Ruke...

4

Ruke...

Da li si mogla da zaboravis
da je tvoja RUKA nekad u mojoj lezala,
i da se neizmerna radost
iz tvoje RUKE u moju,
sa mojih usana na tvoje prelila,
i da je tvoja kosa plava,
citavo jedno kratko prolece
ogrtac srece mojoj ljubavi bila,
i da je ovaj svet, nekad mirisan i raspevan,
sad siv i umoran,
bez ljubavnih oluja
i nasih malih ludosti?

Zlo koje jedno drugom nanosimo
vreme brise i srce zaboravlja;
ali casovi srece ostaju,
NJIHOV SJAJ JE U NAMA.



Herman Hese







[


Hand in Hand

By Kalengule Kaoma

I

enjoy watching people at airports and bus stations. Someone is reading a book. A few people are reading newspapers and magazines. Over there, a lady is cleaning her eyeglasses. Then a young man sits down to eat a quick meal. All the busy people are using their hands!

There is a wonderful saying about hands in the Ndebele language of the Nguni people of Mata- beleland Province, Zimbabwe. The saying is Izandla ziya gezana. Taken literally, it states the obvious. “It takes one hand to wash the other.”

Izandla ziya gezana, however, is used to refer to a number of social situations. For example, it refers to the expectation that people in communities should help each other. When one neighbor helps another, the one who is helped will go and help yet another. One act of kindness spreads to others. It takes one to help another.

Another application of Izandla ziya gezana is when everyone comes together to rally behind a community member who is in need. In times of grief, disaster, weddings, or celebration, the Ngunis come together to support one another. They say Izandla ziya gezana, with the meaning, “we are all in this together.”

Just as hands work together for a common purpose, the Nguni people believe that working together will accomplish much. Izandla ziya gezana encourages people to join hands with others in order to pro- duce bigger results. There are many things that need our attention in the communities where we live.

Why not look around and find something to do for your neighbor? There is wisdom in what the Nguni say, Izandla ziya gezana. We can do a lot more if we work together. After all, as one hand washes another, both are connected to the same body. In the same way, all humans are connected to one another in Jesus Christ, in whom we all live and move and have our being.



I love you in Hands





AN HISTORY OF PALM READING
Palm reading is the art of predicting the future and depicting someone’s personality through the study of the dominant hand’s lines and shape (the dominant hand is the hand we write with). This practice, also known as chiromancy, palmistry or hand analysis exists all over the world, but let’s take a deeper look at its origins.

Palm reading was born in India, many centuries before Christ. From there, the science of reading into the lines of hand spread to China, Japan, Arab countries, and arrived in Europe in the twelfth century.

At first, gypsies from Central Europe were the first to read into the palm. One consider this evolution as “normal” since gypsies are naturally gifted for practicing many sciences considered as “occult”: magic, astrology, horoscope, psychic readings and many more.

Two French men, captain Casimir d’Arpentigny and Adrien Desbarrolles are considered as the creators of modern palmistry. While in Spain, both met a gypsy who read their hands and from that moment, they started to be interested in that revolutionary form of psychic reading. D’Arpentigny observed that most artists had thin and long fingers while scientists had knotty fingers and knuckles. Chiromancy was then founded as a real and serious anatomic science.

Nowadays, palm readers combine traditional techniques of palmistry with psychology and foretelling.



A famous chiromancer:

Born in Ireland, William John Warner (1866-1936), a.k.a. Cheiro, is being considered as the most famous chiromancer for having predicted successfully the future and personality of many persons. He gave courses of palmistry and wrote many fascinating books on the subject (“Language of the hand”, “You and your hand”, “Cheiro’s palmistry for all”).





...ušunjam se u tvoj jastuk
da ne znaš,
ušunjam se kao umor
od jurnjave po šumracima,
pokrivam te celu noć,
a pre no što se probudiš
ostavim ti na RUKAMA toplim od sna,
na trepavicama i rumenim obrazima
mali smotuljak jutra,
jer drugo ništa i ne znam...
*
m.antić














photo by man ray

Dopuna: 16 Okt 2008 21:03



OTTAWAN Hands Up

Hands up je odlična za dobro jutro!






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