Imena: July 2006

Monday, July 31, 2006

Summer in the City
















I passed my exam, Im so happy I finally passed the class. Thanks to everyone who gave me positive advice, and prayers. My apologies for not updating my blog, I just have been really buzy lately. I adopted a little dog a couple days a go, I have also have another dog a pitbull. I thought she was getting lonely when I left the house. They keep each other in good company. I watched the movie "Lil Man" yesterday, it wasnt as funny as I thought it would have been. It seems like the summer has gone by so fast, and I havent even went on vacation yet, soon the new semester will be starting again; one more year. But, I guess you could say I have had a very productive summer. ~LOL~ I hope you, my brothas and sistas are having a great summer. Salaams!

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Sweet Thing




This week has been pretty good, tomorrow is my last day of summer school. I need to really study for the exam tomorrow, IsahAllah I 'll past. Also, tomorrow Im going to go shopping, I havent went shopping in a couple months Ive been to buzy saving money. My friends say I am too cheap, but they are always broke. LOL. Anywayz Im going to be taking some pictures too, I havent had any professioal pictures taken of me since I have graduated from High School. Shame I know. My friend Caitlin's birthday is next week we are going to see "Phantom of the Operah", at the Venetian. Caitlin majors in theater, so she loves these kind of shows. Well I need to get back to studying. Salaams!

Monday, July 24, 2006

Blaazing
















As you probaly know it has been getting hotter by the day. Here in Nevada it has been at its highest, up to 210 degrees. Oh Allah, I think it is time for another ice age. For me it has even been too hot sleep, or eat during the day. My friend who recenty visited London said it was the hottest its ever been. I really do feel sory for other countries who are not use to such a heat wave. My windshield got nicked the other day on my way to work from a rock, I thought no big deal. When I came out for my lunch break, the nick had turned into a two inch crack from the sun(Shakes Head). Oh well, what can you do? I guess I will have to be more cautious on the freeway, and not try to get behind any more gravel trucks. Salaams!

Friday, July 21, 2006

Baaba Maal - Hamady Boiro (LIVE)
Please Read the Post Below

Baaba Maal


Thought I would share a story of one of my favorite African artist Baaba Maal.


Artist Bio:
From the northern, riverside town of Podor comes a modern musician filled with the mysteries of ancient Africa. Catlike and delicate in appearance, Baaba Maal sings with hurricane force. His music embraces the gentle filigree of West African folk, the tumult of mbalax and the toughness of rap and reggae.
Maal comes from the Toucouleur people who live in the Fulani fouta region, by the Senegal River, which divides Senegal and Mauritania. Young Baaba left home and moved to the Wolof-dominated capital Dakar to study music and explore his national culture. He soon returned to the north and spent a year with his group traveling along the Senegal River and learning from the old musicians village by village.
In 1982, Maal went to a conservatory in Paris, where he performed with his longtime friend the blind singer Mansour Seck. The duo pricked up ears in Europe with their intimate live recording, Djam Leelii. Maal returned to Senegal to form his current group, Dande Lenol, or "Voice of the Race." The group has played a key role in African pop's incorporation of hip-hop, reggae and techno, notably on their landmark 1994 release, Firin' in Fouta. Other Maal releases with Dande Lenol include Lam Toro (1992), Nomad Soul (1997) and Live at Royal Festival Hall (1999).
Maal also maintains an acoustic group that plays and records folkloric music. His 1991 acoustic release Baayo is a landmark Afropop recording, and Maal reprised its acoustic format on Missing You (Mi Yeewlii) (2001). A true original, Maal celebrates village life even as he advocates contemporary causes, including women's rights in Africa. Like the griots he admires, Maal sings of history and heroes, bringing the lessons of the past into peoples' lives today.– Banning Eyre, Courtesy Afropop Worldwide: www.afropop.org

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Never Truly See Your Self













My friend Caitlin once told me that you will never truly see your self how others have. I've always belived there was some truth in that statement, it is really hard to know what others are thinking of you. People can smile, but feel pain. People can cry, but not even feel sad. People can apologize, but not even feel remorse. As complex as the world is, it is any wonder people have survived .


But, I guess that is how the world works. Dont you think so? Pretending to be on thing only to survive another day in life. Being a mother working endless hours, pretending to love life when really you are aching just to rest. Going to a job you hate, just to pay the bills. Even spouses, saying honey I'll miss you when you really want them just to leave the house. Marrying someone just to be financially secure. Which reminds me of my sister's friend who married a man just because he was wealthy, and owned his own business. He was really a tyrant who would physically abuse her, and make her wear sweat suits; or baggy clothes even though it was in the middle of July. When I first saw her I thought she was in her mid-thirties, but really she was no older than 25.

Same with politicians, don't they have to lie, and save face just to get by. Make another dollar, so that their generations of their children can survive. I do wonder, do any of them have a conscience bone in their body? As my mother use to say, "Everything is not as it seems". I guess she was right. Salaams, brothas and sistas!

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Tired Eyes


One of my favorite poems by Anna Copeland





My eyes have seen
tragic times, almost
better to be blind
with no hurt
than to see great pain,
for depths of vision
flood my heart.
My soul sees all.

With age comes
knowledge, understanding,
interpreting the world
through tired eyes.
A freshness of new
perspective gone.

I view the world
with distance and reserve,
protecting myself from
Life's pain.
Holding back a little
I'm near sighted
to what I see.

The hands of time
ticking away the
moments of my life.
Tired eyes see the
end is nearer with
a whole lot more to see.

Anna Copeland

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Working Day and Night


Well, the job at CVS has been going ok. The manager is ok too, I guess you could say. She basically sits in a office all day doing nothing, while the rest of us clean, close up the store, and ring out the customers. My supervisor is a decent woman, she is a heavy smoker who has a mouth of a sailor(LOL), every time my boss leaves which is around six she begins to tell us stories about her life, and the cutomers of the store. I been working side by side with a girl named Amelia, she is nice, very quiet, but also very lazy at times. Let me tell you about the customers, the customers are very Very well-off, they live in these big two story houses on Black Mountain over looking the city, and every one of them either drives a BMW, Lexus, or some sort of SUV. Some of them are ok, but most come in with this attitude like "I know Im all that." They are quite interesting to watch, and by interesting Im reffering to their over the top "plastic surgery", and "botox". Besides working at the drug store, Im also all most done with my semester(Insha'Allah). Belive me it has not been easy, but it is well worth it. I will be quitting CVS soon as the regular school semester starts, I need to begin to concentrate more on school. Just three more courses! Salaams.

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Intresting Article




I found this Article on BBC, I thought it was interesting.

India skull man pulls huge crowds

Mr Roy says his skull has made him famous (Photo: Palash Debnath)Hundreds of people have flocked to a hospital in the Indian city of Calcutta to see a man holding a sizeable chunk of his head in his hands.
Doctors say a section of electrician Sambhu Roy's skull fell off on Sunday, months after he suffered severe burns.
He has now become the centre of public attention as the man who literally "holds his head in his hands".
However some medics have questioned whether he has been left holding part of his skull or part of his scalp.
'Extremely rare'
Mr Roy got an electric shock while repairing a high voltage wire last October.
The doctor who treated him insists that his patient underwent an extremely rare medical phenomenon.
"When he came to us late last year, his scalp was completely burnt and within months it came off, exposing the skull," surgeon Ratan Lal Bandyopadhyay told Reuters.
"Later, we noticed that the part of his skull was loosening due to lack of blood supply to the affected area, which can happen in such extensive burn cases."

Mr Roy says he is determined to keep his trophy (Photo: Palash Debnath)Correspondents say hundreds of people have now gathered around Mr Roy's hospital bed to see him holding his extraordinary trophy.
Dr Bandyopadhyay said the skull's inner covering and the membrane which helps produce bone were "miraculously unaffected", allowing fresh bone to grow.
"When the skull came off, I thought he will die," the doctor told Reuters, "but we noticed a new covering on his head forming and that might have pushed the 'dead skull' out."
Doctors say that 80% of the outer part of Mr Roy's skull has now hardened, and they expect him to be completely cured in about three months' time.
Scalp or skull?
But some experts say that while such a development is possible, cases are extremely rare.
"It's most likely that the hard outer portion of the scalp came off," a senior orthopaedic surgeon in Calcutta - who does not want to be named - told the BBC.
"If the skull itself came off with the brain of the patient being exposed, the patient wouldn't have survived."
Another surgeon, Mrinal Kanti Biswas, pointed out that no X-rays had yet been carried out on the patient.
"Before scientific tests are conducted, it wouldn't be proper to comment what exactly came off - whether it is the skull or the outer portion of the scalp," he said.
Prized possession
Mr Roy is in no doubt that his is a fantastic tale of survival.
"Doctors say a new skull covering has replaced the old one, but I am not letting go of this one," he told Reuters.
He said that he intended to keep his prized possession for life and not hand it over to the hospital when he left.
"My skull has made me famous," he said.
http://http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5151612.stm

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

New Phaze

Well I got my car! I also got a new summer job at CVS/Pharmacy, the job at Citcuit City really was getting bad. The manager is such a weasel, but now Im leaving. Im going to miss some of the people, ecspecially the lady who trained me. So everything has been going fine, lets see what else just finishing up some classes over the summer; one more year till UNLV. Thats all for now, Salaams my brothas and sistas!