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Day 2

  

“Love knows no limit to its endurance, no end to its trust, no fading of its hope; it can outlast anything. Love still stands when all else has fallen.”

 

 “Love is not written on paper, for paper can be erased. Nor is it etched on stone, for stone can be broken. But it is inscribed on a heart and there it shall remain forever.”

 

In order for a relationship to last the trust value has to be evenly distributed.  It’s a two way venue…both has to have similar strengths in how they trust each other.  I think that one of the main forces of destruction for the value of trust someone has for the other is based on two opposing factors:  reality and imagination.  Imagination can lead to fictitious scenarios that can seem so real that they seem to betray reality.  I say if you didn’t see it first hand or you haven’t been in a situation to have doubt then why act like the action happened?  I get tired of so many of my friends getting upset over situations that may or may not happen….okay I am guilty of that too but like Burgundy, Moet, Mack, and countless others have told me…Men handle situations in very different ways.  Women tend to cry and show outward rage (yes rage)….while men tend to take it in and slowly process it.  Maybe it’s because a man’s mind works slower than a woman’s.  In that case that is a plus for the men because we can slow our roll on over reacting.  What do you think?

 

 

 

 

Day 1

I guess there is so much intolerance in our society. It is not just the color of your skin or the way that you worship your God that people discriminate against anymore. Society as a whole is getting just so damn narcissistic and bitchy. Every other commercial on TV is about fixing what is wrong with you. What if there is really just something wrong with society? What if its okay to have one tit bigger than the other, two moles behind your left ear, graying hair, limp dicks, a few stretch marks here and there, and of course the terribly unwanted love handles? I would gladly be friends with real people, with real issues. I don’t want some fake made up shell of what a person wants to be. I would rather talk to a 85% burn victim about the way to solve cancer and global hunger than some super-model chick about Prada or Versace. We as a people have become so materialistic and uncaring. We have people living in hunger and homeless residenced in the richest country in the world, yet we walk past them every day without even saying “hello”; which is free. But let a celebrity have an issue and 144 million American are instantly glued to the TV screen sending thousands of dollars in money to “Save the Pink Polka Dot Deli and Tea shop” because that is the persons favorite lunch stop….all in the name of saving the celebrity from going back into the hospital for anxiety attacks. How did we get to this level of uncaring and hatefulness? What made us stop caring for each other? The world is going to hell in a hand basket quickly. I saw this documentary about organ sales in foreign countries and it is so scary…we are setting ourselves up for another Plague quickly. When did selling a kidney become so easy and so cheap? Read below and watch the video. If you can’t see this then please go to YouTube or Google and type “Iran Kidney Sale”….I don’t think things will ever get better in the Middle East if they begin to realize that rich Westerners are using them as body part farms for the highest bidder. How would you feel about us? The actual film is embedded below.

Iran kidney sale This World films inside one of Iran's kidney donor clinics. Tuesday, 31 October, 2006 2150 GMT on BBC Two

In Iran, the buying and selling of kidneys is legal and regulated by the state. As a result, the Iranians claim to have eliminated waiting lists for people on dialysis. The only problem is that if you do not have the money for a new kidney then there is no list to get on. There is an official price list, where the state pays donors $1,000 (£531) while the recipient and their family pay $2000 (£1,062). But once donor and recipient are introduced the haggling starts. With the average salary in Iran being around $200 (£106) a month, the stakes are high for both sides. This documentary gives a fascinating insight into ordinary life in Iran through the eyes of two young Iranians who have decided to sell a kidney. Mehrdad lost his job on the railways and now faces mounting debts. He wants to sell a kidney to fund a new job as a taxi driver. And Sohaila, who already works long shifts at night but since her father died six years ago, she has had to support two younger sisters. Her wage alone is just not enough.

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