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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Mysterious of Gardens & Mazes

Mysterious Gardens for the people who love the Gothic way of life:
Did you ever wondered how it feels to be lost in a deep dark forest where you are so turned around that you don't know where North~South~West~and East are. or even how high up is? What if you got lost in a gothic garden that someone created for you? For example : what if you got lost in Harry Potters maze in the movie the Goblet of fire? It was a very magical garden that harry had to go into in the last game. But as the head master of the school said " this is a very different kind of garden. It is mythical and magical, but what you have to do to get out is how you look at  yourself. These mazes have away of taking over your mind. You must stay focus at all times of the maze can take you mind and you may never get out".
As I said its not only about getting lost! its also about finding yourself and giving yourself the opportunity to navigate your life. Risks are all around you when you walk in the labyrinth, and there are lots of life and death choices behind every turn as the unknown as you get deeper in the maze. Your unknown future is spread all over the mythical garden as you get in deeper and deeper.

In the last thousands years, labyrinths and mazes had a Big impact on the world of Gothic gardening themes and designs. Those maze gardens can be made by heavy rocks or high plants and trees, but one thing is certain they are beautiful and mysterious at the same time.

In the middle ages walking in a maze garden had a religious meaning. If you got the chance to evaluate  your life, by a  voyage and choices through the maze garden. Also going in the dark in order to find your spiritual enlightenment is another thing people would do in the middle ages with maze gardens. The dark and light themes are also associated with death and life creation. It was believed that ghost and evil spirits lived in the trees and plants that forged the amazing labyrinths. As the winds blows through the maze and dangerous animals are all around you possessed by those spirits who control the mysterious fields with their supernatural powers.

Gothic gardens that are designed as mazes have a special usage for hide and seek games. These games can serve the need to protect the castle against thief's and other vandals by mils and mils of dead end mazes. Think that you are a stranger that wants to enter the remote castle, not only that you don't know the area, you can also get lost and even die in the labyrinths paths. On the other hand, hide and seek games are well known as love games. Mazes are the perfect place of forbidden love affairs. A location where you can release your sins without anyone to know about it, only you know these remote spaces between the plants. 
As garden activities such picnics, field games and other social gathering became more popular, the height of the maze components reduced and was no longer than the height of your knees, in order to give the people a chance to socialize, communicate and see each others. The maze garden is so fun that you don't only interact with other people but also with the animal kingdom and the beautiful nature. Every tunnel has its unique plants and grass paths there for a reason and of different colours and shapes of nature is unfold every step you take.

Create your own maze garden in your backyard:
First you must draw the maze on a piece of paper. Pay attention to the maze style as the paths can be rounds of sharps, big or small, and the number of the dead ends can be also vary, all these factor determine the design of your garden labyrinth.

Where do you want to put your Gothic garden maze? if you are constrained by garden space its suggested that use choose a flat area, of a hill so you will be able to distinguish your maze from the other parts of your garden. You  should also be aware that use should reserve a part of your garden to a non- maze area, so it wont be difficult to enter and get out from your house. Gardening components: turf labyrinth, you can plant your own or you can buy  mowed turn in different shapes of circles and lines that you can combine. And of course you can do it all by mowing your grass in the shape of the maze, by cutting parts of it and let other parts of the grass to grow high.

Other nature beautify, you can add a stepping stones as a directions inside your maze. You can also create special areas in your maze. In each area you can grow a different vegetables or fruits and plant colorful flowers. Put big rocks or big trees in order to hide the rest of the paths of the Gothic garden mazes  and  to prevent people to cheat and cross the maze in the middle but going in a straight line and killing all your flowers. 








Monday, September 23, 2013

The Lady of the Lake

The Lady of the Lake
In this post I will continue to to talk about my first discussion on AN OLD
TALE IN WALES. I've decided to go back a little farther in the story to see how it really began. Also to see if there are different worlds or lifetimes within the story of the lady of the lake...
I did find there were many different versions of the story and one has to choose which one is more true to the story.. I found this one too be the closes to the Welsh Lady of the Lake...
Of course there are other stories that i could have chosen, but maybe that's for you the reader to discover yourself...
High up in a hollow of the Black Mountains in South Wales , is a lonely sheet of water called Llyn y Fan Fach. There is a farm not far from the lake where an olden widow lives, with an only son whose name was Gwyn. When her son grew up, he was often sent by his mother to look after the cattle grazing in the valley. The place where they grazed was always the sweetest food was by the lake, and it was thither that the mild-eyed beasts wandered whenever they had their will. One day when Gwyn was walking along the banks of the lake, watching the kine cropping the short grass, he was astonished to see a lady standing in the clear smooth water, some distance from the land. She was the most beautiful creature that he had ever set his eyes upon, and she was combing her long hair with a golden comb, on the unruffled surfaced of the lake serving her as a mirror....
Gwyn just stood there, gazing at the maiden, and straightway knew that he loved her. As he gazed, he unconsciously held out to her the barley-bread and cheese which his mother had given him before he left home. The lady gradually glided towards him, but shook her head as he continued to hold out his hand and saying:
Cras dy fara, O thou of the crimped bread, Nid hawdd fy nala, It is not easy to catch me,then she dived under the water, and disappeared from his sight.
Gwyn went home, full of sorrow and told his mother of the beautiful vision which he had seen. As they pondered over the strange language, used by the mysterious lady before she plunged out of sight, they came to the conclusion that there must have been some kinda spell connected with the hard-baked bread and the mother advised her son to take some unbaked dough, or it could be a different language for a whole different world, either way the unbaked bread should work his mother said,and to take it next time he goes to the lake.
The next morning, long before the sun appeared above the crest of the mountain, Gwyn was by the lake with the dough in his hand, anxiously waiting for the Lady of the Lake to appear above the surface. The sun rose, scattering the lake with his powerful beams of misty light which veiled the high ridges around the lake and the mountains high in the heavens. Hour after hour the young man watched the water on the lake, but hour after hour there was nothing to be seen except the ripples of the little waves made by the breeze and the sunbeams dancing upon them. By the late afternoon despair had crept over Gwyn and he was on the point of turning his footsteps home, when to his intense delight the lady of the lake appeared again above the sunlit ripples. She seemed even more beautiful than last time he saw her, forgetting in admiration of her fairness all that he had carefully prepared to say, he could only hold out his hand, and offer the dough. She refused the gift with a shake of the head as before , adding the words:
Llaith dy fara, O thou of the moist bread,
Tu ni fynna. I will not have thee.
Then she vanished under the water, but before she sank out of sight, she smiled upon the youth so sweetly and so graciously that his heart became fuller than ever of love for the woman in the lake. As he walked home slowly and sadly the remembrance of her smile consoled him and awakened the hope that when the next time she appeared she would not refuse his gift. He told his mother what had happened, and she advised him , this time since the lady of the lake had refused both hard-baked, and unbaked bread , to take with him bread that was half-baked.
That night he did not sleep a wink. The sun rose and the rain came , but the youth . heeded nothing as he eagerly strained his gaze over the lake. Morning to afternoon, afternoon to evening, but nothing met the eyes of the anxious youth, but the waves on the lake make by the dimples of the rain.
Shades of night began to fall, and Gwyn was about to depart in sore disappointment, when a last casting farewell look over the lake, he beheld some cows walking on its surface. The sight of these beasts made him hope that they would be followed by the Lady of the Lake, and sure enough before long the maiden emerged from the water. She seemed lovelier than ever, and Gwyn was almost beside with joy.

His rapture increased when he saw that she was gradually approaching the land, and he rushed into the water to meet her, holding out the half-baked bread in his hand. She was smiling and took his gift and allowed him to lead her to dry land. Her beauty dazzled him, and for some time he could do nothing but gaze upon her.

And as he gazed upon her he saw that the sandal one her right foot was tied in a peculiar manner. She smiled so graciously that he it took some time to recover his speech and then said,"Lady of the Lake, I love you more than all the world, and i want you to be my wife."
She would not consent at first. He pleaded, however , so earnestly that she at last promised to be his bride, but only on the following condition. "I will wed you," she said, " and I will live with you until I receive from you three blows without a cause--tri ergyd diachos. When you strike me the third causeless blow I will leave you forever and return back to the lake."
He was protesting that he would rather cut off his hand than employ it in such a way, when she suddenly darted from him and dived into the lake. His grief and disappointment was sore that he was determined to put an end to his life by casting himself headlong into the deepest part of the lake. Gwyn rushed to the top of a great rock that overhangs the lake, and on the point of jumping in is when he heard a loud voice saying,"Forbear, rash youth, and come hither."
He turned and beheld on the of the lake some distance from the rock a hoary-headed old man of majestic mien, accompanied by two maidens. He descended from the rock in fear and trembling, and the old man addressed him in comforting accents.
"Mortal, thou wishest to wed one of these my daughters. I will consent to the union if thou wilt point out to me the one thou lovest."
Gwyn gazed upon the two maidens, but they were so similar in stature, apparel and beauty that he could not see the slightest difference between them. They were such perfect counterparts of each other, that it seemed quit impossible to say which one of them, he had promised to be his bride.
Gwyn almost gave-up the task of choosing between the two maidens, when one of them very quietly thrust her foot slightly forward. The motion, simple as it was, did not escape the attention of Gwyn and looking down he saw the peculiar shoe-tie which he had observed on the sandal of the maiden who had accepted his half-baked bread. He went forward and boldly took hold of her hand.
"Thou hast chosen rightly," said the old man, "be to her a kind and loving husband, and I will give her as a dowry as many sheep, cattle; goats, swine and horses as she can count of each without drawing in her breath. But remember, if thou strikest her three causeless blows, she shall return to me."
Gwyn was overjoyed, and again protested that he would rater lop off all his limbs than do such a thing. The old man smiled, and turning to his daughter desired her to count the number of sheep she wished to have. She began to count by fives--one, two, three, four, five--one, two, three, four, five--one, two, three, four, five,--- as many times as she could until her breath was exhausted. In an instant as many sheep as she had counted emerged from the water. Then her father asked her to count the cattle she desired. One, two, three, four, five--one, two, three, four, five--one, two, three, four, five--she went on counting until she had to draw in her breath again. Without delay, black cattle to the number she had been able to reach came, lowing out of her breath again. Without delay, black cattle to the number she had been able to reach came, lowing out of the mere. In the same way she counted the goats, swine and horses she wanted, and the full tale of each kind ranged themselves alongside the sheep and cattle. Then the old man and this other daughter vanished.
The lady of the lake and Gwyn were married amid great rejoicing and took up their home at a farm named ESGAIR LLAETHDY, where they lived for many years very happy,and everything prospered with them and had three sons .
When the eldest boy was seven years old, there was a wedding some distance away, to which Nelferch-for the name the Lady to the lake gave herself -- and her husband were specially invited. When the day came, the two started and were walking through a field in which some of their horses were grazing, when Nelferch said that the distance was too great for her to walk and she would rather not go. "We must go,"said her husband [Gwyn] and if you do not like to walk, you can ride one of these horses. Do you catch one of them while I go back to the house for the saddle and bridle."
"I will," Nelferch said. "At the same time bring me my gloves. I have forgotten them -- they are on the table."
Gwyn went back to the house, and when he returned with the saddle and bridle and gloves, he found to his surprise that she had not stirred from the spot where he had left her. Pointing to the horses, he playfully flicked her with the gloves and said, "Go, go (dos, dos)."
"This is the first causeless blow," she said with a sigh, and reminded him of the condition upon which she had married him, a condition which he had almost forgotten"
Many years after, that they were both at a christening. When all the guests were full of mirth and hilarity, Nelferch suddenly burst into tears and sobbed piteously. Gwyn tapped her on the shoulder and asked her why she wept. " I weep," she said, "because this poor innocent babe is so weak and frail that it will have no joy in this world. Pain and suffering will fill all the days of its brief stay on earth, and in the agony of torture will it depart this life. And, husband, thou hast struck me the second causeless blow."
After this, Gwyn was on his guard day and night not to do anything which could be regarded as a breach of their marriage covenant. He was so happy in the love with his wife Nelferch and their children that he knew his heart would break if through some accident he gave the last and only blow which would take his dear wife away from him.
"Sometime after, the babe whose christening they had attended , after a short life of pain and suffering, died in agony, as Nelferch had foretold. Gwyn and Nelferch went to the funeral, and in the midst of the mourning and grief, Nelferch laughed merrily, causing all to stare at her in astonishment. Gwyn was so shocked at her high spirits on a very sad occasion, that he touched her , saying "Hushed wife, why dost thou laugh?"
"I laugh, "she replied, "because the poor babe is at last happy and fee from pain and suffering."Then rising said, "THE LAST BLOW HAS BEEN STRUCK. FAREWELL. MY HUSBAND."
SHE STARTED OFF IMMEDIATELY TOWARDS Esgair Llaethdy, AND WHEN SHE ARRIVED HOME, SHE CALLED HER CATTLE AND OTHER LIVE STOCK TOGETHER , EACH BY NAME. THE CATTLE SHE CALLED THUS:
Mu wlfrech, moelfrech, Brindled cow, bold freckled,
Mu olfrech, gwynfrech, Spotted cow, white speckled;
Pedair cae tonn-frech, Ye four field sward mottled.
Yr hen wynebwen, The old white-faced,
A'r las Geigen And the grey Geigen
Gyda'r tarw gwyn With the white bull
O lys y Brenin, From the court of the King,
A'rr lloduubachh, And thou little black calf,
Syddd ar ybachh, Suspended on the hook,
Derdithee,ynniachhadree! Come thou also, whole again, home.
They all immediately obeyed the summons of their mistress. The little black calf, although it had been killed, came back to life again, and walked off with the rest of the cattle, sheep, goats, swine and horses at the command of Nelferch, now ~ The Lady of the Lake.
It was the spring of the year, and there were four oxen ploughing in one of the fields. To these she cried:
Y pedwar eidion glas, Ye four grey oxen,
Sydd ar y ma's, That are on the field,
Deuweh chwithe Come you also
Yn iach adre! Whole and well home!
Away went the whole of the live stock with the lady of the lake, across the mountain to the lake from whence they had come from, their true home, and disappeared beneath its waters. The only trace they left was the furrow made by the plough which the oxen drew after them into the lake: this remains to this day....
Gwyn's heart was broken. He followed his wife to the lake, crushed with woe, and put and end to his misery by plugging into the depths of the cold water. The three sons distracted with grief, almost followed their father's example, and spent most of their days wandering about the lake in the hope of seeing their lost mother once more. Their love was at last rewarded, for one day, Nelferch appeared suddenly to them.
She told them that their mission on earth was to relive pain an misery of mankind. She took them to a place which is still called the Physician's Dingle (Pant y Meddygon), where she showed them the virtues of the plants and herbs which grew there, and taught them the art of healing.
Profiting by their mother's instruction, they became the most skillful physicians in the land.
I find this version of the lady of the lake much more interesting . Why! To me its much more an legend in Celtic times of Wales.. Its true the people of Wales have very strong beliefs in their legends and historical Celtic stories. But i also like the aspects of the two different worlds blending with the charters in the story. Showing the real idea that other worlds exist within our own world. Also that there maybe the idea of an Parallel Universes/ worlds so close as just a lake. Another interesting element about this version of the lady of the lake is the transporting her as a real character from a a whole differ place. and the progression as the character Gwyn seeing that she is a special being with god like powers and she can be taken away in a blink if he doesn't follow the rules... there are many more but there other stories to tell...
Wendy....




MICHAEL JACKSON - 'MAN- MUSIC SPIRITUAL MAN- HUMANITARIAN-In His Own Words'

Michael Jackson- Real-lovely-honest man-spiritual man-that we All Loved~Love ♥ *pEACE ∞¸.´¸.ஜ۩۞۩ஜ¸.´¸.• ∞ ♥ *pEACE
When I first found this speech of Michael Jackson's - Heal the Kids. I was truly touched by his honesty, lovely spirit, and true-care for children in his speech. I have always loved his music as a child - and grew with his music as an adult too. During his life he was always been introverted . Mainly because of the life he was given by his stage father, at a very early age 5yearsold.. So when I found this speech that he did at Oxford University in 2001 [ just 10 short years before we lost this great man of music, dance, and humanitarian ] I had to state my opinion on this and show the speech too.

I believe after reading the speech, Michael was passionate about his Music, Dancing, his children and all the children of the world plus helping our earth. He also wanted to get back a little bit of that childhood that he never had and so disparity wanted. In some of the scenes I've seen in his bio he's talked about seeing boys his age playing ball [baseball] and wanted to play. Have friends, but everytime he said sometime about that; he would get hit or yelled at. He was told to get back to practicing to music.. I truly believe that he was abused as a child and onto as a teenager. I may get so flake from this statement, but I do believe it is true that Michael was an abused child and by his father throughout his childhood and into his teenage years.. This is why he as a adult wanted to help children that have been abused and also get a piece of his childhood back in his adult hood ..
People always though he was weird or odd. But think about it.. Think about what he had to endure as a child and on to an adult.. So he had billions, but he was so alone. He could go anywhere without being mobbed, and there's the newspapers telling stories about him..
But most of all the boldness of his belief's in what childhood should be and how our country has lost what it means to be a child in this country. What it means to be a parent in this country... Today's generation of children are loosing their childhood to fast. And are pushed in school and at home Michael Say's in his speech. I believe in what he is saying is true.. He is a smart man.. this speech opened my eyes.. I hope it does the same for you!
I know I will get either good comments or completely bad because this is a hot topic.. but you have to take a chance in life and state your opinion or life wouldn't be interesting.. Wendy 2011

Oxford University, March 2001 by Michael Jackson
Heal The Kids:
Thank you, than you dear friends, form the bottom of my heart, for such a loving and spirited welcome, and thank you, Mr. President, for your kind invitation to me which I am so honored to accept. I also want to express a special thanks to you Shmuley, who for 11 years served as Rabbi here at Oxford. You and I have been working so hard to form Heal the Kids, as well as writing our book about childlike qualities, and in all of our efforts you have been such a supportive and loving friend. And I would also like to thank Toba Friedman, our director of operations at Heal the KIds, who is returning to night to the alma mater where she served as a Marshall scholar, as wee as Marilyn Piels, another central member of our Heal the Kids team.

I am humbled to be lecturing in a place that has previously been filled by such notable figures as Mother Theresa, Albert Einstein, Ronald Reagan, Robert Kennedy and Malcolm X. I've even heard that Kermit the Frog has made an appearance here, and I've always felt a kinship with Kermit's message that it's not easy being green. I'm sure he didn't find it any easier being up here than I do!

As I looked around Oxford today, I couldn't help but be aware of the majesty and grandeur of this great institution, not to mention the brilliance of the great and gifted minds that have roamed these streets for centuries. The walls of Oxford have not only housed the greatest philosophical and scientific geniuses - they have also ushered forth some of the most cherished creators of children's literature, form J. R. R Tolkien to CS Lewis. Today I was allowed to hobble
into the dining hall in Christ Church to see Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland immortalized in the stained glass windows. And even one of my own fellow Americans, the beloved Dr Seuss graced these halls and then went on to leave his mark on the imaginations of millions of children throughout the world.

I suppose I should start by listing my qualifications to speak before you this evening. Friends, I do not claim to have the academic expertise of other speakers who have addressed this hall, just as they could lay little claim at being adept at the moonwalk- and you know, Einstein in particular was really TERRIBLE at that.

But I do have a claim to having experienced more places and cultures than most people will ever see. Human knowledge consists not only of libraries of parchment and ink - it is also comprised of the volumes of knowledge that are written on the human heart, chiseled on the human soul, and engraved on the human psyche. And friends, I have encountered so much in this relatively short life of mine that I still cannot believe I am only 42. I often tell Shmuley that in soul years I'm sure that I'm at least 80 - and tonight I even walk like I'm 80! So please harken to my message, because what i have to tell you tonight can bring healing to humanity and healing to our planet.

Through the grace of God, I have been fortunate to have achieved many of my artistic and professional aspirations realized early in my lifetime. But these, friends are accomplishments, and accomplishments alone are not synonymous with who I am. Indeed, the cheery five-year-old- who belted out Rockin' Robin and Ben to adoring crowds was not indicative of the boy behind the smile.

Tonight, I come before you less as an icon of pop [ whatever that means anyway], and more as an icon of a generation, a generation that no longer knows what it means to be children.

All of us are product of our childhood, But i am the product of a lack of a childhood, an absence of that precious and wondrous age when we frolic playfully without a care in the world, basking in the adoration of parents and relatives, where our biggest concern is studying for that big spelling test come Monday morning.

Those of you who are familiar with the Jackson Five know that I began performing at the tender age of five and that ever since then, I haven't stopped dancing or singing. But while performing and making music undoubtedly remain as some of my greatest joys, when I was young I wanted more than anything else to be a typical little boy. I wanted to build tree houses, have water balloon fights, and play hide and seek with my friends. But fate had it otherwise and all i could do was envy the laughter and playtime that seemed to be going on all around me.
There was no respite from my professional life. But on Sundays I would go Pioneering, the term used for the missionary work that Jehovah 's Witnesses do. And it was then that i was able to see the magic of other peoples childhoods.

Since I was already a celebrity, I would have to don a disguise of fat suit, beard and glasses and we would spend the day in the suburbs of Southern California, going door-to -door or making the rounds of shopping malls, distributing our Watchtower magazine . I loved to set foot in all those regular suburban houses and catch sight of the shag rugs and La - Z Boy armchairs with kids playing Monopoly and grandmas baby-sitting and all those wonderful,
ordinary and starry scenes of everyday life. Many, I know, would argue that these things seem like no big deal. But to me they were mesmerizing.

I used to think that I was unique in feeling that I was without a childhood. I believed that indeed there were only a handful with whom I could share those feelings. When I recently met with Shirley Temple Black, The great child star of the 1930s and 40s, we said nothing to each other at first, we simply cried
together, for she could share a pain with me that only others like my close friends Elizabeth Taylor and McCauley Culkin know .

I do not tell you this to gain your sympathy but to impress upon you my first important point:
It is not just Hollywood child stars that, have suffered from a non-existent childhood. Today, it's a universal calamity, a global catastrophe. Childhood has become the great casualty of modern -day living. All around us we are producing scores of kids who have not had the joy, who have not been accorded the right,
who have not been allowed the freedom, or knowing what it's like to be a kid.

Today children are constantly encouraged to grow up faster as if this period known as childhood is a burdensome stage, to be endured and ushered through, as swiftly as possible.
And on that subject I am certainly one of the world's greatest experts.

Ours is a generation that has witnessed the abrogation of the parent-child covenant. Psychologists are publishing libraries of books detailing the destructive effects of denying one's children the unconditional love that is so necessary to the healthy development of their minds and character. And because of all the neglect, too many of our kids have, essentially, to raise themselves. They are growing more distant from their parents, grandparents and other family members, as all around us the indestructible bond that once glued together the generations, unravels.
This violation has bred a new generation, Generation O let us call it, that has now picked up the torch form Generation X. The O stands for a generation that has everything on the outside- wealth, success, fancy clothing and fancy cars, but an aching emptiness on the inside. That cavity in our chests, that barrenness at our core, that void in our centre is the place where the heart once beat and love once occupied.

And it's not just the kids who are suffering. It's the parents as well. For the more we cultivate little-adults in kid's-bodies, the more removed we ourselves become from our own child- like qualities, and there is so much about being a child that is worth retaining in adult life.

Love, ladies and gentlemen, is the human family's most precious legacy, its richest bequest, its golden inheritance. And it is a treasure that is handed down from one generation to another. Previous ages may not have had the wealth we enjoy. Their houses may have lacked electricity and they squeezed their many kids into small homes without central heating. But those homes had no darkness, nor were they cold. They were lit bright with the glow of love and they were warmed snugly by the very heat of the human heart. Parents undistracted by the lust for luxury and status, accorded their children primacy in their lives.

As you all know ,our two countries broke from each other over what Thomas Jefferson referred to as "certain inalienable rights". And while we Americans and British might dispute the justice of his claims, what has never been in dispute is that children have certain inalienable rights, and the gradual erosion of those rights has led to scores of children worldwide being denied the joys and security of childhood.

I would therefore like to propose tonight that we install in every home a Children's Universal Bill of Rights, the tenets of which are:
1. The right to be loved without having to earn it.
2. The right to be protected, without having to deserve it.
3. The right to feel valuable , even if you came into the world with nothing.
4. The right to be listened to without having to be interesting.
5. The right to be read a bedtime story, without having to compete with the evening news
6. The right to an education without having to dodge bullets at schools
7. The right to be though of as adorable -{ even if you have a face that only a mother could love]

Friends, the foundation of all human knowledge, the beginning of human consciousness must be that each and every one of us is and object of love. Before you know if you have red hair or brown , before you know if you are black or white, before you know of what religion you are a part you have to know that you are loved.

About twelve years ago, when I was just about to start my Bad tour, a little boy came with his parents to visit me at home in California. He was dying of cancer and he told me how much he loved my music and me. His parents told me that he wasn't going to live, that any day he could just go, and I said to him; " Look, I am going to be coming to your town in Kansas to open my tour in three months, I want you to come to the show. I am going to give you this jacket that I wore in one of my videos." His eyes lit up and he said; "You are gonna Give it to me?" I said "Yeah, but you have to promise that you will wear it to the show." I was trying to make him hold on. I said: "When you come to the show I want to see you in this jacket and in this glove" and I gave him one of my rhinestone gloves- and I never usually give the rhinestone gloves away. And he was just in heaven. `

But maybe he was too close to heaven, because when I came to his town, he had already
died, and they had buried him in the glove and jacket . He was just 10 years old. God knows, I know, that he tried his best to hold on. But at least when he died, he knew that he was loved, not only by his parents, but even by me a near stranger, I also loved him. And with all of that love he knew that he didn't come into this world alone, and he certainly didn't leave it alone.

If you enter this world knowing you are loved and you leave this world knowing the same , then everything that happens in-between can be dealt with. A professor may degrade you, but you will not feel degraded, a boss may crush you , but you will not be crushed, a corporate gladiator might vanquish you, but you will still triumph. How could any of them truly prevail in pulling you down? For you know that you are an object worthy of love . The rest is just packaging.

But if you don't have that memory of being loved, you are condemned to search the world for something to fill you up. But no matter how much money you make or how famous you become, you will still feel empty. What you are really searching for is unconditional love, unqualified acceptance. And that was the one thing that was denied to you at birth.

Friends , let me paint a picture for you. Here is a typical day in America -six youths under the age of 20 will commit suicide, 12 children under the age of 20 will die from firearms-
remember this is a DAY, not a year - 399 kids will be arrested for drug abused, 1,352 babies will be born to teen mothers. This is happening in one of the richest , most developed countries in the history of the world- USA.

Yes, in my country there is an epidemic of violence that parallels no other industrialised nation. These are the ways young people in America express their hurl and their anger. but don't think that there is not the same pain and anguish among their counterpart's in the United Kingdom. Studies in this country show that every single hour, three teenagers in the UK inflict harm upon themselves, often by cutting or burning their bodies or taking an overdose. This is how they have chosen to cope with the pain of neglect and emotional agony.

In Britain, as many as 20% of families will only sit down and have dinner together once a year. Once a year! And what about the time - honoured tradition of reading your kid a bedtime story? Research from the 1980s showed that children who are read to, had far greater literacy and significantly outperformed their peers at school. And yet less than 33% of British children ages two to eight have a regular bedtime story read to them. You may not think much of that until you take into account that 75% of their parents DID have that bedtime story when they were that age.

Clearly , we do not have to ask ourselves where all of this pain, anger and violent behaviour comes from. It is self- evident that children are thundering against the neglect , quaking against the indifference and crying out just to be noticed. The various child protection agencies in the US say that millions of children are victims of maltreatment in the form of neglect, in the average year. Yes, neglect. In reach homes, privileged homes, wired to the hilt with every electronic gadget. Homes where parents come home, but they're not really home, because their heads are still at the office. And their kids? Well, their kids just make do with whatever emotional crumbs they get. And you don't get much from endless TV, computer games and videos.

These hard, cold numbers which for me, wrench the soul and shake the spirit, should indicate to you why I have devoted so much of my time and resources into making our new Heal the KIds initiative a colossal success.

Our goal is simple - to recreat the parent/child bond, renew its promise and light the way forward for all the beautiful children who are destined one day to walk this earth.

But since this is my first public lecture, and you have so warmly welcomed me into your hearts, I feel that I want to tell you more. We each have our own story, and in that sense statistics can become personal.

They say that parenting is linke dancing. You take one step, your child takes another. I have discovered that getting parents to re-dedicate themselves to their children is only half the story. The other half is preparing the children to re-accept their parents..

When I was very young I remember that we had this crazy mutt of a dog named " black girl," a mix of wolf and retriever. Not only wasn't she much of a guard dog, she was such a scared and nervous thing that it is a wonder she did not pass out every time a truck rumbled by or a thunderstorm swept through Indiana. My Sister Janet and I gave that dog so much love, but we never really won back the sense of trust that had been stolen from her by her previous owner, We knew he used to beat her. We didn't know with what. But whatever it was, it was enough to suck the spirit right out of that dog.

A lot of kids today are hurt puppies who have weaned themselves off the need for love. They couldn't care less about their parents. Left to their own devices, they cherish their independence. They have move on and have left their parents behind.

Then there are the far worse case of children who harbour animosity and resentment toward their parents, so that any overture that their parents might undertake world be thrown forcefully back in their face.

Tonight, I don't want any of us to make this mistake. Tat's why I'm calling upon all the world's children - beginning with all of us here tonight- to forgive our parents, if we felt neglected.
Forgive them and teach them how to love again.

You probably weren't suprised to hear that I did not have an idyllic childhood. The strain and tension that exists in my relationship with my own father is well documented. My father is a tough man and he pushed my brothers and me hard, from the earliest age, to be the best preformers we could be.

He had great difficulty showing affection. He never really told me he loved me. And he never really complimented me either. If i did a great show, he would tell me it was a good show. And if i did an OK show, he told me it was a lousy show.

He seemed intent, above all else, on making us a commercial success. And at that he was more than adept. My father was a managerial genius and my brothers and i owe our professional success, in no small measure, to the forceful way that he pushed us. he trained me as a showman and under his guidance I couldn't miss a step.

But what i really wanted was a DaD. I wanted a father who showed me love. And my father never did that. He never said i love you while looking me straight in the eye, he never played a game with me. He never gave me a piggyback ride, he never threw a pillow at me, or a water balloon.

But i remember once when I was about 4 years old, there was a little carnival and he picked me up and put me on a pony. It was a tiny gesture, probably something he forgot five minutes later. but because of that moment i have this special place in my heart for him. Because that's how kids are, the little things mean so much to them and for me, that one moment meant everything. I only experienced it that one time, but it made me feel really good, about him and the world.

But now I am a father myself, and one day i was thinking about my own children, Prince and Paris and how i wanted them to think of me when they grow up. To be sure, I would like them to remember how I always wanted them with me wherever i went, how i always tried to put them before everything else. But there are also challenges in their lives. Because my kids are stalked by paparazzi, they can't always go to a park or a movie with me.

So what if they grow older and resent me, and how my choices impacted their youth? Why weren't we given an average childhood like all the other kids, they might ask? And at that moment i pray that my children will give me the benefit of the doubt. That they will say to themselves. "Our daddy did the best he could, given the unique circumstances that he face. He may not have been perfect, but he was a warm and decent man, who tried to give us all the love in the world."

I hope that they will always focus on the positive things, on the sacrifices i willingly made for them, and not criticise the things they had to give up or the errors I've made, and will certainly continue to make, in raising them. For we have all been someone's child, and we know that despit the very best of plans and efforts, mistakes will always occur. That's just being human.

And when I think about this, of how i hope that my children will not judge me unkindly, and will forgive my shortcomings, I am forced to think of my own father and despite my earlier denials, I am forced to admit that me must have love me. He did love me, and I know that.

There were little things that showed it. When I was a kid I had a real sweet tooth - we all did. My favorite food was glazed doughnuts and my father knew that So every few weeks i would come downstairs in the morning and there on the kitchen counter was a bag of glazed doughnuts - no note, no explanation - just the doughnuts. It was like Santa Claus.

Sometimes I would think about staying up late at night, so i could see him leave them there, but just like with Santa Claus, I didn't want to ruin the magic for fear that he would never do it again. My father had to leave them secretly at night, so as no one might catch him with his guard down. He was scared of human emotion, he didn't understand it or know how to deal with it. But he did know doughnuts...

And when i allow the floodgates to open up, there are other memories that come rushing back, Memories of other tiny gestures, however imperfect, that showed that he did what he could. So tonight, rather than focusing on what my father didn't do,I want to focus on all the things he did do and on his own personal challenges. I want to stop judging him.

I have started reflecting on the fact that my father grew up in the South, in a very poor family. He came of age during the Depression and his own father, who struggled to feed his children, showed little affection towards his family and raised my father and his siblings with an iron fist. Who could have imagined what it was like to grow up a poor black man in the South, robbed of dignity, bereft of hope, struggling to become a man in a world that saw my father as subordinate. I was the first black artist to play on MTV and I remember how big a deal it was even then. And that was in the 80s!

My father moved to Indiana and had a large family of his own, working long hours in the steel mill, work that kills, the lungs and humbles the spirit. all to support his family. Is it any wonder that he found it difficult to expose his feelings? Is it any mystery that he hardened his heart, that he raised the emotional ramparts? And most of all, is it any wonder why he pushed his sons so hard to succeed as performers, so that they could be saved from what he dnew to be a life of indignity and poverty?

I have begun to see that even my father's harshness was a kind of love, an imperfect love, to be sure, but love nonetheless. He pushed me because he loved me. Because he wanted no man ever to look down at his offspring.

And now with time, rather than bitterness, I feel blessing. In the place of anger, I have found absolution. And in the place of revenge i have found reconciliation. And my initial fury has slowly given way to forgiveness....

Almost a decade ago, I founded a charity called HEAL THE WORLD. The title was something i felt insed me . Little did i know , as Shmuley later pointed ou, that those two words form the corerstone of Old Testament prophecy. Do I really believe that we can heal this world, that is riddled with war and genocide, even today? And do I really think that we can heal our children, the same children who can enter their schools with guns and hatred and shoot down their classmates, like they did at Columbine? Or children who can beat a defenseless toddler to death, like the tragic storie of Jamie Buger? Of course i do, or I wouldn't be here tonight.

But it all begins with forgiveness, because to heal the world, we first have to heal ourselves. And to heal the kids, we first have to heal the child within, each and every one of us. As an adult, and as a parent, I realize that I cannot be a whole being, nor a parent capable of unconditional love, until I put to rest the ghost of my own childhood.

And that's what I'm asking all of us to do tonight. Live up to the fifth of the Ten Commandments Honour your parents by not judging them. Give them the benefit of the doubt.

That is why I want to forgive my father and to stop judging him. I want to forgive my father, because I want a father, and this is the only one that I've got. I want the weight of my past lifted from my shoulders and I want to be free to step into a new relationship with my father, for the rest of my life, unhindered by the goblins of the past.

In a world filled with hate, we must still dare to hope. In a world filled with anger, we must still dare to comfort. In a world filled with despair, we must still dare to dream. And in a world filled with distrust, we must still dare to believe.

To all of you tonight who feel let down by your parents, I ask you to let down your disappointment. To all of you tonight who feel cheated by your fathers or mothers, I ask you not to cheat yourself further. And to all of you who wish to push your parents away, I ask you to extend you hand to them instead. I am asking you , I am asking myself, to give our parents the gift of unconditional love, so that they too may learn how to love from us, their children. So that love will finally be restored to a desolate and lonely world.

Shmuley once mentioned to me an ancient Biblical prophecy which says that a new world and a new time would come, when, " the hearts of the parents would be restored through the hearts of their children." My friends, we are that world, we are those children.

Mahatma Gandhi said: "The weak can never forgive . Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong." Tonight be strong. Beyond being strong, rise to the greatest challenge of all - to restore that broken covenat. We must all overcome whatever crippling effects our childhoods may have had on our lives and in the words of Jesse Jackson, "forgive each other, redeem each other and move on.

This call for forgiveness may not result in Oprah moments the world over, with thousands of children making up with their parents, but it will at least be a start, and we'll all be so much happier as a result.

And so ladies and gentleman, I conclude my remarks tonight with faith, joy and excitement.

From this day forward, may a new song be heard.

Let that new song be the sound of children laughing.

Let that song be the sound of children playing.

Let that song be the sound of children singing.

Let that song be the sound of parent listening.

Together , let us create a symphony of hearts, marveling at the miracle of our children and basking in the beauty of love.

Let us heal the world and blight its pain.

And may we all make beautiful music together.

God bless you, and I love you.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


HEAL THE WORLD
MICHAEL JACKSON
SET-UP THE HEAL THE WORLD FOUNDATION IN 1992
THE FOUNDATION FOCUSES ON CHILDREN AIMING FOR THEIR SAFETY AND HEALTHY DEVELOPMENT TO BE THE WORLD'S PROIORITY.
IT AIMS TO MAKE THE WORLD AWARE OF THE RIGHTS AND NEEDS OF ALL CHILDREN AROUND THE WORLD, ALSO TO HELP IMPROVE THE WORLD WE LIVE IN.. WITHOUT VIOLENCE AND FREE OF DISEASES. FOR MORE INFO. AT HEAL THE WORLD'S WEBSITE AT:




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