Showing posts with label Animal Pictures For Children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animal Pictures For Children. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 April 2013

Animal Pictures For Children

Source(google.com.pk)
Animal Pictures For Children Biography 

does anyone else show way more sympathy to animals than people? i do because i view all animals as innocent victims of man. not that this is news to anyone, but i get so angry at something like people clubbing seals or using chimpanzees as lab rats or using dolphins as nothing more than entertainment to rake in money, when these creatures have their OWN minds and deserve the same freedoms we have but they do not have them. i mean seriously, if i saw someone club a seal i'd take a boulder and bash their skull in and feel no remorse about it, that's how angry i get at this kind of thing. does anyone else feel this wayI feel like you do, all creatures have feelings and feel pain and joy on some level. Though to bash some human idiots head in, just because they hurt or killed a animal, would be just as bad, if not worse. One of higher intellect and feeling to even notice and feel that, should know better, even if the thought crosses your mind.

I am always so overwhelmed with feelings, when ever I see even a accidentally killed animal along the road, wild or domesticated. But I know that life, death and pain is a part of life and nature of things on Earth, in the present physical state in which is exists.

I have always been a very sensitive empath, and find animals and plants far better companions many times, and more soothing then many humans I come into contact with.

As a sensitive empath, one has to be-careful not to take on the pain and hurt of the animal, as if it was yours, toward human, been there in the past, don't want to go there again.
David I used to feel this way. Over a lifetime of working with wildlife (for conservation and protection of threatened and endangered species) I have a pretty different take on this. I see animals as fellow beings. Biologically we're all animals and so on. I see all creatures as having sentients in their own right. At the same time we're all part of the same energy exchange and interactions. Lions hunt, Wildebeests travel in huge herds and people use tools to advance their agenda. I see other creatures as being far more connected than we are. In fact we are so arrogant about our own importance that we completely miss the gifts that so many other living things offer to us every day.

What we do in the name of profit and progress is not OK. When actions of any one group or species are carried out to the detriment of others for things like profit it is a problem. The hunter needs to practice reverence and create sacred space for the hunted. All species are here for balance and to help one another on many levels. Things like killing baby Harp Seals en mass for profit is an abomination of these principles. So are mass agricultural practices that disrespect the lives of any creature. It doesn't mean that going fishing to put food on the table is wrong. Understanding our connections to all living things is what matters. There is no right or wrong in the natural system, just balance. We have become so disconnected from this that it is very sad. To me this same understanding of balance applies to plants as well as animals. The more people disassociate from the natural world, the more we loose our understanding of our connection to it.

There are terrible things that happen and I have learned to not take these things to heart because it would just send me on a downward negative spiral where I can be no help at all. Instead I choose to send blessings and positive energy out there to help any situation that needs it. Also keep in mind that there are so many good and amazing things being done to help animals all over the world. Every day Fish and Wildlife Agencies work to conserve and protect wildlife around the world. Private organizations work to conserve habitat and turn possible extinction around. So much good work is done everyday and many people care very much. This is what to focus on. The media never focuses on this and yet I have seen so many heart warming situations with people and other animals. It's very encouraging.

So I guess my message is; don't let these discouraging situations darken your perspective . Instead add your positive energy to the mix. I know it will be received with many thanks.
Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children


Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children


Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children


Wednesday, 27 March 2013

Animal Pictures For Children


Source(google.com.pk)
Animal Pictures For Children Biography

Mark E. Smith was the lead vocalist, songwriter, bandleader, and general mastermind of the Fall, the longest-lived and most prolific band of the British post-punk movement. Smith's uncompromisingly abrasive music and bitterly cranky persona made him a cult icon in underground rock circles, and even if the Fall's appeal was far from universal, their harsh experimentalism left a huge imprint on '90s indie rock. Notoriously confrontational and difficult to work with, Smith had a penchant for firing bandmembers on whims, yet the Fall's sound remained essentially the same: jagged, angular guitars, tense rhythms, and stabbing keyboards, all overlaid with Smith's snarling monotone vocal rants. There were flirtations with pop and/or dance as the years went by, but only on a relative scale; Smith's original vision for the band endured largely intact. His lyrics -- at least, when he delivered them intelligibly -- were generally the Fall's focal point: abstract poetry filled with complicated wordplay, bone-dry wit, cutting social observations, and general misanthropy (sometimes more implied than clearly stated, but apparent nonetheless). Weathering the original wave of post-punk in the late '70s, Smith had some minor chart success in the U.K. during the mid-'80s, and stuck around long enough to become a press favorite for his colorful, opinionated interviews and fondness for beer. Recording with various lineups into the new millennium, Smith remained defiantly working-class, provocative, alienated, and above all -- for better and worse -- himself.Smith was born in the Salford area of Manchester, England, on March 5, 1957. As a teenager, he listened mostly to '60s garage rock (of the Nuggets variety) and experimental rockers like Can, Captain Beefheart, and the Velvet Underground. He auditioned for several different heavy metal groups in the Manchester area, but was far from a gifted singer, and was consistently rejected. In the meantime, he worked as an office clerk for two years, then took a job as a dock worker in 1976; a year later, in January 1977, he formed the Fall as a more personal vehicle of expression, tailored to his own idiosyncrasies and musical tastes. Their debut single, "Bingo Master's Breakout," was followed by the full-length Live at the Witch Trials, which kicked off a string of difficult, challenging, amateurish releases that were clearly connected to punk rock, but also far artier and more ambitious. In 1983, Smith met and married guitarist Brix Smith while on tour in the U.S.; she brought a stronger melodic sensibility to the band's clattering art-punk cacophony, making it as close to accessible as it would ever get. Albums like The Wonderful and Frightening World of the Fall, This Nation's Saving Grace, and Bend Sinister were among the group's most popular and critically acclaimed, and amid numerous lineup changes, the Fall even hit the lower reaches of the British singles charts a few times over 1986-1988. However, the Smiths divorced, and Brix left the group in 1989. Smith carried on through the '90s, recording a couple of albums for the American Matador label over 1993-1994. By that point, indie bands on both sides of the Atlantic were acknowledging the Fall as an influence, and Smith had become an enduring cult hero in the U.K. (especially in his hometown). In 1996, as part of his increasing interest in electronic dance music, Smith guested on the D.O.S.E. single "Plug Myself In"; he'd previously appeared on a Coldcut track, "(I'm) In Deep," from the 1989 What's That Noise? album. 1998 proved to be one of the more disastrous years in Fall history; Smith took the band on a brief, tension-filled North American tour, which ended with his arrest in a New York hotel on misdemeanor domestic assault charges. Allegedly, Smith punched, kicked, and choked his girlfriend -- the band's keyboardist, Julia Nagle -- one week after Nagle reportedly hit him in the face with a telephone, giving him a black eye. He pleaded not guilty, and was ordered to undergo counseling for alcohol abuse and anger management; after six months of good behavior, the charges were eventually dropped. Nagle remained in the band -- oddly, since the rest of the lineup had quit in a huff. Smith took some time off from the Fall to record his first solo album later that year; The Post Nearly Man was chiefly a spoken word outing, backed with snippets of electronica and past Fall songs. After recording with the Fall a bit more, he returned with a second solo spoken word album, Pander! Panda! Panzer!, in 2002.
Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children

Animal Pictures For Children