Agency” vicious circle.

And… until the next time … Life is more than one journey, love every one of them! As an end, please listen to this Jimmy Cliff song:

 

Related articles
Enhanced by Zemanta

June 16, 2011 | 10:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


malcs64   malcs64 Malcolm Lawrence's TIGblog
Malcolm Lawrence's profile

Hare Krishna: Textures

Click here to view the embedded video.

This video is basically a collage of different pictures I’ve taken a few weeks ago during an Indian festival in Trafalgar Square, London UK. I was fascinated by the sea of colours and the blend between sari and traditional Indian textures with modern-Western materials and shapes. I have an obsession for taking pictures of feet – it’s not a fetish, it’s more like a way of cutting an image (with its story) to the slightest detail (the feet) which still holds a meaning and can tell much more than the whole picture. It also leaves room to imagination!

Enjoy … and Hare Krishna!

Related articles
Enhanced by Zemanta

June 16, 2011 | 5:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


anandk   anandk Anand Koti's TIGblog
Anand Koti's profile

Project Enhance uses sport and the arts as tools to promote physical well-being while improving mental health


Making a difference in the community is by far one of the most gratifying feelings in the world. There is a great sense of accomplishment you receive when performing such humane duties. Doing what is right brings many great qualities to the table; it connects you to others, delivers wonderful energy to your mind and soul and importantly, positively impacting your society.

Investing your time in providing strategies to enhance the lives of others also improves your own. By contributing in some way to help others eventually shapes your own future. You will improve your interpersonal skills, promote human welfare, gain valuable information and have some fun. So why not take part in a life-changing experience?

One of our Project - Project Enhance uses sport and the arts as tools to promote physical well-being while improving mental health. Mental health is not just the absence of mental disorder; rather, it is a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own potential, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively, and is able to make a contribution to her or his community.

In India, even today girl child is considered as a liability and is often ignored; even harassed and molested. Project Enhance is targeted at empowering the girl child through a blend of martial arts and creative arts resulting into increased self-confidence and improved academic performance as a result.
Project Enhance and its details:



Lending a helping hand to witness happiness is the real reward. There is no loss in the end.  Everyone gains – you, the organization and society. 

At Colorss Foundation, we strive to exceed our objectives- to bring positive changes and color to the world. We need your help and support to continue this mission. Join us and be a part of this great change! : contact@colorss.org for more information

For Love,
Anand

June 5, 2011 | 8:06 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:




Esperanza Garcia's Profile


Latest Posts
GLOBAL SUMMIT 2008...

Monthly Archive
November 2008

Change Language


Tags Archive
globalsummit

Filter By Type
Topics

Friends
Abdul-Dahim Salifu
Adewole Taiwo
adeyemi temitope
Adham Tobail
Alexandra
Anand Koti
Angela Jhanji
Belal jahjooh
bertchranis
cherry
Christopher De la Cruz
Danish Khan MCP, CompTIA A+ & CompTIA Network+ Certified Professional (webmaster@mdanishkhan.tk)
Darnell
DOUMBIA
Dr. Ahmed Tammam
Dr.Amira Mostafa
farah abd al razaq al azab
Gudina Fufa Yadeta
Hazem M. AbuKaresh
jean michel marc donald chevalier
Josh
Kathleen Scully
khaled
Kinga Katus
macdonald
Malcolm Lawrence
MARCO ANTONIO MALDONADO M.
marleny
Matthew Carroll
MIGUEL ANGEL
MIZERO
mon
Monica P. Alava
Saladin Abuhamdieh
Sandy Mae
Sheila Kelengwe
TEWEN
Vanessa
YA Staff
Zainul Abedin
بييدا


4938 views
Important Disclaimer