Time, Great Revealer — Akwafrigeria

Time is the greatest, it is eternal. Time flows, lives follows. Lives ends, time never stops. Life is short, time you don’t own. Your life is a share in time, the value of your share depends on your choices, make great, wise, and humane choices, cos time eventually brings everything to light ❤️

Time, Great Revealer — Akwafrigeria

Kalo Mera tis O Agios Spyridon

Context, Thought, and Learning: ShiraDest Offers Project Do Better

       Happy St. Spyridon’s day, to my Greek friends, especially here in San Diego, with their beautiful Greek Cathedral!

 

Shira

Action Prompts:

1.) Share your thoughts on how the Greeks really invented every word in the European languages, and even the phrase “Things Are Not Always As They Seem!”   😉

2.) Write a story, post or tweet that uses those thoughts.

Dear Readers, ideas on learning, especially multiple #LanguageLearning, on-going education and empathy-building, to #EndPoverty, #EndHomelessness,  #EndMoneyBail & achieve freedom for All HumanKind? 

Support our key #PublicDomainInfrastructure  & #StopSmoking at least for CCOVID-19:
1. #PublicLibraries,
2. #ProBono legal aid and Education,
3. #UniversalHealthCare, and
4. good #publictransport
Read, Write

-we can learn from the past Stayed on Freedom’s Call for free,

        by Teaching and Learning (Lesson Plans offline) in the present, to

                     We can  Do Better: to create a kinder…

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Une histoire significative pour les enfants et les adultes –  « La Magie de l’Amazonie Les aventures de Namowë, un garçon Yanomami »  — Barbara Crane Navarro

illustration tirée de « La Magie de l’Amazonie Les aventures de Namowë, un garçon Yanomami » La Magie de l’Amazonie décrit le voyage d’un garçon Yanomami à travers la forêt tropicale amazonienne pour trouver un remède pour sa sœur malade. Il rencontre des animaux et des plantes parlant qui l’aident. Le conte est écrit dans la veine […]

Une histoire significative pour les enfants et les adultes –  « La Magie de l’Amazonie Les aventures de Namowë, un garçon Yanomami »  — Barbara Crane Navarro

Plain language summary: Focus on improving how nature is conserved and by whom instead of how much to protect — Relational Thinking — Barbara Crane Navarro

The Caatinga dry forest in Catimbau National Park, northeast Brazil (credit Neil Dawson) By Neil Dawson, William Douglas Carvalho, Jakelyne Suélen Sousa Bezerra, Felipe Todeschini, Marcelo Tabarelli and Karen Mustina Read the article here. Pledges have been made to increase the land set aside for conservation by 2030. But the common assumption that governments and […] […]

Plain language summary: Focus on improving how nature is conserved and by whom instead of how much to protect — Relational Thinking — Barbara Crane Navarro

“Who will defend us if not ourselves?” Indigenous people and rainforests under renewed attack in Brazil — Leila’s Blog — Barbara Crane Navarro

Socio-environmental protections in Brazil are being dismantled whilst the world is distracted by the Covid-19 pandemic. Forests in the Amazon, home to 1 million indigenous people, have been subject to fires and deforestation as the current government administration seeks to reverse hard-won gains for indigenous and environmental rights. These fragile rights exist in tension with […] […]

“Who will defend us if not ourselves?” Indigenous people and rainforests under renewed attack in Brazil — Leila’s Blog — Barbara Crane Navarro

Ann and Anna, (serial short story, Part 11): Punishment?

Context, Thought, and Learning: ShiraDest Offers Project Do Better

      …  Parts 10 (Warmth)9 (Found)8 (Lost), 7 (Rock), 6 (Believe), 5 (Naming), 4 (Home), 3 (Trust), 2 (Hope), and 1 (Nightmares) have posted on previous Sundays…

     Bacon!

 

     Anna helped me sit up, and then pushed the bandages a bit higher on my forehead.  The doctor had left my eyes mostly uncovered when he renewed my head dressing, but the bandages still covered my eyes a bit.  It was as if he’d wanted to cover them again, but opted to allow me enough vision to feel safer in my new surroundings.  I was glad of it, for I was quite curious to see who was coming through the door, now.

 

“Here you are, dears.”  

     The woman serving us was white, and seemed as pleased to be bringing us our breakfast as if…

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