Friday, December 4, 2009

Deranged Brilliance by Maria Balcelo



Any Hugh Laurie fans?

Maria created this piece during a night when she says she "was so inspired by his craziness in his show House."

To create this piece, she used pencils /2H 3B 8B and some charcoal.

In addition to her regular submissions to Reflections Magazine, Maria has also begun showcasing her art work on other sites such as DeviantArt.com.




Tuesday, December 1, 2009

The Rite of Life by Dr. George M. Gabb


Life is so precious we are forced to decide

Who under star studded skies should live or die

Neither gods nor men can free us of this burden


From the lushness of Eden to concrete streets

History, in blood is written

Of wars and conquests

Of knowledge and achievements

Of right or wrong

Of love

Of gods incomplete


Who should decide whether or not my brother eats?

Whose shelter shall be given unto him, or me, or you?

For on this ship blue there are numbered seats


Our plight like the sun shall forever rise

Until permanent slumber replaces our eyes

Then, only then shall the incessant flow of souls escheat

Swelling, cresting, bursting into Hades replete


Life is so precious we are forced to decide

Who under star studded skies should live or die

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

The Disability by Ms. Yasmin Moses


I have a disability.

It is not visible; therefore, you would never know if you saw me walking down the street!


It is not rare, but it is gives me motivation.

This disability challenges my learning.

It does not define me, but it does hurt me!

It is an agonizing pain that is consistently in the back of my mind.

It has broken my understanding and gives me no remorse.

This is a silent disability that only surfaces when it's time to calculate, read, or write.


It is defined as dyscalculia, dyslexia, and dyscraphia…

The worst part of this disability is it has been a part of my life for a long time.

Yet, in retrospect, it is a disability that I have learned to make an ability.

I have failed and succeeded through it.

Many try to understand, but they simply do not!

I must admit it has driven me to conquer my fears, fear of learning…

The disability arrived well in stride when I reached college, and still exists to this day!


The dream overcame the disability and made college possible,

because I made this disability, an ability within me!

Dedicated to those who learn differently, always remember a disability, is an ability!



Monday, November 16, 2009

I Used to Read by Professor Bert Lorenzo


I used to read biography.

My mom bought them for me.

She said I’d learn about success

and how to avoid catastrophe.


I used to read World Book Encyclopedia.

All summer I read article after article.

What a cornucopia!


I used to read history.

I learned events repeat themselves

so the future really isn’t a mystery.


I used to read fiction.

In college it became my predilection.

I read it so much it felt like an addiction.


I read all sorts of things

from the Bible to Lord of the Rings.


Every day now I read the paper.

Filled with news when I leave my house

I feel safer.


I read everything from anthropology to zoology.

I even skim astrology.


I turn page after page

in search of wisdom from some sage.


I read all sort of text.

What will I read next?


Copyright 2009

Friday, November 13, 2009

Visiting the Boneyard by Professor Stephanie Packer


I don’t own these bones though I’ve grown quite attached.

Cervical lumbar thoracic

Mineral families live in my back.


My blood’s damned attractive.

Ebbs and flows as it should.

Yet at night I get nervous.

Is it up to no good?


The breath comes so freely.

That is -- Till it Don’t.

Took off in one eye-blink

Left no suicide note.


The brain is its own place.

A nut in the skull.

Cop, jury, and hangman

Judgmental as hell.


You get the picture.


One can hardly refuse

To be busted

Committed

Just a little

bemused.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Change Only Constant by Professor Bert Lorenzo

We live in a world and specifically a country that changes constantly, rapidly and dramatically. What type of education prepares a person for such a world? How do I prepare for the future when I don’t know what the future brings? Such an education exists. I recommend an education (formal and informal) that increases intelligence. I believe individuals can increase their intelligence but this requires a specific set of exercises just like increased physical strength requires exercise. Only with intelligence can a person predict, understand and manage change. Once we can predict, understand and manage change we can control our lives and live the way we want no matter the conditions.

I love independence and education should give us the tools necessary to live free no matter the times. We must learn how to argue our cause and learn to live intelligently so we can live how we want.

Below I outline a curriculum I recommend to students who want to increase their intelligence and independence. Some of this we learn in school. The rest we gain through interaction with intelligent people and contemplation.

Information

1. Study History. Mark Twain wrote that history doesn’t repeat itself but that it certainly rhymes. I disagree. All events repeat themselves. Only the players change. We can test current opinions and events and safely predict the future if we know what happened in the past and discover the patterns that always repeat. We’ve always had wars, poverty, corrupt politicians, people who make poor decisions and those who make intelligent ones. Arnold Toynbee (perhaps history’s greatest historian) did an entire study of historical patterns and published what he learned in A Study Of History. I recommend it to all students. Only those ignorant of the past say we can’t predict the future.

2. Study Economics. We can’t gain independence without financial freedom. To do this we must understand how money works. We can study the financially independent and observe their habits. I reject the view that only a certain amount of money exists and as long as others have it I never will. With millions of millionaires in America why can’t I join them?


Skills

1. Master Language. We make sense of the world through our senses and we make sense of our senses with language. With limited language we have a limited ability to reason and understand why things happen as they do. We think in sentences (the basic unit of thought). We can only think logically, clearly, elegantly and concisely if we can formulate logical, clear, elegant, concise sentences. Those who have mastered language can outthink and manipulate those who haven’t. P.T. Barnum knew this so he coined the expression, “There’s a sucker born every minute.”

2. Reject Group Think. We lose the ability to reason and we make emotional decisions when we let groups think and conclude for us. This includes political parties. Groups survive this way. The leaders feed off the individuals. I always try to think for myself. This takes constant practice. I practice my independence and I’ve discovered the power of “No” as I’ve practiced my independence.

3. Cultivate Intelligent Friends. I recommend we nurture relationships with people smarter than us. We will learn something new everyday and develop our minds. Most intelligent people probably do many of the things on this list too. Education requires change. Those who fight new, better ideas and ways to live don’t really want an education. I try not to associate much with people like that. We shouldn’t lament if we outgrow friends. We should rejoice!

4. Fashion A Life Philosophy. Decide how you want to live and what you want to do with your life. Don’t let others define you. This includes family, friends, celebrities or the latest fashion. Remember those who stand for nothing will fall for anything.

5. Develop A sense Of Proportion. You will think the future looks bleak if you listen to too much television news and gossip. We live better today than kings lived 100 years ago and the future looks even brighter. Those ignorant of history don’t realize this.

6. Practice Gratitude. Thousands of people make our lives possible. We owe a lot to people we will never meet. When you do get the chance to meet some of the people who make your freedom possible thank them. Also constantly remind yourself how good you have it. This has a very liberating effect. Those ignorant of economics don’t realize this.

7. Maintain Physical And Mental Health. Many young people abuse their health. Once you lose it you lose your independence. Start early in life with exercise and a good diet. Reject all drugs and alcohol and poisons to the mind we get from television, film, music and other media. Develop a good relationship with a doctor and speak openly about how you feel.

Copyright Bert Lorenzo, 2009

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Before Friending We Had Friends by Professor Stephanie Packer

One friend rots in prison
Another’s been binned
I should be in there with them
But they won't let me in

One friend just went missing
One split for L.A.
All leather and Harleys
Victims line up to pay

One started a journal
One plays 21
One fakes being older
When she's not all that young

One got snapped with a rock star
Rubbing chests in the pool
Full of vim, life, and vigor
So deep and so cool

One turned up, a pastor.
"You're joking," I cried.
"The women, the women,"
He winked and he sighed.

We don't really talk now
They speak in my mind
Precious relics, void passports
Lands we've left far behind.