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Fleeting Thoughts

joen toiselle puolelle - to the other side of the river

5/2/2026

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Life has a way of finding its own way. Since my last post, almost three years have passed. I got a full-time job and gave up my business. I finished writing a book, sent it out to an agent and a publisher, none of whom has replied yet. We bought a cottage by a small lake, not too far away from Joensuu, and I sang a lot of Karaoke. 

Now the full-time job has almost run its course and I am thinking of getting into business again. Not right now, I'm on sick leave and just got out of bed. But sometime in March or April, once the full-time job is officially over and my mind cleared. Transitions need to be given time and space.

What are you going to do, people ask me. Well, I would like to work as a Death doula.  Death Doula?! What's that? It's someone who sits with people who are dying. Or with those who are grieving. Or with those who want to talk about life and death. 

The idea sprung on me last year, I was on sick leave for 2 months. Nothing physical, more on the mentally stressed and overwhelmed side and I realised that the job I was doing, wasn't good for me.  I realised that my brain is not cut out for constant input without any time for reflection and depth. 

So I lay on my sofa and just was. And then I talked to someone and the word "deathdoula" was uttered, and I sat up and asked "what?" Death doula, she said, what's that, I asked, and the rest is history, because I went through a training and am now certified and just want to be of service to people who are facing death. It doesn't matter, from which side, because we all are going there at some point.

Being a death doula is all about acceptance and not being able to change the outcome.
Life is all about acceptance, the only difference is that sometimes I can change the outcome. But if I can't, I go into acceptance. It's all about acceptance. Accepting people and their feelings, thoughts and opinions as they are. As a Deathdoula, I create and hold space. I just sit and listen. And if the client has nothing to say, I just sit and am with them. From One Human Being to another Human Being. 

Life is all about endings and beginnings. People, jobs, hobbies, houses, pets - they come and go. What  can we hold on to, in this stream of life? What are you holding on to, to keep you going? What have you let go? What would you like to let go? What, if anything, keeps you from doing so?

Those are some of the questions I think, are worth considering during a lifetime. There are many more, and it could well be, that I explore them here. More will be revealed. 

So I let go of my business "Holistication". I still believe in the idea of holistic adult education, but it wasn't the right time for that business to flourish. I learned a lot at the time and have moved on. It's time for something new, to the other side of the river, joen toiselle puolelle. Will it be an independent business, or will someone employ me to provide my services? Time will tell.  Everything comes together in its own time. Life has a way of finding its way. 

Thanks for reading. Have a good day. Pia
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One of my favourite paradoxes and cliches of all time

5/2/2026

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I am decluttering, and here is something I wrote in October 2022. 

Change is the only constant in life. ​

Change is the only constant in life. We all know it. Yet, we cling to what we know and what's familiar, as if our life depended on it.  
And on some very old, instinctual level​, it does depend on it. For our foremothers and fathers it was a rough world out there, and the need and search for safety was the survival mechanism that kept our ancestors alive. On that very basic level, the easy way to stay safe, or at least not to risk more danger, was to stick to the known. And of course it worked, otherwise You and I wouldn't be here and We wouldn't be wired to resist change as much as we do.
What worked for them must work for us. But. There's always a but. The operative word is "basic". 
They worked on basic instinct: listen to your gut, be awake, be aware of your surroundings, in case of of danger, let your system take over, and choose one of three options: fight, flight or freeze. When the situation is over, and you have survived, carry on with what you were doing. 
It sounds like Mindfulness to me, the being present in the moment part. And often, we need to re-learn in expensive classes, what they did naturally.  ​
​
​Since those dark days, our Neocortex and what we are capable of doing with it, has developed considerably. Maybe that's the problem. We are our biggest problem.
And of course we still have our instincts, but over thousands of generations of survival they also got tainted with and blocked by all kinds of trauma. It doesn't matter what the trauma is, be it a war, the early death of a parent, abuse, addiction, an accident, the result is that we are not able to use our basic instincts as they were intended to be used. 
We are too smart for our own good, and it shows in our body, mind and spirit. We get sick, mentally and physically. We drag our traumas behind us like a sack of stones and wonder what's wrong with us.

The problem is, that we respond to our interpretation of reality.  We take everything personal and feel offended and are unforgiving towards anybody who doesn't share our opinion. We are at war with the world and everything in it, and we over-react on basic instinct. We fight, flight and freeze in the face of what we consider right or wrong and feel justified to do so. 

Crisis and Change

Crisis is always an opportunity to change. The world is changing quickly, all the more reason to feel panicky and to react, rather than respond. But that's what we have our Neocortex for.
To think, before we act. To take a step back and to consider, to maybe even change our mind. 
Response-ability, the ability to respond. 
That's the freedom we have. The freedom of choice. We can choose to be mindful of our surroundings and our reality. If we perceive a problem, we have a choice to double check, accept the reality and find ways to solve any problems.  And it seems that many want change,  but if you want change, you gotta change. 

Muokkaa napsauttamalla tätä.

Right now we are living through times that many experience as overwhelming and traumatic. We fight, flight and freeze. Some fight climate CHANGE,  others fight in yet another war, this time in the European region. (Was there ever a time after WW2 without a war somewhere in the world? Was there ever a time without people fleeing their homes and countries somewhere in the world? I am trying to understand the concept of war crimes, to me, war is a crime. Full-stop.) We take flight and escape into addictions and consume. Drugs, alcohol, shopping, sex, food, you name it. We fight or freeze in the face of populism, nationalism, racism, sexism, terrorism, isms, wherever you look. 

Fear stifles the mind. 

​I can't escape the news on the war, but I don't have to get absorbed in them either. What you  give your attention to, grows. In the 80's in Berlin, where I grew up, there was this saying, "Stell Dir vor es ist Krieg, und keiner geht hin" - "Imagine there is a war and no one goes." I don't go. I don't watch videos or look at photos. They are always a variation of the same and all they do, is feed the fear. Fear stifles the mind. I have learned that there are certain things I can't do anything about, and then there are things I CAN change.

Call Me Pollyanna

The war is real. I can't do anything about it. Climate Change is real. I can do my part. My relationships are real, and I play a part in them.
 I want to live a life in peace. I wish peace for everyone. I wish an earth for the generations to come. But peace and caring for the world are inside jobs.  The change I am looking for, has to start with me. I have a life with family, friends, neighbours, there is a whole world out there, for me to meet, and to be kind toward. Call me Pollyanna, but I take the right to choose. For so many years I fed on drama, crisis, and pain, my own and the world's, and I got more and more miserable. I didn't know I had a choice. But I do, and I am done with it. Life is too short to be scared all the time. Having a choice is the essence of freedom. ​
We, who live in this day and age, have the luxury of using our minds before we react out of trauma-instinct. While we use our minds, we often forget to connect our minds to our hearts. Hearts stand for love, Love is the opposite of fear. ​
Whether we experienced trauma directly or not, we all carry those old stories with us. We heard them in school and in our families. There is nothing wrong with stories, I love a good story, but aren't we, you and me, and humanity as a whole, ready to reflect on them, before we continue spreading their content? Are we ready yet, to let go of those stories that are based in fear and only create more of it? But that's the crux. Unless we detach on some level, take some time to reflect and create a distance between ourselves and the feeling, unless we do something differently, nothing will change. 
We have a choice to let go of fear and to choose differently

Another paradox: We want change, but we don't want to change.

We see the state of the world. We are upset and feel insecure about the changes that in the world. We can blame others as much as we like, unless we stop, look and listen at ourselves, nothing will change. ​​We can be and we can become who we really are. We can be as colourful and as grey as we wish to be. And if we are not happy with where we are, we can start the process of change. It's much easier to change ourselves than the world around us.

What we know feels safe, no matter how hellish the known might be.

What we know feels safe, no matter how hellish the known might be. And of course, we won't know anything else, until we come off track, which we won't, because we don't want to take the risk of losing track and feel unsafe and so we continue, ad infinitum.
What astonishes me again and again, that as a result, we stick to unhealthy, unsafe situations, just because they are familiar. Out of fear we close our eyes, ears and hearts and pretend that all is well.
​We would like things to be different without having to do anything about it. Instead we hope for and expect others to change. ​In the meantime we keep making the same mistakes, meet the same kind of people and experience the same frustrating situations. We create big dramas and even more suffering by resisting and fighting the inevitable.

Change. When? How? What? Who?

But maybe it's not about not wanting to change. Maybe it's about not knowing that change is possible. Not knowing that we do have a choice and that we bloody well have the right to change, if, when, how, and what we want. There's no "who" in the last sentence, because there's only one who, and that who is I. We cannot change other people, only ourselves. 

Changing = Learning = Changing = Learning

We are not alone and nobody is perfect. Phew, what a relief. Some people need to learn to be more "selfish", others need to learn to be "selfless". We all have our own themes in life that need to be addressed. It seems that old patterns of the past repeat themselves again and again in many variations. We keep having the same problems in our relationship or we have the same relationships with different partners. Or, as a friend said, "I keep getting the same girlfriend, just with different haircut." We have certain issues at work, or with our friends. Jf we are not happy, and cannot accept the status quo. It's much easier to change ourselves than the world around us.   ​

​Where is the Change going to take us? ​​​

I don't know. Who does? All we have is this moment in which each of us can decide what and how we want to be in the world. ​If and when we change, our environment and our relationships change. Anyone who has learned to express themselves freely and kindly is an example and asset to the world. We don't have to carry the whole world on our shoulders. It's enough to take care of our own package.  
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Happy Birthday-Hello to those who are considered fruit flies. Yes, you!

9/3/2023

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It’s Birthday month! Holistication is 1 year old! TATAAA !!!
I started with Dramatic Language Coaching and now, 12 months later, I also offer self-care & sustainability. 

I was told that I should decide what I wanted to focus on, that I couldn’t do it all. I am not sure what assumption this advice is based on. 
 
Does this assume that potential clients only have two braincells and therefore can't make up their own minds? That they will get confused when confronted with options?
Is it really true that people only “have the attention span of a fruit fly”, as I was told by a marketing specialist? (The cheek! It's time to prove them wrong!)
 
Or is it the notion that a person can only do one thing well enough to pass it on?
Or Is it the idea that potential clients don’t trust someone who has more to give?
What? What??
 
Holistication stands for holistic lifelong learning and adult education. 
Besides, it’s not my call. It’s my clients’ decision. I offer, what I'm passionate about. They take what serves them. 
 
To be clear. I don’t have all the answers, but I’d like to help you to find yours. I live with my choices and enjoy my life and I gladly share my experience, knowledge, and skills with others who struggle with language, self-care, or sustainability. 

I started with Dramatic Language Coaching, because I saw a need for a creative and emphatic way to helping people overcome their fear of making mistakes, which keeps most people from speaking a foreign language. 
 
Fear closes the mind. 
Fear keeps us from learning and experiencing new things and ideas.
Theatrical tools like breathing, games, and movement, make it easier to let go of the fear, and they promote self-care and wellbeing. Having a good laugh together is the best that can happen to release tension.

Dramatic Language Coaching clients talk to me about anything they like. Listening to them and talking with them about their lives and interests is a fantastic way to learn about their world and they slowly grow confident and dare to speak more freely.  

I had a group of clients who wanted and needed to talk about sustainability. During our sessions I became aware of how self-care, language and sustainability are connected on many different levels. To quote Wittgenstein: “The limits of my language are the limits of my mind. All I know is what I have words for.” (And no, I haven’t read anything by him yet, but it’s a great quote).
 
It can be a long journey to overcome those learned ideas about oneself. 
I started my self-care journey over 25 years ago, and I have been toying with the idea to pass on what I know for some years now. Guess what kept me from doing it for so long? Yes. Fear and self-doubt.
The journey never ends, but it gets easier and more fun every day, and at some point, all I can do, is to do what feels right, no matter what others say.
I don’t have to believe everything that I think. And what others think isn’t really my business anyway, right?

You are still with me. I salute you and thank you for restoring my hope in humankind. 

So, I finally decided to offer 1:1 sessions and workshops on self-care and sustainability. I strongly believe that Self-care and sustainability are connected. If we don't start living more sustainably, no amount of self-care will do us any good. But where does self-care start and sustainability end? 

In my workshops, all participants get the opportunity to find their own answers. 
​Without a moralising finger, but with a lot of fun and many tips and ideas.
And here the language comes back in. I can do this in English, German and Finglish (Fin & Eng).

​If clients want to learn the language with the help of these topics, great!
If clients want to learn about self-care and sustainability in their own language, great!
If clients want to learn the language and talk about their own topics of interest, great! 

​If this sounds interesting instead of overwhelming, if you want to know more or have any questions, drop me a line or book a session!

Find out more about workshops
 
Thanks for reading, 
Have a good day!
​Pia

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What does self-care have to do with sustainability?

24/1/2023

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Two weeks ago, I ran my first workshop on self-care and sustainability and, while I don't like tooting my own horn, I can say, it was a complete success, and I am looking forward to running many more.  For a long time, I have been toying with the idea of passing on different forms of self-care, but it only occurred to me last year that there is a connection between self-care and sustainability. 
 
​​Sustainability is a big buzz word, but let's be honest, who wants to hear another lecture about how to up-cycle, separate the trash, or not to fly so much? We all know that! It's getting boring, the buzz is un-buzzing. But this is not about buzz anymore, it's about much more. But that’s the part that makes it difficult. It’s overwhelming. It’s too much. It’s not manageable, so we tend to put the head in the sand, or under the duvet, and try to ignore what’s going on, hoping, that it’ll pass, somehow, that there will be a miracle. So, I thought, let’s go back to the basics. 
 
Me, myself, and I. 
We usually start to care when we are personally affected. We are of this world, and while we take it for granted, many of us are so far removed from nature that they only see it in documentaries. How can we appreciate this planet and all its riches when we don't see and feel the connection? We buy our goods around the clock, nicely wrapped up in plastic, in supermarkets. When something’s sold out, we can be sure that the shelves get filled up. We love to chase bargains, the cheaper the better. That's how we live, and we are blind to the fact that we are biting the hand that feeds us. 
 
 
 
What we have on the inside, we find on the outside. When I smile at other people, they smile back.
Would we treat the world better if we saw it as an extension of ourselves and vice versa? I think it depends. If we loved ourselves and cared for ourselves, I would say yes. But if we haven't learned to love ourselves and take good care of ourselves, how could we take care of anything outside of ourselves? 

There are many ways to care for ourselves, and they are all valid. What a cucumber mask is for one, is a massage, Tai Chi or yoga for another. Others get their hair or nails done or buy something beautiful.  
 
What all forms of self-care have in common is care and love for oneself. However, I believe that too often we try to show this love with material things, while what we need is often something else. 
 
Time.
Spending time with someone we love is a precious way to show appreciation. Spending time with ourselves is too.
​When we take a moment to sit and breathe, when we question, reflect and listen to ourselves, we can come to new realisations about our needs and our lives. 
Maybe we realise that we need more alone- time or more social contacts, more rest, or more exercise, more joy or less hassle. We might develop a wish to feel better and enjoy our livesmore. We may realise that we are impatient, stressed, and tired, or that we speak unkindly to ourselves and others. We might realise that it’s time to set a boundary with someone close to us, or that we would like to make new friends. 
 
Sustainability starts with us, within ourselves. If we don't enjoy our lives, what's the point in saving them? Maybe the world is in the state it is in because too many people don't really care for themselves.


The Art of Living.
In German, the art of living is called Lebenskunst. It is the ability to take life on life’s terms, to make the best of it, while enjoying ourselves. It is the balance between action and rest, indulgence and moderation, sensual pleasures, and asceticism.  The art of living has nothing to do with hedonism, the pursuit of pure pleasure. We live in a hedonistic world, we are fish in a sea of sensual impressions, accustomed to a constant stream of images, smells, and sounds. Unable to sit calm, silently and still, we are doing something all the time, forgetting that we are human beings.  We do not learn to sit with ourselves, giving time and space to thought and feeling.
We have stopped to grapple with a problem, instead we are used to expect and find an instant solution including an instant gratification. Our solution is to consume everything all the way. We drink up, eat up, shop and work till we drop. 
Whether we perceive this sea as a prison or ultimate freedom lies in our perspective and, at the end of the day, is our choice. Again, a choice we don’t always know we have. For some, the awareness, that “this can’t go on like this” might be borne out of an acute medical crisis, such as a burn-out, stroke or heart-attack. For others, the sign might be more subtle, such a depression, fatigue, a developing addiction, a sense of unrest or frustration. For many it is what’s going on in the world. Whatever it may be, we always have a choice and do not have to continue what doesn’t feel right.
 
Self-care inside out
The authors Göhlich & Zirfas (2007) see self-care as the starting point and goal of Lebenskunst. Self-care means to sit with the self, and to listen to our body, mind, and spirit.  What we eat, how we move and rest, our hygiene, they are all aspects of caring for ourselves. But there is more. 
  The body is the tool that guides us. It gives us the gut feeling, the pain in the neck, makes us feel sick and tired. Self-care means to listen and to act on it. Take a break, get a massage, stop worrying.
Self-care means to nurture kind, gentle thoughts towards ourselves and the rest of the world. Self-care means to listen to our passions and dreams and to find joy in whatever we are doing. If we don’t, we will get sick, and then we will get sicker.
 
Crisis as a Chance
The problem with us humans is that we think we know it all. Crises make us painfully aware that we do not. 
Biographical learning theory assumes that early on in our lives, we start to develop patterns of interpretation and behaviour which guide us through our lives. We develop opinions. To make sense, we divide the world into left, right, good, bad, black, white, up, down, easy, difficult etc. We perceive and judge and create the world based on our past experiences, through our individual pair of glasses – far, near, pink, or dark shades, we see what we know. We do what we know. We know what we know, and then suddenly, a crisis, and we just don’t know anymore.
 
The crisis might have developed over a period or might be the reaction to a one-off event, it might be external or internal, in any case, it is our perception of it that defines how we deal with it.
We might have had an idea about how things should go, had it all planned, and suddenly we must let go of that idea, must rethink, consider different angles, and find different ways to deal with what life throws at us. We are at our wit’s end, bordering on insanity. 
 
Einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. Unfortunately, it is a fact that most adults tend to rest on their laurels and are unwilling to change unless they face a crisis. And rather than embracing it, with a “Yes! This is the chance! This is the opportunity and challenge to find a new solution, a different way of doing something!”, most adults tend to insist on continuing doing what they have been doing. 
 
 “Why is this happening to me?” is a valid question, but by itself, it doesn’t lead anywhere in terms of dealing with and resolving the crisis. Crisis is an opportunity to check our view on life, it’s a chance to check in with ourselves. The earlier we move into acceptance of what is, ask “What can I do differently?” and change our way of approaching a problem, the sooner the crisis is over and the saner we’ll feel. 
 
Those of us who wear glasses, usually have our eyes checked in regular intervals, and as a result of the examination, have to get new lenses. Asking “why?”, will not change that fact. So, we throw ourselves into choosing a new frame, and our attitude will make it a pleasant or tedious undertaking. We always have thr choice of attitude. 
 
Often, we are not aware that we have a choice in how to respond to people, things, places, life. 
What we perceive as a crisis, is the awareness that our old patterns of interpretation and behaviour are not working. Nothing makes sense anymore! Perfect. Because we now have the chance to check our interpretations and behaviours and change our frame of mind. 
In my experience this is usually the only thing I can change, as my control over the rest of the world is, to my deep regret, somewhat limited.
 
By experiencing and accepting that we just don’t know anymore, we make room for new solutions and can learn new ways of thinking and doing. But. (There is always a but.) 
 
A new frame of mind doesn’t jump at you from out of nowhere. It needs conscious observation and awareness, and gentle developing, like a muscle. A muscle grows while it rests between workouts.  A thought can develop into a vision if we give it time. We can learn if we have time to digest the information. Giving ourselves time, gratefully inhaling and exhaling, learning to live fully, enjoying the moment, those can be the gifts of a crisis. And even if we already have an inner and outer self-care routine, it never hurts to question ourselves, our actions, and thoughts from time to time. You can't do too much self-care, because you automatically give some of it to the world, and that's the best way to sustain it. ​
 
 
 
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May there be light and lightness

5/1/2023

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Hello and Happy New Year!

I was away over the holidays. It was refreshing to meet some old and new friends, and now I’m back - full of energy which should last me until 10pm, at least.
 
Tomorrow is a new day, and if I want, a new year! What's a number? I love the fact, that I can restart the count at any time.  Just because I wake up cranky and with a grudge, I don’t have to hold on to it. It’s a choice. Every day. Every moment. To me that’s priceless freedom – having a choice of attitude and perspective. 
 
Any plans for 2023?
My plan for this year is to care even less about what others think of me. I don’t mean a resentful and roaring “I don’t give a f***!”, but rather a quiet, gentle, dumdidum-doobedoo, “I feel what’s right and I do it too.” 
 
I will continue writing my book, a process I started during the first Covid spring. It’s based on my master’s thesis and looks on the effects of growing up with alcoholism (and recovering from it) through the lens of adult education and lifelong learning, from a biographical learning perspective. 
 
Biographical learning theory assumes that our life history corresponds to our learning history and vice versa. Fun fact: Thanks to neuroplasticity we are capable of learning all our lives. Forget about “I’m too old”. We are never too old to learn, whether we do, is our choice.
Or is it?

Hands up, who likes change?
What, if, and how we learn as adults depends a lot on our learning and life experiences during our childhood and youth. Back then we developed the patterns of interpretation and behaviour that formed our perspectives and attitudes, which inform our choices in life.

Whether we grew up in alcoholic families or not, most of us don’t question those patterns. As adults we use them on autopilot and re-create what we have learned in our families - the familiar. Day in-day out, we do the same things, think the same thoughts. Who likes to change?  

There is nothing wrong with re-creating what is useful to us, our lives, the lives of others, and yes, let’s think big, the world! But, not only because of alcohol-, but other forms of ism, many re-create realities that are based on templates of pain, shame, guilt, and fear. Those states of mind are not only unhealthy on every level, they are also not conducive to  learning. 

​The power of Crisis
In adult education, critical events (cognitive and/or emotional irritations) are regarded as catalysts for starting learning processes in adults. 
​If big enough, crisis can lead to a sustainable transformation of cognitive and emotional schemata and perspectives, and contribute to re- structuring our biography.

Wherever you go, there you are.
Let's face it, the world is on fire. Crises, wherever you look. Who wouldn't want to escape?
But escapism is just another ism. 
Crisis is an individual experience, and it might take a while, before the pain threshold is reached. But once it is, crisis can change our personal story as well as our perspective and attitude towards the crisis, and life on the whole.

So, the book in a nutshell
People get into recovery because of personal crises. In recovery they learn new patterns of interpretation and behaviour. 
Q: How are learning and educational processes, and as a result, personal and professional biographies affected by growing up with alcohol(ism)? 
A: A lot!
Q: What can we learn from those who learned new patterns of interpretation and behaviour as a result of a personal crisis?
A: A lot! 
 
If you are interested in finding out more, let me know or stay tuned. 

​Have a wonderful day,
Pia
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<<Edellinen

    Author
    ​

    Hi, my name is Pia Hyppönen. I have a colourful past, had different jobs since I was 18. I learned something on all of them, but never stayed long enough to have a career. 
    My business idea started with  a name: Holistication (a kind of acronym of my Holistic view on life and my M. A. in Lifelong Learning and Adult Education.)
    In the summer of 2021, I moved to Joensuu and looked for a job. The question "What can you do?" got me thinking and I decided to put all the things I love into one basket: lifelong learning, drama, language, encouraging and empowering people, et voilà - Dramatic Language Coaching. The one thing I didn't know anything about was "business". In the past that (not knowing something) would have stopped me. This time I took business courses, visited seminars and started listening  to those who know more about the topic.

    Over the past 25 years I have gotten rid of my fear of making mistakes, I became teachable and open to new ways of living my life. If I could do it, you can do it too. And if you can't yet, I'll be happy to help you. 

    None of us is going to get out alive. But until then we can have a life. 




    My mottos:
    Be true to yourself. Love what you do. Do what you love. Today.


    Nothing in life is set in stone, once it is, I'm six feet under.

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