FordeFables
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    • Strictly for Adults Novels >
      • Rebecca's Revenge
      • Come Back Peter
    • Tales from Portlaw >
      • No Need to Look for Love
      • 'The Love Quartet' >
        • The Tannery Wager
        • 'Fini and Archie'
        • 'The Love Bridge'
        • 'Forgotten Love'
      • The Priest's Calling Card >
        • Chapter One - The Irish Custom
        • Chapter Two - Patrick Duffy's Family Background
        • Chapter Three - Patrick Duffy Junior's Vocation to Priesthood
        • Chapter Four - The first years of the priesthood
        • Chapter Five - Father Patrick Duffy in Seattle
        • Chapter Six - Father Patrick Duffy, Portlaw Priest
        • Chapter Seven - Patrick Duffy Priest Power
        • Chapter Eight - Patrick Duffy Groundless Gossip
        • Chapter Nine - Monsignor Duffy of Portlaw
        • Chapter Ten - The Portlaw Inheritance of Patrick Duffy
      • Bigger and Better >
        • Chapter One - The Portlaw Runt
        • Chapter Two - Tony Arrives in California
        • Chapter Three - Tony's Life in San Francisco
        • Chapter Four - Tony and Mary
        • Chapter Five - The Portlaw Secret
      • The Oldest Woman in the World >
        • Chapter One - The Early Life of Sean Thornton
        • Chapter Two - Reporter to Investigator
        • Chapter Three - Search for the Oldest Person Alive
        • Chapter Four - Sean Thornton marries Sheila
        • Chapter Five - Discoveries of Widow Friggs' Past
        • Chapter Six - Facts and Truth are Not Always the Same
      • Sean and Sarah >
        • Chapter 1 - 'Return of the Prodigal Son'
        • Chapter 2 - 'The early years of sweet innocence in Portlaw'
        • Chapter 3 - 'The Separation'
        • Chapter 4 - 'Separation and Betrayal'
        • Chapter 5 - 'Portlaw to Manchester'
        • Chapter 6 - 'Salford Choices'
        • Chapter 7 - 'Life inside Prison'
        • Chapter 8 - 'The Aylesbury Pilgrimage'
        • Chapter 9 - Sean's interest in stone masonary'
        • Chapter 10 - 'Sean's and Tony's Partnership'
        • Chapter 11 - 'Return of the Prodigal Son'
      • The Alternative Christmas Party >
        • Chapter One
        • Chapter Two
        • Chapter Three
        • Chapter Four
        • Chapter Five
        • Chapter Six
        • Chapter Seven
        • Chapter Eight
      • The Life of Liam Lafferty >
        • Chapter One: ' Liam Lafferty is born'
        • Chapter Two : 'The Baptism of Liam Lafferty'
        • Chapter Three: 'The early years of Liam Lafferty'
        • Chapter Four : Early Manhood
        • Chapter Five : Ned's Secret Past
        • Chapter Six : Courtship and Marriage
        • Chapter Seven : Liam and Trish marry
        • Chapter Eight : Farley meets Ned
        • Chapter Nine : 'Ned comes clean to Farley'
        • Chapter Ten : Tragedy hits the family
        • Chapter Eleven : The future is brighter
      • The life and times of Joe Walsh >
        • Chapter One : 'The marriage of Margaret Mawd and Thomas Walsh’
        • Chapter Two 'The birth of Joe Walsh'
        • Chapter Three 'Marriage breakup and betrayal'
        • Chapter Four: ' The Walsh family breakup'
        • Chapter Five : ' Liverpool Lodgings'
        • Chapter Six: ' Settled times are established and tested'
        • Chapter Seven : 'Haworth is heaven is a place on earth'
        • Chapter Eight: 'Coming out'
        • Chapter Nine: Portlaw revenge
        • Chapter Ten: ' The murder trial of Paddy Groggy'
        • Chapter Eleven: 'New beginnings'
      • The Woman Who Hated Christmas >
        • Chapter One: 'The Christmas Enigma'
        • Chapter Two: ' The Breakup of Beth's Family''
        • Chapter Three: From Teenager to Adulthood.'
        • Chapter Four: 'The Mills of West Yorkshire.'
        • Chapter Five: 'Harrison Garner Showdown.'
        • Chapter Six : 'The Christmas Dance'
        • Chapter Seven : 'The ballot for Shop Steward.'
        • Chapter Eight: ' Leaving the Mill'
        • Chapter Ten: ' Beth buries her Ghosts'
        • Chapter Eleven: Beth and Dermot start off married life in Galway.
        • Chapter Twelve: The Twin Tragedy of Christmas, 1992.'
        • Chapter Thirteen: 'The Christmas star returns'
        • Chapter Fourteen: ' Beth's future in Portlaw'
      • The Last Dance >
        • Chapter One - ‘Nancy Swales becomes the Widow Swales’
        • Chapter Two ‘The secret night life of Widow Swales’
        • Chapter Three ‘Meeting Richard again’
        • Chapter Four ‘Clancy’s Ballroom: March 1961’
        • Chapter Five ‘The All Ireland Dancing Rounds’
        • Chapter Six ‘James Mountford’
        • Chapter Seven ‘The All Ireland Ballroom Latin American Dance Final.’
        • Chapter Eight ‘The Final Arrives’
        • Chapter Nine: 'Beth in Manchester.'
      • 'Two Sisters' >
        • Chapter One
        • Chapter Two
        • Chapter Three
        • Chapter Four
        • Chapter Five
        • Chapter Six
        • Chapter Seven
        • Chapter Eight
        • Chapter Nine
        • Chapter Ten
        • Chapter Eleven
        • Chapter Twelve
        • Chapter Thirteen
        • Chapter Fourteen
        • Chapter Fifteen
        • Chapter Sixteen
        • Chapter Seventeen
      • Fourteen Days >
        • Chapter One
        • Chapter Two
        • Chapter Three
        • Chapter Four
        • Chapter Five
        • Chapter Six
        • Chapter Seven
        • Chapter Eight
        • Chapter Nine
        • Chapter Ten
        • Chapter Eleven
        • Chapter Twelve
        • Chapter Thirteen
        • Chapter Fourteen
      • ‘The Postman Always Knocks Twice’ >
        • Author's Foreword
        • Contents
        • Chapter One
        • Chapter Two
        • Chapter Three
        • Chapter Four
        • Chapter Five
        • Chapter Six
        • Chapter Seven
        • Chapter Eight
        • Chapter Nine
        • Chapter Ten
        • Chapter Eleven
        • Chapter Twelve
        • Chapter Thirteen
        • Chapter Fourteen
        • Chapter Fifteen
        • Chapter Sixteen
        • Chapter Seventeen
        • Chapter Eighteen
        • Chapter Nineteen
        • Chapter Twenty
        • Chapter Twenty-One
        • Chapter Twenty-Two
  • Celebrity Contacts
    • Contacts with Celebrities >
      • Journey to the Stars
      • Number 46
      • Shining Stars
      • Sweet Serendipity
      • There's Nowt Stranger Than Folk
      • Caught Short
      • A Day with Hannah Hauxwell
    • More Contacts with Celebrities >
      • Judgement Day
      • The One That Got Away
      • Two Women of Substance
      • The Outcasts
      • Cars for Stars
      • Going That Extra Mile
      • Lady in Red
      • Television Presenters
  • Thoughts and Musings
    • Bereavement >
      • Time to clear the Fallen Leaves
      • Eulogy for Uncle Johnnie
    • Nature >
      • Why do birds sing
    • Bill's Personal Development >
      • What I'd like to be remembered for
      • Second Chances
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      • Holidays of Old
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      • Cleckheaton Consecration
      • Canadian Loves
      • Mum's Wisdom
      • 'Early life at my Grandparents'
      • Family Holidays
      • 'Mother /Child Bond'
      • Childhood Pain
      • The Death of Lady
      • 'Soldiering On'
      • 'Romantic Holidays'
      • 'On the roof'
      • Always wear clean shoes
      • 'Family Tree'
      • The importance of poise
      • 'Growing up with grandparents'
    • Love & Romance >
      • Dancing Partner
      • The Greatest
      • Arthur & Guinevere
      • Hands That Touch
    • Christian Thoughts, Acts and Words >
      • Reuben's Naming Ceremony
      • Love makes the World go round
      • Walks along the Mirfield canal
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    • Audio Stories >
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        • Douglas the Dragon Play >
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        • The Ballad of Sleezy the Fox
        • Be My Life
    • 'Relaxation Rationale' >
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    • The Role of a Step-Father
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    • Christmas Songs & Carols
  • Bill's Blog
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October 31st, 2013

31/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"When I recently came across this image, it instantly brought my mind back to the cake shop of my youth. Twice in my young life cakes caused me great embarrassment.

The first occasion was when I was three years old. My father was in England working in a Yorkshire pit near Bradford. He was trying to get family accommodation to bring my pregnant mother and my two-year-old sister, Mary, across from Ireland to live here. On the day in question, My mother took me and my sister into a Dublin Tea Shop. As was customary at the time, the assistant would automatically bring a pot of tea to the table without the need to order, along with a cake stand that contained a dozen different types of delicious buns. One ate what one required and then paid on the way out. My mother only had enough money to buy herself a cup of tea and by the time she realised what I'd done, I'd scoffed down one cream cake and was feeding my face with a second. The story she told us afterwards was that we quickly did a runner.
 
The second occasion that a bun embarrassed me was when me and Geoffrey Griffiths (deceased for 15 years now), dared each other to enter a confectionery shop on our way to school in Heckmonwike and steal a cream bun. I was 9 years old and Geoffrey was 11 years old. Both of us considered ourself to be the best thief on the estate and yearned to be proclaimed 'the winner' to the much-sought-after title. Now the bun in question just wasn't any old bun, as that would have been too easy a task to accomplish for a pair of thieves with our shop-lifting abilities. We identified a particular large cream bun in the middle of the shop window and said that we would steal 'that' bun. Geoffrey went into the shop first and when the owner wasn't looking, he swooped to steal the bun. After he came out of the shop grinning from here to the other side of next week, we noticed that he'd only managed to steal half of the cream bun; leaving the remaining half on display for all to see. It therefore fell to me to enter the shop, distract the owner and then steal the other half of cream bun which surely would have drawn suspicion on the two of us, had it been left there in its half-naked form.


Years later, after my propensity to steal stopped, I became a Probation Officer. It was customary  whenever a colleague's birthday arrived in the office, for the birthday boy to buy cream cakes all round. They were over thirty colleagues who worked in the Probation Office and so there was always a birthday to celebrate and a cream cake to eat. Despite it being over 60 years after my illegal foray into the world of cream cake confectionery, I never forgot my original sin as I licked the cream of temptation." William Forde: October 31st, 2013. 



   

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October 30th, 2013

30/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Whether you be dog or owner or beauty or beast, we all need to 'pull a face' at the passing of life from time to time if we are to preserve our sanity. A very dear friend of mine, the deceased author, Stan Barstow (who incidentally once lived in Haworth), once told me over a meal that life was too short to constantly observe the code of civility. 'There comes a time in all our lives, Bill when we just have to let blast and hang the consequences!' Perhaps that's why the owner of this pooch has opened the passenger window?" William Forde: October 30th, 2013.













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October 29th, 2013

29/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Even the most mundane of particulars are capable of occupying the mind of a young child who is newly exploring the vast richness of the earth they were born into. Even the depth of their innocent questions is capable of stumping most adults, embarrassing them greatly or putting them on the spot.

When my son, William was only three years old  and he saw a heavily pregnant woman, he asked, 'How will the baby in her tummy get out, Daddy?' Naturally I gave him the traditional Yorkshire Pudding answer when I replied, 'The same way it got in there, son!' 

Children are also experts at conciseness of expression, which I suspect is much more to do with their innate honesty than any particular mastery of the mother tongue. Most children inherently have difficulty resisting the doing of something, indeed anything which they have specifically been told 'not to do'. Hence the one thing you should never say to a child is, 'Under no circumstances, Jimmy, must you ever do that;' unless of course you actually want the child to do it.

When a child asks their parent too many 'Why' questions in the same minute to which the adult cannot provide a satisfactory explanation that the child would understand, often the weary adult will resort to the standard reply, 'Because I say so' or 'Because I say so and you've got to do what I say.

'Our William's favourite response whenever I used the term, 'Because You've got to' was one of sheer child simplicity. 'Got to not to, Dad. Got to not to!' he would invariably reply.

My daughter Becky was just as defiant and smart in her response whenever I used to threaten to leave her behind if she didn't get a move on. She would simply swing her feet in the air nonchalantly and say, 'You go if you must. See if I care!' " William Forde : October 29th, 20013.

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October 28th, 2013

28/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Oh beautiful rider of white stallions, in the deepest of my winter thoughts thou bringest spring to mind and faint hearts to account. My heart races at a pace of burgeoning excitement that threatens to stop it each moment I feel you gently move between my thighs. You heighten my senses beyond all exhilaration and earthly expectation. I feel the wind in my face as we ride headlong into it; two forces yet one in body, releasing all freedom of movement and abandoning all restraint as heaven approaches and the dam walls bursts their banks in joyous outpouring." William Forde: October 28th, 2013.

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October 27th,2013

27/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"I was listening to Radio Five Live yesterday morning when I heard a most interesting discussion. The question was posed for the listener, 'What is the most expensive and dangerous substance in the world?' 


Naturally, oneself thought of those precious elements such as gold, uranium,etc.The presenter's guest then told the listener that one cup of the white powder would be enough to wipe out every single person in the whole world! I know that by now, all you 'Brains of Britain' out there will be shouting the answer back at me and calling me all the elephant names under the sun like, 'Dumbo', but I am still finding it hard to get my head around. 

The answer is, believe it or not, a commodity that so commonly used today by the fashion conscious and the vanity brigade. It is a protein and neurotoxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum and is the most acutely toxic substance known to man. We British bricks know it as Botox.

Many women who try it once try it again and again without any worry about the potential risks to facial disfigurement. Once the beauty bug is caught, many even progress to cosmetic surgery under the knife or have all manner of foreign matter inserted inside parts of their body.

Getting back to Botox. Now, I don't know about you, but wouldn't one think that something so powerful that even the most experienced homeopathic chemist in the world would never be able to identify a safe amount for use, would be kept under strict lock and key of the world's greatest scientists?


Not so it would seem! Anyone can walk into any chemist on the high street any day of the week during their lunch break and and have the stuff injected into their facial brow and cheeks by the new temporary assistant Tracy, who recently hailed from the Job Centre, after having worked three years packing supermarket shelves in Tescos, and who incidentally couldn't read, let alone obtain a training certificate of competence if a £1,000 prize depended on it!


I often wonder about the balance of society's sanity today when I now live in a country where excellent jam makers can no longer present their goods to sell at The Women's Institute Charity Day and boisterous children cannot play conkers or games like leap frog in the  playground any more because of 'Health and Safety' procedures. But allow dear little Tracy to create a world of Frankensteins and you won't hear one word of complaint or concern from our political lords. William Forde: October 27th, 2013.




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October 26th, 2013

26/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Isn't strange how all the very richest colours of the world are to be found in the birds, beasts, seas and lands which belong to all the poorest countries in the world. It makes one wonder where lies the 'richest of worldly experiences' and whether or not what the poorest nations have to offer the rest of us, far outweighs any material advantage enjoyed by 'more prosperous economies.'



My mind instantly goes to Jamaica, a country born out of slavery and one that exists today upon the patronage of tourists to its beautiful shores. Having worked with the people of Trelawny, Jamaica and all of its 32 schools during the years 2000-2002, I was amazed by the overall positive attitude of its peoples in relation to the daily hardships most of them experience. Many live on a meagre $1 a day, a subsistence level from which school fees have to be paid by the parents for every poor pupil they have parented, despite having no chance of their offspring ever getting a job in their own country or a passport out of it. Their classroom floors are carpeted with nature's earth, pupils line their paper and write on both sides and pencils are cut into threes sections to make them spread farther. Each hurricane season of its year witnesses the collapse and destruction of the poorly built homes of many citizens and uproots their pot-holed roads. The largest growth industry is the spread of drugs, and with a third-world health service to supply its gravely ill, the chances of reaching a distant hospital if ever needed before the patient dies, is slighter than this snow-free land ever winning an Olympic gold medal for ski jumping or toboggan racing. Jamaica is the murder capital of the world and yet it has more churches per 1000-population ratio than any other country on the face of the earth. Given all of its hardships and poor prospects faced by Jamaicans, its people seem to be born with a capacity of 'always looking ahead to better times to come.' It's little surprise that one of its favourite songs that acts as an ambassador across the world for 'positivism' begins with the words, 'Don't worry about a thing, 'cos every little thing's gonna be alright'  It's a funny old world, isn't it? " William Forde: October 26th, 2013.

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October 25th, 2013

25/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"What a bad hair day I'm having and the morning isn't over yet. It started at the crack of dawn. No sooner than I'd got out of bed I went to drink my saucer of milk, I stumbled over one of the children's toys and spilled it; feeding the carpet instead of me!



Then I unexpectedly pooped as I passed my owner and scarpered from her sight before she started turning up her nose at my presence.

When I was walking my morning round up this alley and down that one, it started raining buckets and spades and I got soaked. Then, as I was about to cross the road, a  ten-ton-truck sped by and after running through a big puddle, it  made a massive splash and drenched me to high heaven with the sheer force of its spray.



I had initially planned to meet this Tom down at the street corner, but there's just no way I'm letting him see me on a first date straight out of the shower." William Forde: October 25th, 2013.

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October 24th, 2013

24/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Beware all you animal lovers out there. However lonely you may be, however sad your lives are, however long it's been since you were last kissed; don't let dogs lick you. You literally don't know where they've been, what they've done with their tongues or who with!


Nobody would ever kiss us in a thousand years if only they knew all the places we had allowed all parts of our anatomy to venture into during the course of our excursions out and about. Whether it was up one alley way or down another, few of us would relish being outed. William Forde: October 24th, 2013.

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October 23rd, 2013

23/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"The loftier the thought, the higher is the seat of meditation required. Though looking down on one's fellow beings is disrespectful and only leads to one lowering oneself in the eyes of others, seeing them within their natural environments and better understanding their customs, ways and beliefs is the very best way of one looking up to another." William Forde: October 23rd, 2013.

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October 22nd, 2013

22/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"It's no good looking at me with that hang-dog face Lady, 'cos I'm not Sheila and it doesn't work with hard men like me as it does with soft touches like her.


Now, prick up your ears and you may learn something to your advantage. Here's some food for thought, Lady. There's food for dogs and there's food for Bill. This is Bill's food, so buzz off, Buster before I twist your ears and make them floppy again!" William Forde: October 22nd, 2013.

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October 21st,2013

21/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Now, that's what I call classy. Look at the chassis on that. The car's not all that bad either!" William Forde: October 21st, 2013.

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October 20th,2013.

20/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"The very best time of my day is the early morning. That is the time when I get my first cuddle of the day from the one I love the most. It constantly amazes me that somebody yet hasn't bottled the feelings that such a simple embrace can bring. If I'd my way, I'd make cuddles a mandatory morning experience for everyone in the country and not just family and very close friends upon fresh re-acquaintance." William Forde: October 20th,2013.

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October 19th, 2013

19/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Your very best friends in life are those who help you through hard times, give you a hand when you most need it and lend you a listening ear when you you just want to let off steam. These are real friends who are not found in places where the healing powers of both heart and humanity rarely venture. So when they take you to their bosom and into their confidence, bind them ever close to you and their presence shall never fail to comfort and console. Be aware that most of our advancements in life have been achieved on the shoulders of others and are rarely due to the sole efforts of ourselves. Always count your close friends among your greatest blessings, but beware of ever taking advantage of their friendship. Instead, treasure and nurture it and you'll always have it." William Forde: October 19th, 2013.

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October 18th, 2013

18/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Feelings of loss are the most fragile of all spent emotions.They can dampen the spirit of any positive thoughts for the future and sap the soul of all hope.

All creatures need a shoulder to cry on from time to time while others try to work it off or fight it out of their system.

So when you feel too fragile to move ahead, choose your comfort and cuddle zone for a much needed emotional break before moving forward with life once more.

Only standing firm and facing the uncertainty of the future ahead is capable of producing the required strength of mind and body to take one forever forward in the expectation of just rewards to come." William Forde: October 18th, 2013.

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October 17th,2013

17/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Oh wood of youthful wonder with shades so brown and green, show me your springtime one more season before my eyes close.


Though the years of mortals last a mere three score years and ten, your woodlands will endure belong all walks of common life and grace its presence into centuries new.

While I may not be around to see it, the wind  will still blow through tree branches and the birds still sing their song. Insects will continue to hide beneath their green canvas camouflage and blades of grass  continue to grow anew amid the fern and ground-land moss that pays homage at your feet.

Long after those who walked your footpaths from childhood through manhood and into old age  have left this earth, your fragrant carpet of floral delight will stand proud  within the sun and shade of woodland earth and wave in the breeze as couples walk by whispering words of eternal love.

Every now and then the flowers will shout out to all lovers who walk this path, 'Have heart and do not pluck me from my home so that advantage of fair maiden may be gained and love oaths exchanged between your sweet embraces.'

Soon spring will give way to summer, summer shall surrender to autumn and autumn merge into the cold of winter's morn once more. Then, when all life has seemingly ceased to grow, the end of winter shall kick-start spring into action once again as the woodland is reborn and the wheel of life turns full circle, powered by the wings of butterflies in river waters deep." William Forde: October 17th, 2013

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October 16th, 2013

16/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Whatever the circumstances of one are in this life, whether they  be  found in the branches of a tree or left out on a limb in the mobility stakes; if their destination remains clear, then all that is further required is the means of getting there. Whether one swings from the branches of a tree or gets one's skates on, matters not. The most important thing of all is to always to keep the primary focus of your love within your sight and grasp. Lose not the love of those who are closest to you and you will never lose your compass bearings or your way in the world." William Forde: October 16th, 2013.

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October 15th, 2013

15/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"The adoption of one creature by another, if it is to work out for the best, must be a two-way street of mutual love and affection. There are just some creatures in this world who were destined to find each other; who are meant to share each other's happiness and pain and where parting is such a heartbreaking wrench. Such raw emotions are the stuff of life that touch every feeling person and raise the hope for all humanity that in the final analysis, good shall prevail. Where mankind and his best friend continue to live in close proximity of the welfare of each other, their relationship and close bond shall never be broken." William Forde: October 15th,2013.

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October 14th, 2013

14/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Teaching a dog to be obedient is no different to teaching any other creature, human or otherwise. Behaviour and long-term learning depends upon creating the right environment, rewarding the behaviour you want to see established and either punishing or ignoring the behaviour that is undesired. One should also satisfy the expectations one is shaping and repeat the experience until it is learned and is automatically reproduced in given situations. Now then, stop being so darn highbrow about establishing correct table manners and let the poor dogs taste the meat. They're starving!" William Forde: October 14th, 2013.

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October 13th, 2013

13/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Smile and have a good day. Whatever you do, be careful not to bite off more than you are able to chew this Sunday. However, if you find that something sticks in your throat, then spitting it out is often the best way of clearing the air." William Forde: October 13th, 2013.

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October 12th, 2013

12/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"It is believed that the the best way to develop a different perspective is to find a way of distancing oneself from the situation being viewed, experienced or assessed. To do this, it helps to look from outside the situation of examination with a degree of emotional detachment. Another way is to apply a different thought dimension and become more positive in one's thinking. One of the most common and practical ways however is to learn to look at things, events, situations and people from a different angle to the one most common for seeing things; namely, looking at life from an opposite viewpoint of others." William Forde: October 12th, 2013.

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October 11th, 2013

11/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"How many of us have been saved by an angel of mercy at one time or another. Angels and saviours come in many forms and guises and invariably manifest themselves at a time in our lives when we least expect them, are most in need of them and are open to receive them. There is a saying that was once told to me by a guardian angel who once intervened in my life when I most needed him. He simply said, 'To have an angel, you must first be prepared to be one to others.' How wise are all creatures of good will. Be a traveller who refuses to walk by on the other side of the road and by doing so, you will too become a guardian angel to all mankind." William Forde: October 11th, 2013.

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October 10th, 2013

10/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Never say die! Many of us who have lost loved ones, particularly parents, secure comfort many years after the person has passed away by being constantly aware of their spiritual presence in our lives. When we die, there is never a time when all that we were and are die with us. Our faith lives on in those loved ones we leave behind, as do some of our precious objects of life that become comforting memories for those still alive. Our mannerisms and traits still live on in those who were closest to us; the way we spoke, stood, walked, gestured or even drank a cup of tea. All of these things remain to ensure that we will never be forgotten and will still influence the living when we no longer breathe. And even as future generations pass, our one-time image will still persist in showing itself anew as our genetic likeness suddenly crops up again in both face and mannerisms within our ancestral offspring. Our present-day face will be accurately mirrored in the face of some future distant cousin, great nephew or grandchild. So take comfort in the knowledge that though we may die, we always live on in one form or another, and all we are will never die whilst the genetic line continues. Long live the Fordes!" William Forde: October 10th, 2013.

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October 9th, 2013

9/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"The writer Mark Twain once remarked, 'My mother had a great deal of trouble with me, but I think she enjoyed it.' If Mark Twain's mother was like the vast majority of our mothers, I am sure that she did enjoy the upbringing of her children; including all the happiness and heartache that loving another attaches itself to. 


My mother, having given birth to seven children who lived, used to describe her experience as the 'agony and the ecstasy.' Being the eldest of the seven, I naturally felt obliged to tell the younger six that they were the 'agony' and I was the 'ecstasy.' I think they believed me?" William Forde: October 9th, 2013.

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October 8th, 2013

8/10/2013

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Thought for today:
"Starvation of either creature or person is an abomination of humanity. The cruelty to both creature and child alike is that starvation still exists today, and that it is allowed to happen at all. It offends all that is decent and good about the purpose of any creature's existence in this world. It's continued presence is a scourge upon the senses of all that is good and lessens the dignity of mankind as he tries to distinguish himself from that of the wild beast of the forest. 


Whether one is an Ibizan hound or children of the African war zones left to starve, it is simply obscene to the sensibilities of any reasonably-minded person that such horrors should still be allowed to exist in 2013 where food plates are empty on one side of the world while they are filled to the brim on the other.


I'm sure that you are all acquainted with the biblical account of Jesus feeding the 5,000 as he asked them to pass around the communal basket of five loaves and two fish. Let me tell you, that the miracle wasn't the feeding of 5,000 with five loaves and two fish: the true miracle was in showing mankind the 'possibility' that if they each pass around their basket of food after they have eaten their fill to the next person in the world, then there will be 'enough' food to feed all the people in the world. The moot question facing mankind today is which would represent the greater miracle: would it be a much greater miracle to achieve 'selfless sharing' throughout the world so that all might be fed than to feed 5,000 to their fill with five loaves and two fish?"  William Forde: October 8th, 2013.

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October 7th, 2013

7/10/2013

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Picture
Thought for today:
"Thank God that civilised society has become more enlightened over the past fifty years  and in the main, no longer judges a person's worth by the colour of their skin or the character of their circumstances.

I know however, that in saying this that one particular type of discrimination and racialism has simply been replaced by a newer type. And so it has been, ever since people with foreign faiths, cultures and faces have come to live here over the past centuries; the Huguenots, the Catholics, the Jews, the Irish, the West Indian, the Pakistani and more recently the Polish, Turks, Romanians and all manner of travelling Gypsy.

And yet, as a nation we appear to have most certainly progressed in many areas. Today, the indigenous population seems more concerned with jobs, housing, education, wage levels and allocation of the National Health resources when it seeks to restrict number of foreign migration to this country as opposed to the once-burning issue of 'Are they black or white?' 

Or is this other than it seems?  America and its citizens of the deep south are clearly more advanced in view than they were in the ugly 20's and 30's, yet discrimination of numerous kinds are still committed in their country's name and are been carried out in other parts of the world almost a century later than these lynchings took place. 

Put simply, there is more than one way to hang a person out to dry. If you segregate them by wealth, status, educational and employment prospects, medical entitlement, housing allocation and vagaries in the criminal justice system, some might well argue that whilst you may no longer engage in lynching the black person, although the rope has been demonstrably loosened, it still remains inexorably hanging around their necks as they are left to feel the social pressures of 2013. " William Forde: October 7th, 2013.




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