Ever have and jennifer says its appropriate to talk on social media but discretion is appreciated. However, death is a part of life and on Facebook Chris warns i wouldnt recommend this unless you have got thick skin. The internet can be a powder cake over the most innocuous remarks and tony says i no etiquette and needs to be a positive outlet and as we have seen in the first segment it is positive for so many. Reporter your blog about your experience and have a huge Online Community that openly discusses this issue and you talk about a lot of things, how do you decide what to share and what to hold back . Well, i think in this issue as its not an etiquette per se as i have a story. And im a writer. So the way that i process what im going through is that i write about it. Now, one issue im having right now is that i usually process things a few years after the fact. And im going to have to speed that up under the circumstances right now. So im kind of in an adjustment period per se but
Tweets and personal stories, i will share a few of them but it seems we are tweeting about marriages and tweeting about birth and showing photos of our kids and death is the inevitable cycle of life and people are sharing with it and roger gets poetec says we go through our way through emotions and instant ways to find others going through emotions and on Facebook Allen has a heartwarming story of blogging during 8 years of his wifes cancer and declining as she passed and getting emotions and frustrations out and used to be a stress reliever for him and got this from better schuller is suffering from cancer and shares her journey on facebook and setback with family and friends ares are exhausted and hopes to go through the medium. If you had a terminal illness would you open up online . I think i would because we share our lives with the community and i think death and getting to that stage i probably would want to share it and not feel alone and also talk to my community about the imp
Say and they used to say four things say i love you, im sorry, please i forgive you and thank you. Thats really it. You can do it in 140 characters. You can communicate who you are and what youre going through and think about it we share all of our experiences of our lives on facebook, this chapter we are supposed to stop sharing because you might get upset. I dont think so. Reporter justin one amazing thing with the video is people have expectation that its going to be sad and turns out to be inspiring and empowering. Was that a pleasant surprise for you when you embarked on the journey or did you suspect that . That was the mission of the journey to make it positive and inspiring and see if we could make the topic of death something that actually encouraged people to live better. And to smile more and to laugh more because the thing is we all have one thing in common and that is we are all going to die. So why are we waiting to be happy . Like they are . Why are we waiting to, you kn
He had a lot of goals in life but those were then enhanced when he met and married mary todd. She also was very ambitious. She said she wanted to marry a man of good mind and hopes for a Bright Future and to marry a man who would be president. There was something about Abraham Lincoln that she saw the potential and encouraged it. Mary helped to basically showcase what her husband had done and how far he had calm and kind of hinted at where they were headed stating to the world that Abraham Lincoln had made it and he was ready to move on. He next, Alvaro Vargas llosa discusses his look global crossings which looks at some of the reasons people migrate to foreign lands even in situations where they might risk their own lives. Hosted by the Cato Institute in washington d. C. , this is an hour and a half. [inaudible conversations] welcome everybody to the Cato Institute. I am the director here at cato. Since the beginning of this year immigration has become a burning Public Policy issue in
Who offered a helping hand and a warm smile. Repeatedly, when i was reading a piece in the the wall street journal written by governor jeb bush, i thought of my familys journey out of the ghetto. He said today the sad real city if youre born poor, if youre parents didnt go to college, if you dont know your father, and if english is not spoken at home, then the odds are stacked against you. You are more likely to stay poor today than at any other time since world war ii. What struck me about governor bushs piece was that all except one of his prerequisite for being condemned forest fire poverty applied to me. Fortunately i know my father. But i was born poor. My parents didnt go to college, and english was not and still is not spoken at home. The odds were stacked against me. So like barack obama has been eager to harp on the odds for political purposes, in the narrative he has been pedaling for the four to five years. The Little People at the bottom of the society dont get a fair shake