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I AM...

I am whatever YOU think I am until YOU get to KNOW me. This is true for everyone else too, of course.. so don't make assumptions about anyone or pass judgment; ask questions. You might just make a new friend.

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Saturday, March 31, 2012

THE DAHL HAUS PRESENTS: THE END(S) OF MARCH 2012






¡BOTTOMS UP, THIS IS NOT YOUR AVERAGE TOAST!









































































































I'D DIE WITHOUT YOU










"I'd Die Without You" is a number
three 
Billboard Hot 100 hit from 1992 by P.M. Dawn.
It also peaked at number 16 on Billboard's 
Hot R&B Singles in 1992.





The song
first appeared on the soundtrack of the 1992 movie Boomerang. "I'd Die Without You"
was one of several songs to chart from the Boomerang soundtrack
album. Other notable hits were "Love Shoulda
Brought You Home
" by Toni Braxton and
"End of the Road" by Boyz II Men.





The song
later appeared on P.M. Dawn's own The Bliss Album...? (1993), and their 2000 greatest
hits collection, The Best of P.M. Dawn. In 2002,
the song was covered by Brandy and
her brother Ray J for
her album Full Moon.

Friday, March 30, 2012

THOSE IN POWER...











"Those in power never give way and admit defeat. They plot and scheme to regain their lost power and privilege."





Kemet (Afrikan) proverb





SPARTACUS: SEASON 2 - EPISODE 9 (MONSTER)





Spartacus again must keep his warriors united,
as Glaber plans an attack on the temple they occupy, on the latest episode of
“Spartacus: Vengeance,” “Monsters.”


The episode begins with Spartacus’ warriors,
deep in slumber for the night.  Just then, Roman soldiers stealthily pass
the unguarded wall and attack.  Before the battle is too pitched, one of
the “Romans” reveals himself to be Spartacus himself.  He says that this
was a test, one the warriors failed.  They are still too fractured to keep
each other safe.  More on this later…


Meanwhile, Seppia, armed with knowledge about
Glaber’s role in her brother’s death, bristles at his touch.  But just as
she begins to succumb, a most surprise visitor arrives: Ilithyia. 
Dehydrated and delirious, she collapses.  Some time later, she is revived
and sees Glaber standing before her.  They talk, and it’s clear that she
has been replaced by Seppia, for what she saw upon entering was not an
illusion.  Glaber is told that Spartacus let Ilithyia go.  As for
Glaber, he declares himself no longer the man who once loved Ilithyia, but
rather, a “monster.”



The next morning, the warriors are still
in-fighting, then wonder aloud why Spartacus didn’t kill Ilithyia when Glaber
reneged on the deal.  They are not satisfied by his response, and snipe at
each other still.  Spartacus tells Agron to attend to a task designed to
ease tensions.




Back in Capua, Ilithyia and Lucretia
reunite.  She tells Lucretia that the child she’s carrying is
Spartacus’.  Together, they ponder how they can keep Glaber from moving
forward with Seppia.  At the same time, Glaber plans an attack with Ashur,
who has figured out that Ilithyia was held in a temple in Vesuvius.  Ashur
asks for, and he thinks granted, his freedom when Spartacus falls.  And in
that brave new world, he tells Lucretia later, she will be his wife and Domina
in the house of Ashur.


Back to Spartacus.  We see what task Agron
completed for him, as he returns from commandeering a truck filled with
wine.  The libation fuels the warriors to engage in sport by dueling, a
most vigorous team building exercise if ever there was one.  Soon,
Oenomaus, Gannicus, Crixus and Agron all release tensions between them. 
Everyone is happy, save for Mira, who shortly before learned that Spartacus
cannot make himself closer to her in the way she desires.


Meanwhile, Glaber is confronted by Virnius, who
has learned of Ilithyia’s kidnapping.  He says that he has been dispatched
to take Spartacus down.  He angrily leaves, but not before telling Seppia
that her claims about Glaber’s killing her brother are unfounded and ill-timed,
to boot.  Seppia later bemoans her fate to Lucretia, who in her usual way,
eggs the younger woman towards purpose…killing Glaber.


Sure enough, she’s on her way to do just that,
and catches him in an uncompromising position, smashing him with a wine
jug.  As she’s about to knife him, she is knifed…by Ilithyia, who then
slits her throat, making a literal bloody mess of it, too.  Ilithyia
“comforts” her husband, saying that they should move on from recent events,
reunite as “monsters”.  They consummate their reunion.


Later, Spartacus is communing with the warriors
when they see a flare, a signal that Romans approach.  They get into
attack mode, holding off the Romans as best they can.  Virinius is leading
part of the attack, but finds that the warriors are not easily felled. 
Just then, there’s fireballs in the sky, a deadly attack that takes out some of
the warriors, and Virinius as well.  Glaber leads the fireball attack from
a safe distance.  Spartacus and the others are forced to fall back,
ultimately deciding to take to the higher ground where Glaber is not equipped
to follow.  But he has a sinister smirk on his face, knowing that the
higher ground is a place of no food or water.  The warriors will come down
from the mountain, where he promises to be waiting for them, and vows to kill
them all.


One more episode to the season.  How much
you want to bet there will be blood spilled! But here’s another question…what
did you think of “Monsters”?


SOURCE: SPEAK EASY



Thursday, March 29, 2012

COUPLES FIGHT: ¿HOW DO YOU CHOOSE SIDES?





Couples fight — it’s just a fact of life and it is hard to sit there
and just nod when a man you’ve known for a long time struggle with his relationship
with another man who you genuinely care about.


What do you do when they are both explaining
all of the things the other is doing wrong and you completely identify with the
issues?


How do you maintain your sanity when
there’s a rift between a couple you care about? 

THE NORM...





"For me, the battle is the norm.
Peace is abnormal. You have no business being peaceful while your people are
not free."




John Henrik Clarke