So you go to a concert and at the concert, youre moved. Emotionally, you are moved. I mean, the music comes and you just. You feel good, you can get into it, youre a part of it. You might even be moved to your eyes watering up a little bit, sometimes its so beautiful. And as this is happening, you realize that musicians down below there or up in front, the thing there, are all following some sheet music and that sheet music can be given to different musicians and those different musicians can look at that sheet music and they can do the same thing and you wonder, hey, that is really nice, that this emotional response, its evoked from me, comes from a pattern thats on pencil and paper. You think about that. And you look at the pattern and its very complex and if youre not into music, it looks like, wow, its just gibberish, isnt it . But the musicians are trained to read that pattern. And then you get out of the city and you go up a country at nighttime and youre looking out a night when
Pamela Smart, who is serving life in prison for plotting with her teenage student to have her husband killed in 1990, accepted full responsibility for his death.
After 34 years in prison and numerous failed attempts to be released, New Hampshire’s Pamela Smart finally accepted responsibility for her 1990 plot to have her husband murdered in their
After 34 years in prison and numerous failed attempts to be released, New Hampshire s Pam Smart finally accepted full responsibility for her 1990 plot to have her husband murdered in