I whole-heartedly endorse everything said by MMXIV.
Support systems are in place and are there to be used - and they range from the immediate to the long-term.
have anyone of you read, the absolutly jaw dropping paragraph in this article about a women who was hit by her husband?
its in page 25 of the 2/15/12 wt study edition (i read the dumbed down version).. .
if there was any question, that the watchtowers stance is for wives to simply take it when their husbands abuse them, this makes it crystal clear.. who the hell is scanning these things before they go to print?
I whole-heartedly endorse everything said by MMXIV.
Support systems are in place and are there to be used - and they range from the immediate to the long-term.
as some know here, i am a retired cop (30 years).. .
i am a member of narpo (national association of retired police officers) - uk.. .
it seems that hardly a day goes by without an e-mail from my regional branch with details of yet another brother or sister officer who has died.
She's fine AFAIK - she's still in touch with some of my family on FB. Moved on well, I think.
as some know here, i am a retired cop (30 years).. .
i am a member of narpo (national association of retired police officers) - uk.. .
it seems that hardly a day goes by without an e-mail from my regional branch with details of yet another brother or sister officer who has died.
James:
Yes, it probably was. She came for a visit to UK.
as some know here, i am a retired cop (30 years).. .
i am a member of narpo (national association of retired police officers) - uk.. .
it seems that hardly a day goes by without an e-mail from my regional branch with details of yet another brother or sister officer who has died.
As some know here, I am a retired cop (30 years).
I am a member of NARPO (National Association of Retired Police Officers) - UK.
It seems that hardly a day goes by without an e-mail from my regional branch with details of yet another brother or sister officer who has died. Not so many in the line of duty (this is the UK) but within a very few years of retirement.
Do we all just get so worn out by the shit we dealt with that we can't take it any more?
Me, I do my best to move on but I know of colleagues that can't.
i remember going to a new school, and before i said anything there were a few kids poking fun at jehovah.
jehovah this and that .
at no stage did i ever hear anyone mention any other god or religion in conversation or playground banter.
Grace:
You have a PM
i remember going to a new school, and before i said anything there were a few kids poking fun at jehovah.
jehovah this and that .
at no stage did i ever hear anyone mention any other god or religion in conversation or playground banter.
Mouthy:
Grace - big hug to you. Not your fault, rather the fault of this wacko cult so many were ensnared by.
i remember going to a new school, and before i said anything there were a few kids poking fun at jehovah.
jehovah this and that .
at no stage did i ever hear anyone mention any other god or religion in conversation or playground banter.
As someone who never was a dub (but has sympathy for those who were/are) I'm sorry to have to tell you this from my perspective in the UK.
Dubs who come to the door are generally regarded in the same light as the cold-callers who want you to switch energy-providers or try to sell you over-priced domestic goods. In other words, a nuisance to be dismissed politely (or not, depending on your mood). About the same level as 'harmless' e-mail spammers, not quite so bad as the West African spammers who want to give me £50m. About the same as flies/midges who pester you on a summer evening.
Dubs like to think that they are hated and persecuted but in fact the opposite of love is not hatred but apathy.
Most people I know are completely apathetic about Dubs. Those who know anything about them, or who have engaged with them (only to rapidly disengage when they realise Dubs still teach Adam was created about 6,000 years ago) tend to have bemused pity for them. Those who know nothing about them tend to lump them in with the other American weirdo religions they've seen on TV (Westboro Baptists, Mormons, First White Southern Baptist Latter Day Church of Mississippi, United Snake Handlers of West Virginia in The Name of the Nazarene, Reformed Disciples of the Holy Mount etc. etc.)
So no, the Dubs are not despised. At best they are tolerated with a bemused smile, probably politely because we are Brits, after all, but with as little understanding or interest as Buddhists who want to explain why their particular brand of Buddhism is best. Complete disinterest, in other words.
Sorry, Dubs, I'm not interested enough to hate, despise or persecute you.
PS: Edited to say I made up some of those weirdo religions - but I'm sure there are others just as weird I didn't think of.
i love music - of many different genres and from different times.. .
i love to play guitar, not to any great standard and purely for my own pleasure, and there are many pieces that really move me.
'don't think twice' by bob dylan from my early teens is one that has stayed with me for 40 years.. .
I love music - of many different genres and from different times.
I love to play guitar, not to any great standard and purely for my own pleasure, and there are many pieces that really move me. 'Don't Think Twice' by Bob Dylan from my early teens is one that has stayed with me for 40 years.
Recently sorting through some stuff I came across this one, which at different times had the capacity to really move me (I had a girlfriend on a different continent):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rs9rCP_wpY&feature=related
What's yours?
i am dating a gal that i met on match.com - we saw each other first last summer, but she didn't think we were a 'match'.
after the "pressure" was off we started hanging out quite a bit with all the benefits that go along with it.
this went on for months.. i became smitten with her, but we weren't a couple, which she pointed out a couple of times.
My view may be a little cynical - I am currently going through a divorce from my 'Filipina Princess'.
In my experience, some ladies (and again, only my experience, but especially those from SEA) like to keep all options open and to choose the best option from all available options - whether that relates to finance, child-production, immigration issues, whatever.
Seems to be different from my (probably old-fashioned) romantic ideas where one falls in love and everything else is subservient to that love.
My own dear estranged wife managed to mend her broken heart within a couple of weeks and found a richer, older, and more naieve live-in boyfriend (i.e. she 'lives-in' with him).
There is a saying about certain ladies 'You don't lose them: you only lose your turn'.
so far what is the response to the aux pioneering this year vs last year?.
in our cong - only 10 so far vs 52 last april.
Interesting ... do you think many JWs know that the 'pioneering work' is officially reagrded by WTBTS as 'nothing to do with the organisation' and as a purely voluntary activity?
And if it is 'purely voluntary and independent' why ask for time-sheets?
Does not add up to this simplistic outside observer.