I remember as a young teenager a talk about why coffee might be bad for you. This brings me back to 70's reading this post. And I have to admit, you got me for a second and now I'm ROFLMFAO!
gespro
JoinedPosts by gespro
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13
New Letter from the GB
by Coded Logic indear brothers and sisters,.
it has come to our attention that many you, especially in the developed world, have chosen to outfit your homes with artificial lighting.
while there is nothing wrong with husbands wishing to see more clearly while studying - or for sisters to want to add some extra lighting when cleaning the home - we need to be careful how we choose to use this technology.
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What made you get baptized?
by Frequent_Fader_Miles inbasically, i was forced into it.
believe me, baptism was the last thing i wanted to do.
but i was already in my early twenties, and the rank and file were like why don't you get baptised!
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gespro
Just figured the beatings would stop, but I didn't realize the mental/emotional beatings were to start after baptism.
I've forgotton how old I was when my brother and I got baptized...me 8 or 9. He was 4 years older. It seemed to be the only thing that put my mother into a good mood and a smile on her face - whenever we would talk about baptism. I was hoping it would put an end to her midnite rantings and her physical abuse...I've had my head bashed in with a metal towel rack on the very top of my head because of her fits of anger. She was great foe throwing and stabbing...truely a sick woman. And where were the 'brothers' in the congregation? Tending to their own dysfunctional families, no doubt.
I've worked on my own recovery and achieved some peace until that woman died a couple of weeks ago. Now I'm grieving over a missing childhood that never will be...
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gespro
Hi Sandy
WOW! R U serious? Did you call the dubs? LOL!!!!!!
very cool
ges
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Ever been questioned by 3 Elders.....
by freefromjws inwhen i was 17 i got pregnant (omg)!!!
i was in a meeting with 3 elders from my nj cong.
and the questions they asked:.
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gespro
I'm so glad you told them where to go! Like
I've been questioned by 5 elders [the dirty b@$!@(&$] Nothing like a bunch of cowards not only sitting in judgement but using someone elses situation to help them forget about their mundane missionary positions the WTS ordains to be acceptable....but digress. LOL!
Welcome to the board!
ges
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Prince halftime show
by JWdaughter inlet's go crazy.
.obviously is asking for the audience to join the wt with him!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayugj4a7qme .
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gespro
Hey There I'm posting this again on this thread just in case it get bypassed on the other thread. My wife's blog is getting hits from the oddest places for her post [probably dubs]. Check it out....
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Oh NO!!! It's raining on Prince!!
by MsMcDucket ini'm scared he's going to get electrocuted or break a leg or something!
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gespro
Hey Guys...
My wife wrote a bit on her blog and has the footage. She's getting hits from odd places [probably dubs.... hope so]. Anyway over here, we've been watching Prince play the WTS game. We think Brother Nelson's trying to tell us something here...
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CD Review of Prince's Latest '3121'
by gespro ini've looked around to see if anyone else posted this yet [and if they have, i haven't been able to find it.
my wife found this...and we had a chuckle.
it gets real good towards the end.
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gespro
I've looked around to see if anyone else posted this yet [and if they have, I haven't been able to find it.]
My wife found this...and we had a chuckle. It gets real good towards the end.
Check it out:
Prince, 3121
(Universal)
Alexis Petridis
Friday March 17, 2006
The GuardianThree years ago, anyone betting on a Prince comeback would have been welcomed by the bookies with open arms. Said bookies would have hung out the streamers and booked a band, confident in the knowledge that payday had arrived. Prince had long since joined that select band of superstars who achieve an apparently inexorable decline without recourse to drink or drugs. His monumental hubris brought him low all on its own. You could see where the hubris came from - in an era so musically barren that anyone with the ability to sing and dance at the same time got labelled a polymath genius, he really was a polymath genius - but that didn't make it easier to swallow.
In dispute with his record company, Prince spent the 1990s insultingly comparing himself to a slave, and churning out contractual-obligation albums with no thought for the poor saps who were supposed to buy them. By the millennium, he had successfully reduced his fanbase to a rump of enthusiasts so nutty they made their idol - a man who once toured the world with a $250,000 giant gold pretzel that supposedly represented a clitoris - seem a model of reason. The Rainbow Children (2001), a jazzy concept album about the Jehovah's Witnesses, made 109 on the Billboard chart, his worst showing for 23 years. It sounded and sold like Prince's Greatest Hits compared with its 2003 follow-up, NEWS, which contained four 14-minute-long instrumental jams and failed to chart at all.Theoretically, a career marked by inexplicable name changes, berserk public pronouncements and giant golden clitoris pretzels should prepare you for any eventuality, but what happened in the next year beggared belief. Prince became America's highest-grossing live performer, ending 2004 $56.5m richer. He achieved this turnaround by the simple expedient of playing his hits in concert and steering clear of jazz-influenced concept albums about the Jehovah's Witnesses and 14-minute instrumental jams.
Like Morrissey's triumphant comeback, Prince's success had more to do with a sort of mass wish-fulfilment than the album, Musicology, on which it was based. Hearing his influence everywhere from OutKast to Alicia Keyes pricked people's memories. They wanted the genuine article to be great again, which meant turning a blind eye to Musicology's flaws - not least Dear Mr Man, which did its bit for the American democratic process by suggesting that blacks shouldn't bother to vote.
With the public's nostalgia fix satiated, the trick now is to maintain their interest. Initially, 3121 appears more complex than its predecessor. The packaging and title track suggest a concept album about a sumptuous pleasure palace. Judging by the photographs in the CD booklet, the sumptuous pleasure palace has been decorated by an interior designer in the throes of a nervous breakdown, hence the placemats made of peacock feathers, the cushions embroidered with the word SATISFIED and, most troubling of all, the wildly impractical glassware: "Drink champagne," the title track urges, "from a glass with chocolate handles."
Any concept, however, vanishes as quickly as said handles would in the dishwasher, to be replaced by something more prosaic. Prince may be many things, but an idiot isn't one of them - he knows his resurgence is founded on fond memories and seems happy to provide the occasional prompt. The title track reintroduces the electronically altered vocals first heard on Sign O' the Times' If I Was Your Girlfriend, while the lyrics echo those of 1999: "We gon' party like there ain't gonna be another one." The declamatory synthesized fanfares of Lolita and Fury are close relations of the declamatory synthesized fanfares of Let's Go Crazy and Little Red Corvette. Black Sweat's tough, atonal, lewd, Afro-centric funk - "You'll be screaming like a white lady," he leers at the song's conclusion - recalls The Black Album.
But there's more to 3121 than the prickle of nostalgia: amid the title track's murky, unsettling groove and the grinding techno noise of Love, Prince sounds thrillingly alive, a veteran throwing down a cocky, confident challenge to any young pretenders. The polymath genius of legend seems to be reasserting himself in the album's casual stylistic shifts - from Lolita's pure pop to Te Amo Corazón's Latin smooch to Satisfied's southern soul.
Then, just when you're wondering what could possibly go wrong, everything goes wrong. The genre-hopping collapses in a hail of dribbly mid-tempo R&B and central-casting James Brown pastiches, and the lyrics take a sudden detour to Kingdom Hall: there are intimations of imminent Armageddon, and the listener is advised to "safeguard against the forked tongue and the treachery of the wicked one". It's as if Prince has tricked you into opening your front door, then jammed it open with his foot and started trying to flog you the Watchtower. Before this unfortunate turn of events, 3121 does enough to remind you what a remarkable artist Prince was and can still be.
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Been gone for awhile, no internet.
by avishai in.
but i could use some love and or email at [email protected].
miss you guys, drop me a line, will have service back soon.
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gespro
heehee - Arrowstar. Nice to see you too!
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How Long Would They Last Without The Society?
by ThomasCovenant infollowing on a little from 2 topics (xjw critical mass) and (the real reason jw's don't accept blood) sorry but don't know how to show the links, i got to thinking: .
if the society were to finish publishing and closed down because of say bankruptcy from lawsuits, how long do you think the worldwide brotherhood would last?.
i feel this is a good question to ask those still in.would they still worship jehovah without the rigmarole of 5 meetings, personal study and preaching work and the monthly kingdom ministry and other regular literature.
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gespro
If the Society said there is no more printing and not going to be any in the future please read your Bibles instead how long do you think? Could this scenario be put in an 'innocent' way to those still in to try and get them to think about what they worship?
Thanks
Thomas Covenant
Hey Thomas-
It would be a wonderful thing if they read only their Bibles!
I'm sure some, after awhile, would see that the Society was full of nonesense and have a chance to really see what Jesus was saying without the interference of 'Mother.' One can only hope and pray...
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