Showing posts with label care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label care. Show all posts

Monday, October 8, 2018

HUSH!


Asleep by Rolf Ohst.




breasts of Christina Aguilera by danny
gingerly captured.


The way a hush can capture a feel inspired by the sight of a woman unclothed by a photographer is a capture. The way it feels is similar to the way one is stilled by the silence of awe. Anyway you look at the body you look at power on either side of the line between perceptions. The breast viewed with reverence, or with lust creates its own perceptions of divinity. Lost to lust is the perception of what is divine, and gained by desire is the beauty of understanding the breasts as nurturer, and a place for a man to recharge who he is to the 'She' of our existence!... - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories 6/7/18



Black woman against the blue sky!



Monday, August 27, 2018

3 Things Give Clarity.


"the deep sense of a woman's need for a man inside of her resides with the equal capacity to love, to endure, to care or not care. Those powerful choices can run a gauntlet through a man's soul." - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories







"The defiance within Black women isn't that, it is them stilling themselves against the forces against them one mo' gin'! It serves them better for you to be an advocate, rather than a man trying to get in her panties!..." - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories 5/26/18





















Lady composed in her serendipity tulle skirt . . .

Care is important to beauty, to stay alive and relevant. It is simple things that keep us alive and engaged in the complexity of living. - Dawn Wolf, Keeper of Stories 5/26/18


Tuesday, August 14, 2018

CARE to Understand?




[The] delicate beauty of a whore: Lauren Phillips. What is a man's responsibility towards her, or any like her? It is fundamental to manhood the answer to a question about vulnerability. - Dawn Wolf, Keeper of Stories (August 7, 2018)


Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Care to the Touch.




Salma Hayek as she appeared at the photocall of the movie, Savages. The gesture is a sacred one indicative of care for the womb. It is a lost art among masculine femininity! It is hard to envision this in a man centered world of economic unbalanced distribution. But, these revelations are meaningless. Both women and men are too far into the double exhaustion of denial and busy work to embrace, and inhale this movement into their awareness. It is sad, but true.

So, deep is this unawareness the number of children born dead by a mother's emotions and thoughts and the stress of their belief systems rises with fury. It isn't theory. It is spiritual science Creation at work. The designs we learn from don't come from Nature's knowing, but from an arrogance and fear based ideologies disgusted by female essence. It is a spirit willing and hard pressed to consume the grandchildren's spirits before they are born stirring this brew over wood fires encircled by stones void of water to keep the explosions of knowledge within the Stone People!

- Dawn Wolf, Keeper of Stories 3/19/18


Friday, May 25, 2018

Remember They are Mothers!


Zoe Saldaña's poise and pregnancy express themselves elegantly. (2014).


Ivanka Trump with her baby strike quite the pose!

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Would You, Could You?




There is no easy answer to the question: "Would I, or you help a police officer fighting with a person?" Being flippant about it ignores that there are facts and factors to consider.

I was a police officer during the Crack Wars in the 1980's. One of my uncles was a police officer during the Jim Crow era in the 1950's in Illinois, and in today's world there are three unobvious movements within the thinking of the public and police officers. Because most Americans seem to live in a strange room where they are unable, or unwilling to face the contradictions to their notions of freedom, they don't recognize the after effect of September 11, 2001. Since, that time Americans became obsessed with being fearful, and subsequently gave up their rights over to President Bush, who in his tenure created a document that facilitated loss of rights, and created a government agency that justified the methods to do just that. It produced a false sense of something unlike the past centuries of colonization, and produced a mentality lest likely to protect anyone else, in this case a police officer.

Helping a police officer in need or danger is fraught with dangers. Only a Black or a white grandmother could have pulled that off if she had a maternal spirit within her. A Black man would not venture to help. He'd most likely become part of the inner dilemma the policeman is embroiled within, and could have been killed by arriving officers. A white woman? Impractical. Inconceivable. A Native man? That would be a surprise for this century for reasons the average citizen would not consider because schools teach that we are extinct. A redneck? Maybe, a good ol' boy would love to help. He'd feel like it was his duty to help in the spirit of being who he is, but that is questionable because intervening in police work has the potential of becoming a challenge to one's personal freedom! In other words, he could get locked up, fo' sho!

The real thing is most people would have filmed it.


- Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories
March 29, 2018