YOU TOO this is really late and i have had like NO time to read buuut ive been reading a lot of mitch albom (NEW FAVE AUTHOR BTW read the magic strings of frankie presto and the time keeper those books are everything) as well as some maya angelou poetry and if youre reading this im already dead by andrew nicoll. thanks anon!
idk who this is but its crazy right!!!! im so amazed and excited at the same time to graduate in may :)
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August 5, 2017
Beyoncé updates her Instagram.
World On Wheels in Los Angeles (Aug. 4).
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August 4, 2017
Beyoncé updates her website - 8.2.17
Date night at Sushi Park in West Hollywood (Aug. 2).
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I knew we’d need a backup plan. The boat was actually Plan C, the church was Plan B, and Plan A was marrying her a long, long time ago. Pretty much the day I met her.
Seek Those Who Fan Your Flames / The Get Down (2016-17)
This Shabbat, immediately following Tisha B'Av, is called Shabbat Nachamu - the Sabbath of Comforting - after the beginning of the prophetic passage (Isaiah 11:1-26) that is read, “Nachamu, nachamu, ami - Comfort you, comfort you, my people.” It is the first of seven Shabbatot of comforting haftarahs that climb from the depths of Tisha B'Av to the renewal of Rosh HaShanah … It takes us seven weeks to move from the deathday of the whole people (Tisha B'Av) to the birthday of the human race (Rosh Hashanah). In these seven weeks we complete the circle of the year, moving from the burning sun of summer to the first cool breeze of autumn. From the hot and thirsty fast of Tisha B'Av to the wellsprings of Hagar and Abraham, and our own visit to the river for Tashlich. We complete the circle, from exhaustion to new life.
Rabbi Arthur Waskow
for people not as familiar with the terms:
Tisha B’Av = a holiday of mourning for the Jewish people over historical tragedi(es) on which there is a major fast.
Rosh HaShanah = the new year, one of the holiest holidays of the Jewish calendar.
Tashlich = a ritual taking place during Rosh HaShanah in which our wrongdoings and regrets are “cast off” and we start anew - often in the form of throwing scraps of bread or similar symbolically into the river.
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To be Jewish is to be an idealist.
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