Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 46
Sign: Pisces
City: DAYTON
State: Ohio
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/3/2006
|
|
|
|
Monday, August 10, 2009
 |
Current mood:Haunted
Category: Dreams and the Supernatural
OK,  so today was my day to go on the Rt 127 Yard sale with Leslie. Everything started well enough. But we ended up in a little town called Seven Mile. Awesome little town who's Mayor owns a little antique shop. So we stopped in to see what kind of bargains we could find. Leslie was looking at vintage jewelry, and I was wondering around. I stopped and looked at some silverware in a little container. I reached and picked up a spoon. I went to set the spoon down and to reach for a knife and ended up with the same spoon in my hand...  So I set it down and picked up a fork that I didn't even look and and set down to pick up the same spoon again...  I started to realize that the spoon had an energy coming from it... Also for some reason I realize now it feels better in my left hand... I am right handed... So anyway I ended up buying the spoon...  I did a little research on it and it is from the 1847 Rogers Bros. http://www.1847rogers.com/ According to the website the design is from 1914... So my question is, what do I do with a Haunted Spoon??? It is silver... as you can read form the website... It is a soup spoon... and of the continental design...
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Sunday, April 26, 2009
 |
Current mood:  hopeful
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Sunday, February 22, 2009
 |
Category: Religion and Philosophy
1. THE GREAT LAW - "As you sow, so shall you reap". This is also known as the "Law of Cause and Effect". Whatever we put out in the Universe is what comes back to us. If what we want is Happiness, Peace, Love, Friendship...Then we should BE Happy, Peaceful, Loving and a True Friend. 2. THE LAW OF CREATION - Life doesn't just HAPPEN, it requires our participation. We are one with the Universe, both inside and out. Whatever surrounds us gives us clues to our inner state. BE yourself, and surround yourself with what you want to have present in your Life. 3. THE LAW OF HUMILITY - What you refuse to accept, will continue for you. If what we see is an enemy, or someone with a character trait that we find to be negative, then we ourselves are not focused on a higher level of existence. 4. THE LAW OF GROWTH - "Wherever you go, there you are". For us to GROW in Spirit, it is we who must change - and not the people, places or things around us. The only given we have in our lives is OURSELVES and that is the only factor we have control over. When we change who and what we are within our heart our life follows suit and changes too. 5. THE LAW OF RESPONSIBILITY - Whenever there is something wrong in my life, there is something wrong in me. We mirror what surrounds us - and what surrounds us mirrors us; this is a Universal Truth. We must take responsibility what is in our life. 6. THE LAW OF CONNECTION - Even if something we do seems inconsequential, it is very important that it gets done as everything in the Universe is connected. Each step leads to the next step, and so forth and so on. Someone must do the initial work to get a job done. Neither the first step nor the last are of greater significance, As they were both needed to accomplish the task. Past - Present - Future They are all connected... 7. THE LAW OF FOCUS - You can not think of two things at the same time. When our focus is on Spiritual Values, it is impossible for us to have lower thoughts such as greed or anger. 8. THE LAW OF GIVING AND HOSPITALITY - If you believe something to be true, then sometime in your life you will be called upon to demonstrate that particular truth. Here is where we put what we CLAIM that we have learned, into actual PRACTICE. 9. THE LAW OF HERE AND NOW - Looking backward to examine what was, prevents us from being totally in the HERE AND NOW. Old thoughts, old patterns of behavior, old dreams... Prevent us from having new ones. 10. THE LAW OF CHANGE - History repeats itself until we learn the lessons that we need to change our path. 11. THE LAW OF PATIENCE AND REWARD - All Rewards require initial toil. Rewards of lasting value require patient and persistent toil. True joy follows doing what we're suppose to be doing, and waiting for the reward to come in on it's own time. 12. THE LAW OF SIGNIFICANCE AND INSPIRATION - You get back from something whatever YOU have put into it. The true value of something is a direct result of the energy and intent that is put into it. Every personal contribution is also a contribution to the Whole. Lack luster contributions have no impact on the Whole, nor do they work to diminish it. Loving contributions bring life to, and inspire, the Whole.
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Wednesday, February 04, 2009
 |
Current mood:  giddy
Category: Life
.. Hi Everyone,
I am reposting this from Barbara's recent email because it hit home with me. I had been finding myself for the past few years always wanting to go home. I would be at work saying God I just want to go home. When I would get home I would say the same damn thing. I never really understood, why I never feel at home. Well after you read the article she wrote you will understand. I know I am finally glad to understand it myself. You can sign up for Barbara's Newsletter at: www.barbarawith.com. I have met Barbara a couple times and she is a wonderful person. Please check out her website... Enjoy
Steve By: Barbara With
Teaching & Inspiring Personal & Global Transformation.... .... www.barbarawith.com .... .... BLOG ME HERE
| | .. Love & Marriage....
February 3, 2009 ....
| World Tour 2009.... | .. | | | .. .... Back in high school (and I don’t mean this ugly) I was a weird kid. Since I was 12, I’d been writing these strange, gothic songs even I didn’t understand. My parents divorced and I withdrew into my bedroom refusing to speak to my family, oh, for a couple years. At a time when kids were supposed to be interacting innocently with the opposite sex through that societal training called “dating,” I was locked in my room writing music. I did not date, per sae, and although the few boys who endured spending time with me back then still think kindly of me, I was a handful. It always ended poorly. But in my favor, most all my social experiences ended poorly back then, which sent me right back into my room.
Instead of dating, at 16 I moved across town into a hippie commune. It was 1972; the sexual revolution was all the rage. Human consciousness had just taken a giant caffeinated jolt out of the 1950s into the 60s. Who were we anymore then sexually? If the model for marriage was no longer Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, what was it?
By the time I reached 17, I was a playing music in the same folk clubs that spawned Bob Dylan. My posse was a group of musicians, all men, none younger than 28, some as old as 40 (“Wow, almost dead,” I used to think). There were no girls but me. I was quickly dubbed, “The new kid.”
This was the culture that shaped my sexual identity. I never got to be that innocent teenager who learned slowly and thoughtfully, not just about her own sexuality but also about those strange and beautiful creatures, boys. I never got a chance to hold hands without expectation of sex. And with it, sex brought the expectation of marriage, even in the era of sexual freedom, make-love-not-war and “power to the people.” Those darn Nelsons still had a lock on my ideology.
This Saturday I will turn 54. On my own for the first time with this new self-love, it feels like a do-over. I feel like a 17-year-old. Seriously. But this time, I get to explore at my own pace. I say who, I say when, I say how much. I get to pose the questions: what is sex, what is marriage, do they have anything to do with one another and what do they mean to me?
I can’t help but wonder, is marriage by nature degenerative? Is it doomed to fail because people mistakenly allow culture to define marriage for them instead of creating their own unique form to fit their own special needs? Could this be because, who knew any of us had special needs, much less what they were, much less how to get them fulfilled?
So what really is marriage and how do we create a successful one in this day and age? How many people do you know who are wildly in love after 30 years together? I’m divorced. That was brutal; why would anyone want to do it again? I know a friend, divorced three times and she’s out there dating again, opening herself up to possibility. She’s dating in her 60s. What does that look like? I had no idea the first time around, why should I have one now?
To get to the bottom of this, I conducted one of my patented unofficial research projects, which consists of nagging friends and strangers in supermarket lines to answer my posed questions: If divorced, would you marry again and why?
100% of the interviewees were divorced. 100% said they would marry again. The answers to “why” varied as widely as the interviewees. Everything from tax breaks, insurance, proclamations of love, shared happiness, sorrows halved, to have someone to grow old with, someone to take care of. Every single person, despite the agony of divorce, said they would take the risk of marrying again.
However, the research did not settle me. None of the above resonated true for me. I had had the ceremonies, the companionship, the tax breaks, the insurance, the “security.” None of that made a marriage for me. So what is it, for me, if anything at all?
Then I remembered a man I met several years ago. I’d only known him for about ten minutes and haven’t seen him since, but in the memory of his parable I perfectly found my answer.
It’s a mid-September night on Madeline Island, Northern Wisconsin. We’re sitting outside under the tent at Tommy’s Burned Down Café. The fires are going, and my friend and I are perched silently on our barstools, staring into space. He’s just buried his dad, and my cousin was killed a couple weeks earlier.
Out of the blue, a man walks up, puts down his beer, looks directly as us and commands, “Ask me what I’m thinking.”
Resisting making a joke about being a psychic, I comply, “Ok, what are you thinking?”
“I’m thinking about my wife.” Do I see a tear shimmering on his lower eyelid?
“Awww honey…where is she?” Now I want to know.
“Oh she’s on the mainland. I work on the island four days a week. I think about her when I wake up, I think about her when I go to sleep, she’s even in my dreams! I miss her when she’s not there and I can’t wait for Friday so I can get home. ‘Cause when I’m with her, I’m home.”
I can’t help but ask, “How long have you been married?”
“Twenty-five years.”
Bingo. That’s it. That’s what marriage is for me. It’s not a ritual declaring a union in front of the world and the government. It’s not sharing expenses, tax breaks, insurance, legal documents. It’s not even sharing happiness or reducing sorrow.
No, for me marriage is that after 25 years, I think about him when I wake up, I think about him when I go to sleep, he’s in my dreams, I miss him when he’s not there and I can’t wait to be with him, because when I’m with him, I’m home. It’s as if his compilation of consciousness, at 10–100 meters, is parked on top of mine, covering me, so close to the Source we are nearly one.
I have no idea how that translates into taxes or ceremonies or living arrangements or insurance. I feel married to him because in my soul, through all these years, somewhere he’s always been there in that way, no matter what.
So how does someone who feels married already (according to my new standard but certainly nowhere near culturally) start over and learn to date? I don’t know but wouldn’t this be a great way to revitalize any relationship? Just start over from the top. Begin again as strangers. Learn how to be best friends.
I ask my friend Gale about her 30-year marriage. She’s still madly in love with him. How did they take it that first step all those years ago?
When they first met in high school, they became biking buddies. They rode bikes together for nine months before they even kissed.
“I could barely look at him, I was so in love with him.” How sweet to see this 50-something woman still blush telling the story.
“We just biked and talked, every week, week after week. But the entire time I was shaking, I was so in love with him.”
I’m flabbergasted. “How did you bike for nine months in that condition? And what moved it along to the next level,” the part of me still 17-years-old wanted to know.
“One day, he was standing on my sidewalk straddling his bike, and I just walked right up to him and planted one on him. The rest is history.”
So she took the time to grow the stranger into her best friend, and when Intuition impelled her, and not a moment sooner, she complied. By that time, the kiss was planted on solid ground.
This year, for my birthday, I want to learn to “ride bikes.” Take my time. Where’s the fire? Because it’s the journey, you see…and I don’t want to miss one single second.
Happy freeking birthday to me..... .. .. | .. | ..
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Thursday, December 25, 2008
 |
Current mood:  amused

You are the Hanged ManSelf-sacrifice, Sacrifice, Devotion, Bound. With the Hanged man there is often a sense of fatalism, waiting for something to happen. Or a fear of loss from a situation, rather than gain. The Hanged Man is perhaps the most fascinating card in the deck. It reflects the story of Odin who offered himself as a sacrifice in order to gain knowledge. Hanging from the world tree, wounded by a spear, given no bread or mead, he hung for nine days. On the last day, he saw on the ground runes that had fallen from the tree, understood their meaning, and, coming down, scooped them up for his own. All knowledge is to be found in these runes. The Hanged Man, in similar fashion, is a card about suspension, not life or death. It signifies selflessness, sacrifice and prophecy. You make yourself vulnerable and in doing so, gain illumination. You see the world differently, with almost mystical insights. What Tarot Card are You? Take the Test to Find Out.
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Saturday, November 15, 2008
 |
Category: Writing and Poetry
I miss your hugs
I miss your kisses
I miss your eyes
The ones with wishes
I miss your heart
I miss your lips
I miss the destiny
That life did pick
The truth remains
In my heart
The one that failed
And fell apart
Our future sparse
and out of control
I miss the woman
I miss her soul
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Saturday, November 08, 2008
 |
Current mood:  depressed
Category: Writing and Poetry
.. http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">.. name="ProgId" content="Word.document· name="Generator" content="Microsoft Word 12">.. name="Originator" content="Microsoft Word 12">.. rel="File-List" href="file:///C:%5CUsers%5CGIGPAR%7E1%5CAppData%5CLocal%5CTemp%5Cmsohtmlclip1%5C01%5Cclip_filelist.xml">.. rel="themeData" href="file:///C:%5CUsers%5CGIGPAR%7E1%5CAppData%5CLocal%5CTemp%5Cmsohtmlclip1%5C01%5Cclip_themedata.thmx">.. rel="colorSchemeMapping" href="file:///C:%5CUsers%5CGIGPAR%7E1%5CAppData%5CLocal%5CTemp%5Cmsohtmlclip1%5C01%5Cclip_colorschememapping.xml">.. -->[if gte mso 9]>.. Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 .. -->[if gte mso 9]>.. ....[endif]-->.. -->[if gte mso 10]> ..[endif]--> I am so lost without you. My life will never be the same. My heart still holds you so close. A life with no meaning just shame. The nights are the worst of all. The dreams and the sudden pain. When I awake and realize you aren't there. The days will be nothing but rain. The wonders I thought we would see. The family I thought us too be. The mysteries of love we could share. My heart no longer can bare. I wish I knew how to fix. The wonders we now will miss. The fire I felt in my heart. The life I won't be apart. I want you in my life and my love. The one who could not be replaced. There's more love than you have ever seen. In a heart that's more red than green. I LOVE YOU DIANE !!!
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Friday, November 07, 2008
 |
Category: Writing and Poetry
Darkness
Darkness arrives in tides
The sounds of hell I hear
The light it all but hides
I swear I'll shed a tear
The clowns of hell subside
But the truth rings out to clear
Her love for me not true
The lips of life not dear
My heart cry's out in pain
1000 nights alone
The truth is all just rain
It's gone and nothing grown
I loved her all I can
I gave her all my heart
My blood it all but ran
I think we missed the start
I love her still she knows
I can't be there for her
Her decision rings too dear
My heart is all but closed
My darkest night is gone
and the next is just tonight
Her love was never there
I fear to find the light
Stephen B. Fink Nov. 2008
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Friday, October 10, 2008
 |
Category: Writing and Poetry
Lost, and alone tonight
my heart calls her
she's not in sight
The love I send
is what she needs
My heart my soul
my friend indeed
The lovers smile
Her call to shame
I love her while
I play the game
My heart still here
her love still dear
I feel alone
I need her here
She has things to do
and places to be
I sit and wait
for her to see
I want to be
Her heart and soul
The lovers link
To heavens pole
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
 |
Category: Writing and Poetry
Cuddle the dreams
Every night
When she's not there
My dreams hold her
Cuddle her and care
The thought of her
in my arms
The tears that where
All but gone
The restfullness
of the sleep
I cuddle her
Full and deep
Her sweet voice rings out
in my dreams
I hold her tight
I hear her sing
The wishfulness
of her heart
I hold her close
We never part
Stephen Fink - 2008
Powered by  | | English | | Albanian | | Arabic | | Bulgarian | | Catalan | | Chinese | | Croatian | | Czech | | Danish | | Dutch | | Estonian | | Filipino | | Finnish | | French | | Galician | | German | | Greek | | Hebrew | | Hindi | | Hungarian | | Indonesian | | Italian | | Japanese | | Korean | | Latvian | | Lithuanian | | Maltese | | Norwegian | | Polish | | Portuguese | | Romanian | | Russian | | Serbian | | Slovak | | Slovenian | | Spanish | | Swedish | | Thai | | Turkish | | Ukrainian | | Vietnamese |
|
|
|
|