Guest guest Posted March 19, 2003 Report Share Posted March 19, 2003 Dear dear friends It now appears that a war may be very close. The Bush administration has abandoned the diplomatic process at the United Nations. The United Nations has begun pulling its inspectors out of Iraq. President Bush has given Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave Iraq or face war. This is a very sad day. We must remember in this dark moment that we have come a long way. By working for peace around the globe, millions of people have successfully challenged the justness of this war on a world stage. We have persuaded governments to heed their peoples' call to peace, and helped the United Nations maintain its integrity. We all have been part of a historic mobilization of the citizens of the globe. It will change everything. And in the end, we will win. We will continue waging peace, even if war comes. We have joined together to articulate a vision of how the world should be -- of how nations should treat each other, of how we can collectively deal with threats to our security. One simple way to show your continued commitment to this vision is to put a light in your window. It could be a Christmas string or candle, a light bulb, or a lantern. It's an easy way to keep the light of reason and hope burning, to let others know that they are not alone, and to show the way home to the young men and women who are on their way to Iraq. We'd like to keep a list of the places and people who are joining in this simple act. Please sign up now at: http://www.moveon.org/windowlight/ On Sunday, people came together in thousands of towns and villages around the world -- a truly global vigil for peace. The vigils came in all shapes and sizes. There were vigils with ten people and vigils with thousands. There were vigils in homes, in churches, and in open fields. People joined together to share their commitment to making a better world. For some amazing pictures of the vigils around the world, go to: http://www.moveon.org/vigil/ The Global Vigil was made possible by the efforts of thousands of volunteers. Some worked tirelessly to make modest but important vigils happen in small towns and villages. Others merely chose a location for a vigil on our Web site and handed out extra candles as hundreds of strangers showed up. Several dedicated volunteers staffing the MoveOn help desk worked countless hours answering questions and solving problems. All of us give our most heartfelt thanks to these fantastic volunteers for their good spirits during such an intense project. Here are a few of the thousands of reports we've seen from vigil coordinators. They give a real sense of the scale and power of this event. " We are planning to take the fire of one of the candle and [keep it burning], as a symbol of the light of the conscience of humanity. " --Fabian Freire, Barcelona, Spain, over 100 attended " The calm, moon-lit night provided an incredibly beautiful setting where persons could visualize the devastation a shock and awe attack would bring to their beloved city. " --Chester L Guinn, Des Moines, United States, over 1,000 attended. " Tonight, at 7, I was alone with my candle on the place of the village, when an old lady, Misses Wery arrived walking with her stick. So old, limping and desiring strongly to say " No war " . We ended up with more than 20 people. " --Jacqueline Beraud, France (no village name) " It is so important for the world to realise that most Americans are, like the rest of the world's people, peace-loving, fair-minded and good-hearted people. " --Al Harris, Cairns, Australia, more than 200 people " People were lining the edge of the fountain, holding candles and signs well before 7pm, and many stayed until 9pm even 10pm, for live coverage on local news channels. Drivers of cars, even metro busses, were honking wildly with fingers in peace signs out their windows. " --Kayte (last name not given), Houston, United States, over 1,000 people " We had 40 participants attend, all ages. People spoke about peace; one participant with her native drum led us in a chant, 'Peace in our minds, peace in our homes, peace in the world,' we sang. All in all it was a great success. We plan to have a vigil next Sunday as well, same time, same place. " --Joyce Lachance, Musquodoboit Harbour, Canada No one has ever said that waging peace is easy. It may take days, or months, or years. But moving forward together, we will make history. Thank you for all you do....and lots of hugs SKY and .... --Carrie, Eli, Joan, Peter, Wes, and Zack The MoveOn Team March 17th, 2003 Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop! <BLOCKQUOTE style= " PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid " > Dear dear friends It now appears that a war may be very close. The Bush administration has abandoned the diplomatic process at the United Nations. The United Nations has begun pulling its inspectors out of Iraq. President Bush has given Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave Iraq or face war. This is a very sad day. We must remember in this dark moment that we have come a long way. By working for peace around the globe, millions of people have successfully challenged the justness of this war on a world stage. We have persuaded governments to heed their peoples' call to peace, and helped the United Nations maintain its integrity. We all have been part of a historic mobilization of the citizens of the globe. It will change everything. And in the end, we will win. We will continue waging peace, even if war comes. We have joined together to articulate a vision of how the world should be -- of how nations should treat each other, of how we can collectively deal with threats to our security. One simple way to show your continued commitment to this vision is to put a light in your window. It could be a Christmas string or candle, a light bulb, or a lantern. It's an easy way to keep the light of reason and hope burning, to let others know that they are not alone, and to show the way home to the young men and women who are on their way to Iraq. We'd like to keep a list of the places and people who are joining in this simple act. Please sign up now at: http://www.moveon.org/windowlight/ On Sunday, people came together in thousands of towns and villages around the world -- a truly global vigil for peace. The vigils came in all shapes and sizes. There were vigils with ten people and vigils with thousands. There were vigils in homes, in churches, and in open fields. People joined together to share their commitment to making a better world. For some amazing pictures of the vigils around the world, go to: http://www.moveon.org/vigil/ The Global Vigil was made possible by the efforts of thousands of volunteers. Some worked tirelessly to make modest but important vigils happen in small towns and villages. Others merely chose a location for a vigil on our Web site and handed out extra candles as hundreds of strangers showed up. Several dedicated volunteers staffing the MoveOn help desk worked countless hours answering questions and solving problems. All of us give our most heartfelt thanks to these fantastic volunteers for their good spirits during such an intense project. Here are a few of the thousands of reports we've seen from vigil coordinators. They give a real sense of the scale and power of this event. " We are planning to take the fire of one of the candle and [keep it burning], as a symbol of the light of the conscience of humanity. " --Fabian Freire, Barcelona, Spain, over 100 attended " The calm, moon-lit night provided an incredibly beautiful setting where persons could visualize the devastation a shock and awe attack would bring to their beloved city. " --Chester L Guinn, Des Moines, United States, over 1,000 attended. " Tonight, at 7, I was alone with my candle on the place of the village, when an old lady, Misses Wery arrived walking with her stick. So old, limping and desiring strongly to say " No war " . We ended up with more than 20 people. " --Jacqueline Beraud, France (no village name) " It is so important for the world to realise that most Americans are, like the rest of the world's people, peace-loving, fair-minded and good-hearted people. " --Al Harris, Cairns, Australia, more than 200 people " People were lining the edge of the fountain, holding candles and signs well before 7pm, and many stayed until 9pm even 10pm, for live coverage on local news channels. Drivers of cars, even metro busses, were honking wildly with fingers in peace signs out their windows. " --Kayte (last name not given), Houston, United States, over 1,000 people " We had 40 participants attend, all ages. People spoke about peace; one participant with her native drum led us in a chant, 'Peace in our minds, peace in our homes, peace in the world,' we sang. All in all it was a great success. We plan to have a vigil next Sunday as well, same time, same place. " --Joyce Lachance, Musquodoboit Harbour, Canada No one has ever said that waging peace is easy. It may take days, or months, or years. But moving forward together, we will make history. Thank you for all you do....and lots of hugs SKY and .... --Carrie, Eli, Joan, Peter, Wes, and Zack The MoveOn Team March 17th, 2003 </BLOCKQUOTE> <hr size=1> <A HREF= " http://rd./platinum/evt=8162/*http://platinum./splash. html " > Platinum</A> - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, <A HREF= " http://rd./platinum/evt=8162/*http://platinum./splash. html " >live on your desktop</A>! ----------------------- Headers -------------------------------- Return-Path: <skymudra Received: from rly-xi03.mx.aol.com (rly-xi03.mail.aol.com [172.20.116.8]) by air-xi02.mail.aol.com (v92.17) with ESMTP id MAILINXI24-20e03e77c4f22f; Tue, 18 Mar 2003 20:16:34 -0500 Received: from web14007.mail. (web14007.mail. [216.136.175.123]) by rly-xi03.mx.aol.com (v92.16) with ESMTP id MAILRELAYINXI31-4cf3e77c4dd189; Tue, 18 Mar 2003 20:16:13 -0500 Message-ID: <20030319010933.62742.qmail Received: from [172.195.49.75] by web14007.mail. via HTTP; Tue, 18 Mar 2003 17:09:33 PST Tue, 18 Mar 2003 17:09:33 -0800 (PST) smith vicky <skymudra Re: Waging peace. Put a light in your window... it's me SKY Diana <dithomas52 In-<20030319004722.25380.qmail MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary= " 0-1259487762-1048036173=:62717 " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2003 Report Share Posted March 19, 2003 dear Di, I am already a member, and took part in the candlelight vigil on sunday. I am so glad, that somewhere, at long last, our feelings and oppinions matter... It seems that the people we vote for, care nothing for our thoughts on this - and it would have been really good if we could in return, boycott the elections, trouble is, it doesn't matter who you vote for, the government still get in! It's good to know that moveon.org are able to accumulate the real representation of the people, not just in this country, but on a world wide scale... Praying for world peace now, should be at the top of our prayer list. Love and light - and a candle in my window Sam dithomas52 wrote: Dear dear friends It now appears that a war may be very close. The Bush administration has abandoned the diplomatic process at the United Nations. The United Nations has begun pulling its inspectors out of Iraq. President Bush has given Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave Iraq or face war. This is a very sad day. We must remember in this dark moment that we have come a long way. By working for peace around the globe, millions of people have successfully challenged the justness of this war on a world stage. We have persuaded governments to heed their peoples' call to peace, and helped the United Nations maintain its integrity. We all have been part of a historic mobilization of the citizens of the globe. It will change everything. And in the end, we will win. We will continue waging peace, even if war comes. We have joined together to articulate a vision of how the world should be -- of how nations should treat each other, of how we can collectively deal with threats to our security. One simple way to show your continued commitment to this vision is to put a light in your window. It could be a Christmas string or candle, a light bulb, or a lantern. It's an easy way to keep the light of reason and hope burning, to let others know that they are not alone, and to show the way home to the young men and women who are on their way to Iraq. We'd like to keep a list of the places and people who are joining in this simple act. Please sign up now at: http://www.moveon.org/windowlight/ On Sunday, people came together in thousands of towns and villages around the world -- a truly global vigil for peace. The vigils came in all shapes and sizes. There were vigils with ten people and vigils with thousands. There were vigils in homes, in churches, and in open fields. People joined together to share their commitment to making a better world. For some amazing pictures of the vigils around the world, go to: http://www.moveon.org/vigil/ The Global Vigil was made possible by the efforts of thousands of volunteers. Some worked tirelessly to make modest but important vigils happen in small towns and villages. Others merely chose a location for a vigil on our Web site and handed out extra candles as hundreds of strangers showed up. Several dedicated volunteers staffing the MoveOn help desk worked countless hours answering questions and solving problems. All of us give our most heartfelt thanks to these fantastic volunteers for their good spirits during such an intense project. Here are a few of the thousands of reports we've seen from vigil coordinators. They give a real sense of the scale and power of this event. " We are planning to take the fire of one of the candle and [keep it burning], as a symbol of the light of the conscience of humanity. " --Fabian Freire, Barcelona, Spain, over 100 attended " The calm, moon-lit night provided an incredibly beautiful setting where persons could visualize the devastation a shock and awe attack would bring to their beloved city. " --Chester L Guinn, Des Moines, United States, over 1,000 attended. " Tonight, at 7, I was alone with my candle on the place of the village, when an old lady, Misses Wery arrived walking with her stick. So old, limping and desiring strongly to say " No war " . We ended up with more than 20 people. " --Jacqueline Beraud, France (no village name) " It is so important for the world to realise that most Americans are, like the rest of the world's people, peace-loving, fair-minded and good-hearted people. " --Al Harris, Cairns, Australia, more than 200 people " People were lining the edge of the fountain, holding candles and signs well before 7pm, and many stayed until 9pm even 10pm, for live coverage on local news channels. Drivers of cars, even metro busses, were honking wildly with fingers in peace signs out their windows. " --Kayte (last name not given), Houston, United States, over 1,000 people " We had 40 participants attend, all ages. People spoke about peace; one participant with her native drum led us in a chant, 'Peace in our minds, peace in our homes, peace in the world,' we sang. All in all it was a great success. We plan to have a vigil next Sunday as well, same time, same place. " --Joyce Lachance, Musquodoboit Harbour, Canada No one has ever said that waging peace is easy. It may take days, or months, or years. But moving forward together, we will make history. Thank you for all you do....and lots of hugs SKY and .... --Carrie, Eli, Joan, Peter, Wes, and Zack The MoveOn Team March 17th, 2003 Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop! <BLOCKQUOTE style= " PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid " > Dear dear friends It now appears that a war may be very close. The Bush administration has abandoned the diplomatic process at the United Nations. The United Nations has begun pulling its inspectors out of Iraq. President Bush has given Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave Iraq or face war. This is a very sad day. We must remember in this dark moment that we have come a long way. By working for peace around the globe, millions of people have successfully challenged the justness of this war on a world stage. We have persuaded governments to heed their peoples' call to peace, and helped the United Nations maintain its integrity. We all have been part of a historic mobilization of the citizens of the globe. It will change everything. And in the end, we will win. We will continue waging peace, even if war comes. We have joined together to articulate a vision of how the world should be -- of how nations should treat each other, of how we can collectively deal with threats to our security. One simple way to show your continued commitment to this vision is to put a light in your window. It could be a Christmas string or candle, a light bulb, or a lantern. It's an easy way to keep the light of reason and hope burning, to let others know that they are not alone, and to show the way home to the young men and women who are on their way to Iraq. We'd like to keep a list of the places and people who are joining in this simple act. Please sign up now at: http://www.moveon.org/windowlight/ On Sunday, people came together in thousands of towns and villages around the world -- a truly global vigil for peace. The vigils came in all shapes and sizes. There were vigils with ten people and vigils with thousands. There were vigils in homes, in churches, and in open fields. People joined together to share their commitment to making a better world. For some amazing pictures of the vigils around the world, go to: http://www.moveon.org/vigil/ The Global Vigil was made possible by the efforts of thousands of volunteers. Some worked tirelessly to make modest but important vigils happen in small towns and villages. Others merely chose a location for a vigil on our Web site and handed out extra candles as hundreds of strangers showed up. Several dedicated volunteers staffing the MoveOn help desk worked countless hours answering questions and solving problems. All of us give our most heartfelt thanks to these fantastic volunteers for their good spirits during such an intense project. Here are a few of the thousands of reports we've seen from vigil coordinators. They give a real sense of the scale and power of this event. " We are planning to take the fire of one of the candle and [keep it burning], as a symbol of the light of the conscience of humanity. " --Fabian Freire, Barcelona, Spain, over 100 attended " The calm, moon-lit night provided an incredibly beautiful setting where persons could visualize the devastation a shock and awe attack would bring to their beloved city. " --Chester L Guinn, Des Moines, United States, over 1,000 attended. " Tonight, at 7, I was alone with my candle on the place of the village, when an old lady, Misses Wery arrived walking with her stick. So old, limping and desiring strongly to say " No war " . We ended up with more than 20 people. " --Jacqueline Beraud, France (no village name) " It is so important for the world to realise that most Americans are, like the rest of the world's people, peace-loving, fair-minded and good-hearted people. " --Al Harris, Cairns, Australia, more than 200 people " People were lining the edge of the fountain, holding candles and signs well before 7pm, and many stayed until 9pm even 10pm, for live coverage on local news channels. Drivers of cars, even metro busses, were honking wildly with fingers in peace signs out their windows. " --Kayte (last name not given), Houston, United States, over 1,000 people " We had 40 participants attend, all ages. People spoke about peace; one participant with her native drum led us in a chant, 'Peace in our minds, peace in our homes, peace in the world,' we sang. All in all it was a great success. We plan to have a vigil next Sunday as well, same time, same place. " --Joyce Lachance, Musquodoboit Harbour, Canada No one has ever said that waging peace is easy. It may take days, or months, or years. But moving forward together, we will make history. Thank you for all you do....and lots of hugs SKY and .... --Carrie, Eli, Joan, Peter, Wes, and Zack The MoveOn Team March 17th, 2003 </BLOCKQUOTE> <hr size=1> <A HREF= " http://rd./platinum/evt=8162/*http://platinum./splash. html " > Platinum</A> - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, <A HREF= " http://rd./platinum/evt=8162/*http://platinum./splash. html " >live on your desktop</A>! ----------------------- Headers -------------------------------- Return-Path: <skymudra Received: from rly-xi03.mx.aol.com (rly-xi03.mail.aol.com [172.20.116.8]) by air-xi02.mail.aol.com (v92.17) with ESMTP id MAILINXI24-20e03e77c4f22f; Tue, 18 Mar 2003 20:16:34 -0500 Received: from web14007.mail. (web14007.mail. [216.136.175.123]) by rly-xi03.mx.aol.com (v92.16) with ESMTP id MAILRELAYINXI31-4cf3e77c4dd189; Tue, 18 Mar 2003 20:16:13 -0500 Message-ID: <20030319010933.62742.qmail Received: from [172.195.49.75] by web14007.mail. via HTTP; Tue, 18 Mar 2003 17:09:33 PST Tue, 18 Mar 2003 17:09:33 -0800 (PST) smith vicky <skymudra Re: Waging peace. Put a light in your window... it's me SKY Diana <dithomas52 In-<20030319004722.25380.qmail MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary= " 0-1259487762-1048036173=:62717 " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2003 Report Share Posted March 19, 2003 In a message dated 19/3/03 10:53:48, celticcrystals2003 writes: << candle in my window >> Hello Sam Great stuff! I am going to feel so much better when I light a candle in my window tonight knowing that so many other people are doing it with the best of intentions. Let there be light!!! Love, Light & Laughter ~ Diane xx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2003 Report Share Posted March 19, 2003 We were about 40 at our Sunday peace vigil here in Cozumel, Mexico. Still praying, Sally , dithomas52@a... wrote: > > Dear dear friends > > > One simple way to show your continued commitment to this > vision is to put a light in your window. It could be a > Christmas string or candle, a light bulb, or a lantern. It's > an easy way to keep the light of reason and hope burning, to > let others know that they are not alone, and to show the way > home to the young men and women who are on their way to Iraq. > > We'd like to keep a list of the places and people who are > joining in this simple act. Please sign up now at: > > http://www.moveon.org/windowlight/ > > On Sunday, people came together in thousands of towns and > villages around the world -- a truly global vigil for peace. > The vigils came in all shapes and sizes. There were vigils > with ten people and vigils with thousands. There were vigils > in homes, in churches, and in open fields. People joined > together to share their commitment to making a better world. > > For some amazing pictures of the vigils around the world, go > to: > > http://www.moveon.org/vigil/ > > The Global Vigil was made possible by the efforts of thousands > of volunteers. Some worked tirelessly to make modest but > important vigils happen in small towns and villages. Others > merely chose a location for a vigil on our Web site and handed > out extra candles as hundreds of strangers showed up. Several > dedicated volunteers staffing the MoveOn help desk worked > countless hours answering questions and solving problems. All > of us give our most heartfelt thanks to these fantastic > volunteers for their good spirits during such an intense > project. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2003 Report Share Posted March 20, 2003 In a message dated 20/3/03 20:13:10, celticcrystals2003 writes: << but do you think we should all light one every night now, for peace? I am really scared, after watching the news today! >> Hello Sam I sent a message to the group which was sent to me by a friend about placing a light in the window to send light to the world (one is burning in my window as I type this!!) It sends light to the world - and knowing that so many people are sending light (and therefore thoughts) to the world is giving me comfort. How can it be that (it seems) the majority of the world don't want war that it can go ahead ???? How can civilised people start war? Can't we act like adults in a responsible way ?? Seems like children which need separating and spending time in a corner for five minutes!!!!!! It really is a time to live in the moment. I am a Yoga Tutor and have just come back from class - reminding the students The Past Is History The Future is a Mystery The Present is a Gift That is Why its called the Present. Very difficult to do, but its going to help us all if we can live in THE MOMENT -- NOW !! Love, Light & Laughter ~ Diane xx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2003 Report Share Posted March 20, 2003 hi Di, you're welcome, but do you think we should all light one every night now, for peace? I am really scared, after watching the news today! This is it and I've been telling my children it will never get this far... If I thought it would make a difference, I would never vote again, How can we elect world leaders that we can never rely on to listen to us??? Love and light and blessings for our prayers for peace... Sam dithomas52 wrote: In a message dated 19/3/03 10:53:48, celticcrystals2003 writes: << candle in my window >> Hello Sam Great stuff! I am going to feel so much better when I light a candle in my window tonight knowing that so many other people are doing it with the best of intentions. Let there be light!!! Love, Light & Laughter ~ Diane xx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2003 Report Share Posted March 21, 2003 dear Diane, thanks Di, you're a star! I am lighting my candle every night - and in the daytime, I shall place my crystal lightbox in the window. Seems to me that Bush is acting like a baby, trying to get his own way, while he is franticly trying to cover up his father's mistakes, after all wasn't it his father who gave Osama and Saddam their military training? Definately Osama did! Did they by any chance, purchase their arms from The Carlisle group, in the Middle East? Bush the 1st, just happens to be a director of them - and rumour (?!) has it, they do much trade in the Middle East? Seems we are all being led up the garden path, while our Tony Blair follows along like a sheep! Baa! I wonder if we shall ever get to the bottom of it, I think not... Love and light Sam Ps. Sorry if I have offended anyone, it seriously is not, my intention, just my opinion dithomas52 wrote: In a message dated 20/3/03 20:13:10, celticcrystals2003 writes: << but do you think we should all light one every night now, for peace? I am really scared, after watching the news today! >> Hello Sam I sent a message to the group which was sent to me by a friend about placing a light in the window to send light to the world (one is burning in my window as I type this!!) It sends light to the world - and knowing that so many people are sending light (and therefore thoughts) to the world is giving me comfort. How can it be that (it seems) the majority of the world don't want war that it can go ahead ???? How can civilised people start war? Can't we act like adults in a responsible way ?? Seems like children which need separating and spending time in a corner for five minutes!!!!!! It really is a time to live in the moment. I am a Yoga Tutor and have just come back from class - reminding the students The Past Is History The Future is a Mystery The Present is a Gift That is Why its called the Present. Very difficult to do, but its going to help us all if we can live in THE MOMENT -- NOW !! Love, Light & Laughter ~ Diane xx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2003 Report Share Posted March 21, 2003 Hello group !!! I am back ! I am in my new place now ...and loving it ...Is a tiny cottage in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado....sorry I have not being aroud for a while...I hope you are doing well and are happy.....Glad to see Diane got my letter .....to put a light on the window for the suffering of the war....Love ya! In The Light SKY Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2003 Report Share Posted March 21, 2003 In a message dated 21/3/03 17:33:58, skymudra writes: << I am in my new place now ...and loving it ...Is a tiny cottage in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado....sorry I have not being aroud for a while...I hope you are doing well and are happy.....Glad to see Diane got my letter .....to put a light on the window for the suffering of the war >> Hello Sky Hope you are settling in well. It sounds lovely!! Putting the light in the window brings me a lot of comfort, knowing that others are sending light to the world. Love, Light & Laughter ~ Diane xx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2003 Report Share Posted March 21, 2003 In a message dated 3/21/03 9:34:25 AM Pacific Standard Time, skymudra writes: > ...Is a tiny cottage in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado.... Dear Sky, I'm so happy you like your new home. I used to live in Littleton, the very last ranch before the mountains. It was beautiful! I wish you peace, pleasure and plenty - so much that you will always be moved to offer the same to the world. Evelyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2003 Report Share Posted March 21, 2003 In a message dated 03/21/2003 12:40:51 AM Pacific Standard Time, celticcrystals2003 writes: > Sam > Ps. Sorry if I have offended anyone, it seriously is not, my intention, > just my opinion > > That is the beauty of this country. We have the right to our own opinions, the Freedom to express that opinion, even if it is not popular one. Mercedes Mercedes Rose Herndon Reiki Master/Teacher, Artist, Photographer Designer & Creator of Silk Healing Scarves Owner of " Just for You " Custom Cards Coauthor & Publisher of: " Loving Thoughts for Gentle Hearts; v. 1 - Goals, Dreams & Affirmations " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2003 Report Share Posted March 21, 2003 In a message dated 03/21/2003 11:48:15 AM Pacific Standard Time, dithomas52 writes: > Hello Sky > Hope you are settling in well. It sounds lovely!! > Putting the light in the window brings me a lot of comfort, knowing that > others are sending light to the world. > > Love, Light & Laughter ~ Diane xx > > Sky, sounds like a lovely wonderful place. Diane, yes the light in the window is a warm and loving touch for all of the world. With that I add prayer as well. Mercedes Mercedes Rose Herndon Reiki Master/Teacher, Artist, Photographer Designer & Creator of Silk Healing Scarves Owner of " Just for You " Custom Cards Coauthor & Publisher of: " Loving Thoughts for Gentle Hearts; v. 1 - Goals, Dreams & Affirmations " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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