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Ukrkoz did not ask you any questions. He is responding to your typo post. And it refers to nothing from your above post. You really have trouble understanding. Are you French?
Ukrkoz did ask me a question which because of this post Re had to repeat it to me. Apparently, unlike your claim I do know how to read and perhaps I'm an anglophone and not a francophone.
I answered his question and he thanked me for that.
Perhaps you are not the enlightened spiritual person you pose as but a bitter person who is more like the angry hateful individual you act like in the A&A subforum. Please go back to your own thread about how to be spiritual . It may help.
By far, this is the deepest thought I have seen from you, Arch. Very open to interpretations any way possible.
Naah, cemetery is shrine of death. Delivery room is shrine of life.
lol, when you can't see the bottom it doesn't mean its not there. Yes, so is birth. Remember those that gave it to us so that we remember to leave some for the Next.
Walking in the forest or forest bathing
sitting near moving water
swimming in the ocean
keeping bees (which I did for a few years.....one of the most rewarding experiences ever)
taking a nap with a dog lying next to you
watching birds
watching a snowstorm
standing in the rain
observing plant life grow or seedlings popping up out of the soil
laying in the yard at night and looking at the stars - especially during meteor showers!!
holding someone you love and expressing your love to others
eating grape tomatoes right off the vine when they are warm from the sun
I think of the time frame they lived. They lived a whole life. Maybe unlike like anything I can imagine. I think wow, even for a moment, I read their name, they are somebody.
That's what I do. Who were they, and what were their lives like? One can only imagine.
There's a small cemetery up the road from where my sister lives in Pennsylvania. She and her partner have already purchased their graves there. My other sister and I walked through it when we visited a few years ago. The first graves seem to start in 1918. Youngish people. It's not hard to imagine why.
But when I visited, it wasn't long after Easter, and there were some wilted daffodils on one grave. The stone indicated that it was a baby who had been born and died in 1965, with a few months between the dates. I was there in the late 1990s, and the fact that there were fresh flowers on a 30+ year-old baby's grave told a story.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Arach Angle
Truth be told, I also think what a waste of land.
I do, too, even though I like to walk through them. Better than a cookie-cutter development of boxy houses, though.
Earth, is not given to us by our grandparents.
Earth, is lent to us by our grandchildren.
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