An India loving Aussie, split between two continents who attempts to see both sides of the social, political, and esoteric arguments. Positive thinking may not work - but positive thinkers achieve more - and I firmly believe that in every diaster there is an equal good, and even the reverse is true. Power is found in seeing the balance that makes a united whole.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
I Want to Kill that Bird!
I want to kill a bird! One of the feathered variety.
Don't worry I wont actually do it. I care about animals.
But ….
The flaming neighbours cockatoo has mastered the sound of a telephone – and squawks ring tones from dawn to dusk …... and beyond.
Its enough to hope they will answer the phone and hold its neck very tightly!
It reminds of my recent travels through India.
On the satellite TV news three lines of banner ads pumped product, news flashes and so much banality it was nearly impossible to concentrate on the news reader.
Maybe the Australian news was more subtle but not the glut of silly season promotions.
As far back as November I heard a barrage of 'you better watch out, you better not cry” wondering if they forgot what it is suppose to be about.
I am all for respecting peoples right of religious belief and practice. It stil makes me wonder. December 25 (December 21/22 Gregorian calendar) was the Roman Saturnalia. Anyway ....
Be that as it may, the advertising is as annoying as that bird.
I wont try and kill your festivities. But, even if I did celebrate Christmas – I don't – I would yearn for a “Silent Night”.
Not the squawking commercialism that is ringing in my ears as annoyingly as that cockatoo.
Friday, September 10, 2010
Reflections on the Aga Khan Palace
Just around the corner in the suburb of Chinhwad, the road already has two temporary platforms blocking the road for the Garnesh festival, or Ganipati. Idols of the little elephant – promising wealth and prosperity - are everywhere.
A Pune firm has even managed to make an environmentally friendly version.
It is perhaps appropriate that I visited the Aga Khan palace and the Peshawar palace just before the Garnesh festival. In the palace, I read a memorial to Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1856 – 1920) among the many reminders of Gandhi and his philosophy.
I am told the British had restricted the right of association, and Tilak turned the once small family festival into a major social unifier and nationalist event.
Flouting British restriction, the festival became both a right of association, religious worship and nationalism.
Tilak was impressed by his grandfathers recollections of the Pre-British Peshawar Marathi kingdom – the last to fall to the British in 1817.
In 1833, my ancestor Hannah Cox gave birth to William Hicks Cox on March 25, claims a hand written family record. He died there on June 27, the same year.
So we took off to the Aga Khans palace where I bought a homespun kurta and handkerchief.
The Sultan Muhammed Shah Aga Khan III built the palace in 1892 to offer employment following a famine, in Yerwada region in eastern Pune suburb that joins Kalyani Nagar (Kalyani City), also called Neelkanth Kalyani after a city industrialist and founder of the Kalyani Forging company.
The present Prince Shah Karim al-Hussayni Aga Khan IV was a supporter and associate of Gandhi, and it was here, that the British transported Gandhi during his 1942- 1944 house arrest. He gave the palace to the public in 1969 becoming the he Gandhi National Memorial.
To Westerners Gandhi is best remembered for his political achievements which he described being of “little value.” The title Mahatma “pained me” he said.
In the 1925 introduction of his biography,he claimed the had been “striving and pining to achieve these thirty years is self realization, to see God face to face, to attain Moksha.”
“For me truth is the sovereign principle … This truth is not only truthfulness in word, but truthfulness in thought also, and not only the relative truth of our conception, but the Absolute Truth, the Eternal Principle that is God.”
In 1930 Gandhi wrote letters from his Yeravda Central Prison stating “the {Sanskrit} word Satya (truth)
is derived from Sat, which means 'being.' Nothing is or exists in reality except truth. That is why Sat, or Truth is perhaps the most important name of God.”
“It is more correct to say Truth is God, than to say that God is truth.”
Gandhi believed there are “innumerable definitions of God, because His manifestations are innumerable.”
“They overwhelm me with wonder and awe and for a moment stun me. But I worship God as truth only. I have not yet found him, but am seeking after Him.” he wrote in 1925. “I am prepared to sacrifice the things dearest to me in pursuit of that quest. Even if the sacrifice be my very life.”
As shown in .Attenborough's film, Gandhi's wife, Kasturba, and also his long-time aide, Mahadev Desai, both died there while under house arrest. Samadhis (memorials) were built by Charles Correa. To the side lay Gandhi's ashes – although friends claim the majority were separated to an number of locations.
One of the most poignant moments for me was reading Gandhi's words after the death of Mahadev Desai – sadly I could not find a copy online.
Mahadev Desai (1892—1942), a journalist, was born in 1892 in the Surat district of the Indian state of Gujarat. A student of philosophy, logic and law he loved literature First meeting Gandhi in November 1917, Desai joined Gandhi full-time becoming viewed as a son by the Mahatma and his wife.
He died on the August 15th, 1942 in the Aga Khan Palace.
Gandhi wrote he expected he would be buried by Desai. Gandhi could not bear to hand his 'son' to the British – who could not aford to have Gandhi visible in a public funeral. Thet relented allow Gandhi to perform the Hindu rites an d cremation on the grounds.
“ ... [Mahadev Desai] was much more than [Gandhi's official secretary]. He was in fact Home and Foreign Secretary combined.” wrote Verrier Elwin “He managed everything. He made all the arrangements. He was equally at home in the office, the guest-house and the kitchen. He looked after many guests and must have saved 10 years of Gandhi's life by diverting from him unwanted visitors....”
Gandhi's room and bathroom are protected behind glass – much like a shrine to Keterba, who died there. Along with his spinning wheel, its simplicity reminded me how great men often remove superfluous distractions in pursuit of dreams and principles.
There is a walk down to the Samahdi for Desai and Mrs Gandhi. Here Ghandi daily trod the path to his daily observances. Kept free of commercial distraction, this area, like the gardens, are tranquil and reflective
Once a clinic for leprosy and other skin conditions, homespun is available for charitable fund raising..Gandhi loved children and on one side near the Samadhi is a children's nursery.
I bought my first homespun garment – a kurta – for 288 rupees. I also bought two of Gandhis books and one by his grandchild for 30 rupees. The only commercialism (found nearly everywhere) is the far higher entrance price for non Indians.
There is a beautiful air of calm in the gardens. The lawn is mowed by an electric mower and swept clean by women with straw brooms.
Gandhi was arrested for speaking out against war. Curiously, as we sat in the gardens carpark we were approached by a women holding the Watchtower – itself banned for political neutrality during the war.
Then, as we left the Aga khans palace, a flatila of cars and a crowd of young men were gathering outside – the flag of Congress – a fist in bands of Indian Orange, white and green – blazed as the cars drove off. Indira Gandhi's grandson, Rahul was in town – and I found out later, he visited youth in my area of Pimpri – Chinhwad purportedly top hear their concerns.
We discussed the Indira and Rajiv Gandhis earlier policies – his plan for voluntary sterilization. I had recently listened to an Indian professor who described the period of democratic suspension by Indira and Rajiv as a dictatorship but afew friends believed at the time tough – focused leadership was needed. She believes India needs a single President figure, USA style, who can get things done. I still feel a single powrful figure needs a president/Governor General counter balance when the constitution is threatened.
We drove through the older part of Pune - Shaniwar Peth. I hope to return to photograph the beautiful old buildings and then to the Shaniwar Wada. This fort was built by Shrimant Pahile Bajirao Peshwe taking two years to complete in 1732. It was the used by the Peshwa rulers until 1818 when the last Indian kingdom surrendered to Britain.
The massive stone construction has large steps – not the size a child would like to run up - held off the British.
Expanded to include, fountains, courtyards, gardens, offices, quarters and audience halls, it was guttered by an unexplained fire in 1827 that lasted 15 days. What remains of the perimeter and fountains hows it was once formerly magnificent.
My own interest in the city comes from It was here that my ancestor Hannax Cox gave birth to son William on March 25, 1833, claims a handwritten family document. He died June 27.
Although the British base, now a suburb named Camp, is further south, it is Shaniwar Wada that made victory so crucial to the British. The Peshiwar legacy is still a catch cry to freedom in Pune. The dynasties founder, Shivaji, has the most locations and statues named after him. He is also a symbol to Hindu nationalism and Marathi pride.
Although offering helpful services, I wonder whether Gandhi would have preferred a more inclusive less parochial politics.
Truth is straight and narrow, he said, it is a 'razors edge' impossible to be achieved by the arrogant, to attain it the seeker must be “humbler than dust.”
Gandhi believed his message of truth and non violence was not new but “as old as the hills.”
Its just that moral lessons are quickly tainted by greed, power and self interest. We easily totter off the razors edge.
Then we forget - or ignore - the truth that we innately know.
Thus endeth the reflections.
Pune, Rosh Hoshanah and recreating our world
Rosh Hoshanah, the Jewish New Year, birthday of creation, and a time for new beginnings, coincides in India with the arrest and detention of two of three suspects, for the bombing of the German Bakery, Pune.
Alledged bomber 29 year old Mirza Himayat Inayat Baig l was arrested as was Sheik Lalbaba Mohummas Hussain Farid for heading a sleeper cell of terrorists in the wine growing region of Nashik.
The other suspect, Moshin Chowdhary, alleged recruiter for the Indian Mujahabideen, is still on the run and his mother has called for him to surrender and “face the law. If he is guilty he will be punished, else we will all be able to live with pride and dignity.”
He is a suspect in a Hydrabad bombing in 2007. Media footage claimjed that many famous Indian sites, such as the Taj Mahal, were targets.
What has that to do with a Jewish holiday?
Before Passover, news reports revealed that CCTV detected that the bombers had first cased out the Chabad House of Rabbi Kupchick. The explosions occurred around Havdalah on February 13. Police claim that after mistakes made by the bombers in the Mumbai attacks
Pune also has the largest sysnagogu in Asia outside of Isreal, buit by Jewish philanthropist David Sassoon – however, a Rabbi is only available for Sabbath services.
Both Chabad House and the Sassoon Ohel Synogogue are protected by Indian military. You must present your passport at the Chabad House at the bunkered front gate.
As we recreate our lives in this time of renewal, perhaps its a time to reflect on what we can do to make the world a home for God, when military security will not be needed.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Lament to a Lost Timetable
I left home just after 3.
The plan, perhaps not strictly structured, was simple. Bus to the city (The 315 from Redcliffe, or 690 to Sandgate and train in), then (guided by the internet) the 178 to Holland Park.
It’s ten to 5, after finally finding the bus stop) and I’m still stuck in the city.
Oh well, that job (funeral director assistant didn’t really have my heart. 5 0ocloch sharp they said for a group discussion. On time or zip.
Well at least I have plan B.
I had been invited to some classes. Either Carindale or Hendra; as it was closer to home, I decided Hendra. Carindale was my original, closer to Holland Park destination.
Doomben line from Eagle junction suggested the net.
Stepping off the train I discover theres no Doomben train - not at this time of night. The office is closed but a passing QR employee tells me either to Taxi or take a bus pointing distantly. It’s nearly 7PM – the class is eight.
Walking to check te the timetable.
The sign is just as upside down as my scheduling. A North Quay timetable in Eagle Junction? I don’t think so.
A few minutes to decide, I take the train back to Sandgate. Then theres a 30 minute wait for the bus.
‘Atleast it’s not a ninety minute walk to Woody Point,’ I think as I walk up to Woolworths for an apple.
There are no lights on the old Hornibrook Bridge that have had to trudge on Sunday evenings with no bus after 7.
Probably unsafe, but at least those nights I get to enjoy the pelicans those nights, like white pontoons tralingtheir necks under the road bridge lights.
Al least they aren’t bothered by lost timetables.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Three Lies of Online Marketing
Yaro Starak is one of the world’s best blog instructors. He doesn’t show you just how to write a blog – he helps you live off it.
Besides that I can walk to his house (OK I would probably take the bus, it’s just a little more than round the corner, but its close), his advice has helped me get , running and profitable.
Recently Yaro reminded us three lies - big lies – that that hold you back from blogging success.Writing in his blog, Yaro says the wording may be different, but under most barriers holding back internet success are three false beliefs.
Lie 1. You can only make money blogging how to make money
Yaro says that this is a short sighted view that stems from the natural process a new entrant into the world of Internet marketing goes through.
While Yaoro admits he makes money this way, and his example may perpetuate the myth, he said “if you really want to make big money enter the dating, weight loss, health, investing or real estate niches.”
“The truth is that the make money online niche, while good, is far from the best.”
“ First they look for methods to make money online and find a ton of resources, some which are good and some which are not” he said.
It sometimes seems that most only make money by selling products that teach how to make money and this including Starak.
However, he admits there are so many possible niches to make money in, but why you don’t hear about them.
“Those making money in other niches are not teaching how to make money, so there’s no incentive for them to talk about how they do it” he said.
Of course, Yaro, whose program, Blogging Mastermind, is focused on that niche. If your focus is on one niche only then obviouslythat is what you are exposed to and write about.
Yaro’s own program, Blogging Mastermind, is full of examples and interviews of people who have succeeded with health products and Tennis training – all helped by Yaro of course. He is the consummate marketer after all.
Lie 2. You need to be a technology nerd to succeed
“Here’s the truth – technology is a bitch. It’s the biggest pain in the butt for most Internet marketers and we all struggle with it from time to time,” said Yaro, “but that shouldn’t stop you from leveraging it to make millions.”
“why on earth would you spend so much time learning something you’re not good at and don’t enjoy?” he said “Technology is not your problem, choosing to handle it yourself is.”
Hiring a technologically savvy person to design a website for you is relatively cheap and easy. While some object to hiring oversees labour, it can be done ethically in a way that really helps a person say from the Philippines.
3. But there are better experts than me
Yaro admits that when he was making making $5,000 a month from blogging be still did not believe he was good enough to teacch it to others,
“Because cause Darren Rowse were around” he said “who needed me if Problogger.net had all the answers for free already?
He identifies two issues-
- Your lack of direction
- Your lack of confidence
To be an expert pick a topic, study it and practice it and then teach it, .he said.
As long as you stay one step ahead of your students you can use services like Guru.com you can find experts who would gladly create eBooks or write courses for you in any niche. – and you will spend only a few hundred dollars.
“What you need to do is get focused, pick something and do it long enough to get a positive result (even just making one sale is good) and then build up from there” he said.
Most people put in poor focus and get poor results..
“Expertise is simply a perception created when one person helps another” said Yaro, who admitted that he realized he had something to offer when someone emailed and thanked him for his advice.
It’s simply good to find someone who can give you down to earth no-nonsense, down to earth advice – without all the guru hype and ego that goes along with the online marketing.
To learn how you can live your dream as an online blogger, check out Yaro Starak’s Blogging Mastermind.
Or you can check out Yaro’s Free Report.
It is very easy to think you are on track- it's great when someone so down to earth can put you back on the path.
It is very easy to think you are on track- it's great when someone so down to earth can put you back on the path.
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Sunday, March 7, 2010
The cookie Thief
A woman was waiting at an airport one night
With several long hours before her flight
She hunted for a book in the airport shop
Bought a bag of cookies and found a place to drop
She was engrossed in her book but happened to see
That the man beside her as bold as could be
Grabbed a cookie or two from the bag between
Which she tried to ignore to avoid a scene
She munched cookies and watched the clock
As this gutsy cookie thief diminished her stock
She was getting more irritated as the minutes ticked by
Thinking "If I wasn't so nice I'd blacken his eye"
With each cookie she took he took one too
And when only one was left she wondered what he'd do
With a smile on his face and a nervous laugh
He took the last cookie and broke it in half
He offered her half as he ate the other
She snatched it from him and thought "Oh brother
This guy has some nerve and he's also rude
Why he didn't even show any gratitude"
She had never known when she had been so galled
And sighed with relief when her flight was called
She gathered her belongings and headed for the gate
Refusing to look back at the thieving ingrate
She boarded the plane and sank in her seat
Then sought her book which was almost complete
As she reached in her baggage she gasped with surprise
There was her bag of cookies in front of her eyes
"If mine are here" she moaned with despair
"Then the others were his and he tried to share"
"Too late to apologize she realized with grief"
That she was the rude one, the ingrate, the thief
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Eli Eli by Voices of Eden
This video is from the group Voices of Eden performing a lovely version of Eli Eli.
Eli Eli was written in Israel in 1942 by Hannah Senesh with music by David Zehavi.
As I do not knowthe full import of this beautiful music, I will let the Teruah podcast tell you the story.
However, it did inspire me to dig out the second LP I ecver purchased, Suzannak Haik Ventura's Music of the Bible Revealled.
"Eli Eli is a powerhouse of a song that has become a classic Shabbat Z'mirot. The song is both a powerhouse because of it's beautiful lyrics and Senesh's story. Not long after composing Eli Eli Senesh volunteered to parachute into Yugoslovia to help Jews escape to Israel. She was caught and executed by the Germans in Hungary in 1944. Despite being written at the height of the Holocaust, the song reflects a deep faith in our the intimate connection with God and a wonderful lyric sensitivity.
Voices of Eden is an ensemble lead by Eliana Gilad, who "is an internationally recognized expert in the conscious use of voice and rhythm as a natural healer, as they were used in ancient times." I'm not exactly sure what that means, other than that it involves "[h]ealing chants, medically proven to induce relaxation and focus, that connect us to our Source." If this sounds interesting, please check out her website. Gilad notes that in this video she "sings into the worlds oldest frame drum, dated 5600 B.C. in the mystical city of Safed." I'm also not sure that that means. Ancient style of drum? I don't see anything on the website clarifying it. But it is a lovely sound."
The song transalates as:
O Lord, my God, I pray that these things shall never end.
The sand and the sea,
the rush of the waters,
the crash of the heavens,
the prayer of man.
The sand and the sea,
the rush of the waters,
the crash of the heavens,
the prayer of man.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Australia Day – India Republic Day
Today is Australia Day. It is also India's Republic Day.
While these two nations sharing a colonial history, sadly there is reason for sadness in the last year.
I regularly ask the Indian people I meet if they have been affected by the recent violence. Many say they have been abused by people who think that Australian jobs are being taken away from them. Of course, oversees visitors creates employment and has been a boon to the economy and the cultural diversity of Australia.
There is little point going over the details that have been covered in the media.
Perhaps one of the best observation came from former defense force chief Peter Cosgrove.
Racial tensions over violence towards Indian students will only be resolved when their attackers are brought to justice, said Cosgrove at the 14th annual Australia Day address in Sydney.
He says Australia cannot afford to be complacent about racism.
Of course, every nation, including Australia, likes to point the finger at someone else. Its easier than doing the real self analysis that society requires.
The majority of Australians are appalled by what has happened. Of course there are the few who find it easier to do finger pointing.
After all, there are some who say, during festivals Muslims are attacked in festivals. Overall, India is a remarkably tolerant society, however, as regular reader of the Indian press I do read of the occasional attack during a festival.
This does not justify Australian complacency.
The series of attacks has generated public anger and widespread media coverage in India, where Australian officials have been accused of failing to deal with the problem.
Meanwhile, carefully worded releases by Victorian police designed to avoid stirring passions has been seen as inaction. Victorian Police Commissioner Overland stated Victoria's police "recognised this problem a long time before it hit the public."
"We've known for over two years that there's been this issue; we've been working away at it."
Working away at it.
Perhaps this mirrors the history of British law, that underpins the Australian system. African poets often bemoaned that their peers could be imprisoned for the minor offense of trying to survive while the land was raped and pillaged in the name of civilization.
Institutions have a tendency to be self preserving – and often it is easy to pick on the low lying fruit of a few minor offenders – it looks like you are doing something – while the complicated hard work goes on and appears to be ignored by the public.
The number of Indian 'offenders' for minor infringements is higher than average. However, Indians are underrepresented in any serious crime statistics.
Perhaps, though Australia has blundered because it has failed to use the media to promote racial harmony. To be fair, australia has developed programs to promote tolerance and racial harmony days were held in schools when the problems hit the media last year.
However, as much as we must act analytically, we must also respond to people's fears. People are not logical robots.
"People will do anything for those who encourage their dreams, justify their failures, allay their fears, confirm their suspicions, and help them throw rocks at their enemies" wrote marketer Blair Warren.
Perhaps Australian leaders have forgotten what Rohit Revo reminds us in The Indian "Indian masses, glued to TV and print media, give a lot of importance to language spoken by leaders of other countries."
"Kevin Rudd also needs to reach out to Indian public. John Howard failed to create an image for himself and never appealed to Indian public. Statements by Obama on Mahatma Gandhi, his love for India , his Diwali message have all got headlines, thus creating goodwill and warmth for US in India ."
" Rather than focusing on platitudes, there is a need to make a bold statement praising India or softer aspects of Indian society so that the jinx can be broken" he said.
Actually, I believe we can - and must - go further. Australia must examine itself – its social psyche, it's institutions and it's past. The plan to send Shane Warne to India may help - seeing leaders reach ourt to India will do more.
While, the quiet achiever is lauded as a person who gets things done without hype, at times we must reach out beyond our traditional comfort zone and offer comfort to our International friends.
From that dialogue we can often find out much about ourselves.
While these two nations sharing a colonial history, sadly there is reason for sadness in the last year.
I regularly ask the Indian people I meet if they have been affected by the recent violence. Many say they have been abused by people who think that Australian jobs are being taken away from them. Of course, oversees visitors creates employment and has been a boon to the economy and the cultural diversity of Australia.
There is little point going over the details that have been covered in the media.
Perhaps one of the best observation came from former defense force chief Peter Cosgrove.
Racial tensions over violence towards Indian students will only be resolved when their attackers are brought to justice, said Cosgrove at the 14th annual Australia Day address in Sydney.
He says Australia cannot afford to be complacent about racism.
Of course, every nation, including Australia, likes to point the finger at someone else. Its easier than doing the real self analysis that society requires.
The majority of Australians are appalled by what has happened. Of course there are the few who find it easier to do finger pointing.
After all, there are some who say, during festivals Muslims are attacked in festivals. Overall, India is a remarkably tolerant society, however, as regular reader of the Indian press I do read of the occasional attack during a festival.
This does not justify Australian complacency.
The series of attacks has generated public anger and widespread media coverage in India, where Australian officials have been accused of failing to deal with the problem.
Meanwhile, carefully worded releases by Victorian police designed to avoid stirring passions has been seen as inaction. Victorian Police Commissioner Overland stated Victoria's police "recognised this problem a long time before it hit the public."
"We've known for over two years that there's been this issue; we've been working away at it."
Working away at it.
Perhaps this mirrors the history of British law, that underpins the Australian system. African poets often bemoaned that their peers could be imprisoned for the minor offense of trying to survive while the land was raped and pillaged in the name of civilization.
Institutions have a tendency to be self preserving – and often it is easy to pick on the low lying fruit of a few minor offenders – it looks like you are doing something – while the complicated hard work goes on and appears to be ignored by the public.
As the Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs, Vayalar Ravi said Australian police were quick to arrest students for visa violations, such as working more than the allowed 20 hours a week during term time, but did little to catch those exploiting them.
There has been a crack down on may operators and exploiters. Sadly, the Brisbane Indian Times research, suggested that some of the exploiters were Indian nationals.
It is understandable that a student, who is struggling to cover costs, who perhaps finds he is exploited will take on extra work and run the risk of a visa violation.
He has to eat.
The number of Indian 'offenders' for minor infringements is higher than average. However, Indians are underrepresented in any serious crime statistics.
This has also meant that some students have suddenly found the institution they paid for jas been blacklisted in Australia. So what do they do?
Even Ravi wants these fraudulent colleges closed down Yet, without a college, they cannot meet their VISA requirements and are in breach of law.
However, as much as we must act analytically, we must also respond to people's fears. People are not logical robots.
"People will do anything for those who encourage their dreams, justify their failures, allay their fears, confirm their suspicions, and help them throw rocks at their enemies" wrote marketer Blair Warren.
Perhaps Australian leaders have forgotten what Rohit Revo reminds us in The Indian "Indian masses, glued to TV and print media, give a lot of importance to language spoken by leaders of other countries."
"Kevin Rudd also needs to reach out to Indian public. John Howard failed to create an image for himself and never appealed to Indian public. Statements by Obama on Mahatma Gandhi, his love for India , his Diwali message have all got headlines, thus creating goodwill and warmth for US in India ."
" Rather than focusing on platitudes, there is a need to make a bold statement praising India or softer aspects of Indian society so that the jinx can be broken" he said.
Actually, I believe we can - and must - go further. Australia must examine itself – its social psyche, it's institutions and it's past. The plan to send Shane Warne to India may help - seeing leaders reach ourt to India will do more.
While, the quiet achiever is lauded as a person who gets things done without hype, at times we must reach out beyond our traditional comfort zone and offer comfort to our International friends.
From that dialogue we can often find out much about ourselves.
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