In high school as a sophomore I was involved in jazz choir. Our school hadn’t won an award in competition in over ten years.
One of the songs was a solo, sung by me. We made it to finals. I asked the teacher if we could use my solo in the competition, he barked, no!! You were singing sharp!! I said, no it wasn’t! So he plugged in the cassette, rewound and had a listen, agreeing he was in error, it was right in tune, so we used it in the final round.
We wound up taking first place trophy. I was not permitted to go up for the trophy with others because I was not senior.
Folks like this … they were always around to make certain I never thought too highly of myself.
May he someday understand what he contributed to …
Welcome magic and wonder Brilliance and grace Welcome joy, satisfaction Pleasure and strength
Welcome essence, beauty, presence Time, spirit, form, and space Welcome excellence in every blessing Sacred and pray
What I seek, I am What I wanna know, I understand All I wish I could, I can Who I wanna be, I am
What I seek, I am What I wanna know, I understand All I wish I could, I can Who I wanna be, I am
Welcome magic and wonder Brilliance and grace Welcome joy, satisfaction Pleasure and strength
Welcome essence, beauty, presence Time, spirit, form, and space Welcome excellence in every blessing Sacred and pray
What I seek, I am What I wanna know, I understand All I wish I could, I can Who I wanna be, I am (to be)
What I seek, I am (ooh-ooh) What I wanna know, I understand (I-I) All I wish I could, I can (whoa-oh) Who I wanna be, I am (to be)
I am a seed, I am a tree I am the flower, I am the bee I am fire and I am wind I accept love and also I give (I am) I am loud and I am mighty (ooh-ooh) I am silent and I tread lightly (I-I) I am a brave and monumental (whoa-oh) I am modest, I am gentle (I am) I am a student and I teach I am the sand and I am a beach I am ease and I am power (I am) I am bridge and I am tower (I am) I am reason, I am wild (I am) I am mother, I am child I am many, I am few I am God, and God is you (I am)
What I seek, I am (I am) What I wanna know, I understand (I-I) All I wish I could, I can (whoa-oh) Who I wanna be, I am (to be)
What I seek, I am (ooh-ooh) What I wanna know, I understand (I-I) All I wish I could, I can (whoa-oh) Who I wanna be, I am (to be)
I am, I am, I am I am, I am, I am (I-I) I am, I am, I am (whoa-oh) I am, I am, I am (to be) (I am)
Source: Musixmatch Songwriters: India Arie Simpson / Alexandra Sarton / Verónica Santiago
I woke with the lyrics “Listen to your heart before you tell him goodbye.” I do believe my soul mate is coming on scene soon.
I know there’s something in the wake of your smile I get a notion from the look in your eyes, yeah You’ve built a love but that love falls apart Your little piece of Heaven turns too dark
Listen to your heart when he’s calling for you Listen to your heart, there’s nothing else you can do I don’t know where you’re going and I don’t know why But listen to your heart before you tell him goodbye
Sometimes you wonder if this fight is worthwhile The precious moments are all lost in the tide, yeah They’re swept away and nothing is what is seems The feeling of belonging to your dreams
Listen to your heart when he’s calling for you Listen to your heart, there’s nothing else you can do I don’t know where you’re going and I don’t know why But listen to your heart before you tell him goodbye
And there are voices that want to be heard So much to mention but you can’t find the words The scent of magic, the beauty that’s been (beauty that’s been) When love was wilder than the wind
Listen to your heart (take a listen to it) when he’s calling for you Listen to your heart (take a listen to it) there’s nothing else you can do I don’t know where you’re going and I don’t know why But listen to your heart before, oh
Listen to your heart (take a listen to it) when he’s calling for you Listen to your heart (take a listen to it) there’s nothing else you can do I don’t know where you’re going and I don’t know why But listen to your heart before You tell him goodbye
Listen to your heart Listen to your heart (take a listen to it) Listen to your heart Listen to your heart (take a, take a listen to it) Listen to your heart Listen to your heart (oh, oh) Listen to your heart (oh, ooh, oh) Listen to your heart (oh, oh, oh) Listen to your heart (oh, oh) Listen to your heart (oh, oh, oh) Listen to your heart (oh, oh) Listen to your heart (oh, yeah, yeah, yeah) Listen to your heart (oh, oh)
Guess we’re getting close to the pre-programmed “zombie apocalypse”.
t’s close to midnight Something evil’s lurking in the dark Under the moonlight You see a sight that almost stops your heart
You try to scream But terror takes the sound before you make it You start to freeze As horror looks you right between the eyes You’re paralyzed
‘Cause this is thriller, thriller night And no one’s gonna save you From the beast about to strike You know it’s thriller, thriller night You’re fighting for your life inside a killer, thriller, ow
I’m gonna thrill you tonight Darkness falls across the land The midnight hour is close at hand Creatures crawl in search of blood To terrorize y’all’s neighborhood (I’m gonna thrill you tonight)
And whosoever shall be found Without the soul for getting down Must stand and face the hounds of hell And rot inside a corpse’s shell I’m gonna thrill you tonight (thriller night, babe)
The foulest stench’s in the air The funk of forty thousand years And grizzly ghouls from every tomb (I’m gonna thrill you tonight) Are closing in to seal your doom (oh, yeah) And though you fight to stay alive Your body starts to shiver For no mere mortal can resist The evil of the thriller
‘Cause this is thriller, thriller night There ain’t no second chance against the thing with 40 eyes, girl Thriller, thriller night You’re fighting for your life inside a killer, thriller
‘Cause this is thriller, thriller night ‘Cause I can thrill you more than any ghoul would ever dare try Thriller (ooh-ooh), thriller night So let me hold you tight and share a Killer, thriller, killer, thriller here tonight
‘Cause this is thriller, thriller night Girl, I can thrill you more than any ghoul would ever dare try Thriller (ooh-ooh), thriller night So let me hold you tight and share a killer, thriller, ow
On this day, November 12th, 1890, an indigenous movement giving hope to the peoples in their loss and grief, was met with fear and violent suppression by the US government and it’s armed forces.
The Ghost Dance is, and was, a spiritual movement that came about in the late 1880s when conditions were in grave despair on Indian reservations with sickness, starvation and death ever present, Native Americans needed something to give them hope.
the Ghost Dance song: “The whole world is coming, A nation is coming, a nation is coming, The eagle has brought the message to the tribe, The father says so, the father says so. Over the whole earth they are coming, The buffalo are coming, the buffalo are coming, The crow has brought the message to the tribe, The father says so, the father says so.” “When the Sun died, I went up to Heaven and saw God [Creator] and all the people who had died a long time ago. God [Creator] told me to come back and tell my people they must be good and love one another, and not fight, or steal or lie. He gave me this dance to give to my people.” ~ Wovoka. HISTORIC AUDIO RECORDING, click on link below to hear.https://archive.org/embed/CollectedWorksOfJamesMooney
The Ghost Dance was an answer to the subjugation of Native Americans by the U.S. government. It was an attempt to revitalize traditional culture and to find a way to face increasing poverty, hunger, and disease, all representing the reservation life of the Native Americans in the late nineteenth century. The Ghost Dance originated among the Paiute Indians around 1870. However, the tide of the movement came in 1889 with a Paiute shaman Wovoka (Jack Wilson). Wovoka had a vision during a sun eclipse in 1889.
While many European Americans were alarmed by the Ghost Dance and saw it as a militant and warlike movement, it was quite the opposite — an emergence of a peaceful resistance movement based on Indian beliefs. It was also a movement of desperation, as existing treaties had been violated and Indians in the West were forced onto reservations. For the Plains Indians, this was a period of starvation as the buffalo were slaughtered, destroying their way of life and main source of food. From an Indian point of view, Europeans were not only destroying the way of life of Indian peoples, but destroying the natural resources of the plains to an extent that would make it impossible for anyone to live there. European Americans often saw the Ghost Dance as irrational. From an Indian point of view, what was being done to them and their way of life was irrational.
James Mooney wrote a book about the Ghost Dance, hoping it would help to counter newspaper articles about it that were inaccurate and promoted prejudice toward the Indians. His research was first published as part of a report in 1890, then enlarged as a book in 1896. The press encouraged popular belief that the dance was dangerous and possibly a prelude to an Indian uprising. Mooney emphatically explained that it was peaceful. In his introduction he describes several fieldwork trips between 1890-1894 that “occupied twenty-two months, involving nearly 32,000 miles of travel, and more or less time spent with about twenty tribes.” As a participant/observer he sang and danced with the Arapaho and Cheyenne, consulted with participants in the new religion, and also took photographs. One reason for the excitement about the Ghost Dance among ethnographers at that time was that the researchers of American Indians were seeing the emergence of a new religion developing in a surprisingly short time and crossing culture and language barriers. This was an extremely rare event. The new movement spread throughout the Native camps in the West, giving Native people much needed hope.
White settlers reacted differently to the “new religion”. Some traveled to the reservations to observe the dancing, others feared the possibility of an Indian uprising. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) eventually banned the Ghost Dance, because the government believed it was a precursor to renewed Native American militancy and violent rebellion. One of the goals of the agency was to convert the Natives to Christianity. The agency did not recognize the Ghost Dance, misunderstanding and ignorance were part of the BIA decision.
Wovoka’s message clearly promoted pacifism. However, spreading rumors of Indian treachery ignited fear and panic with non natives. On November 12th, 1890, president Benjamin Harrison ordered the military to take control over Lakota Sioux reservation in South Dakota.
On December 29, 1890, 300 Lakota men, women and children were killed in an event that came to be known as the Massacre of Wounded Knee. What started as a peaceful movement in 1889, was brutally ended a year later by the U.S. military.
Ka Ohlungwo Ilungwo Ohlo Lungwo Wei The Bird Tribes are rising
Ka old soul Oh it is written The Ancient Ones will rise again I bow in complete recognition The Bird Tribes are rising
Ka Ohlungwo Ilungwo Ohlo Lungwo Wei The Bird Tribes are rising
Ka Old Soul It is legend The Ancient Ones will rise again See my soul of different colours See my feathers worn from within
Ka Ohlungwo Ilungwo Ohlo Lungwo Wei The Bird Tribes are rising
Oh come sit by this fire Warm the seeds you’ve sewn Time travellers how far we have flown Are we not birds of the same feather? Is this not prophecy? I rise up for I remember All of Creation Is inside of me
Ka Ohlungwo Ilungwo Ohlo Lungwo Wei The Bird Tribes are rising.