![]() Many of us will have PTSD for years to come especially our children. "We have a long way in various levels to go to navigate out of the current crisis we find ourselves in. That and the way something is said as opposed to or in conjunction with the content of what is being said. Sometimes it's not what you say but what you don't say that can carry a great deal of weight. "Everyone plays a role and has a calling and a strength. ![]() ![]() "I identify with the latter and consider myself a mediator and philosopher. "In life there are those of us who lead the charge, those of us who cower and hide and those of us who observe and contemplate in the hopes to bring balance to the push and pull of humanity," Jesse added. We do have much to learn from one another even if we do feel a stark disagreement with another. We also all know that really isn't happening, as we are in extremely divisive and desperate times. We need to engage in dialogue and civil discussion to learn anything from each other. "We all are on a path of decisions and evolving mind-states. I know this is idealistic but it is at the core of who I am regardless of your opinion on my way of thinking. "Perhaps I am a hopeless optimist or in truth I just desire a better world for us all to find a place to belong and find some harmony. "I am certain there are some diehard unwavering people who will take issue with my thoughts, I digress and welcome their differences," he continued. I then rewatched it and thought perhaps this will inspire someone to seek wisdom and understanding (over self righteousness and berating someone else for different perspectives, opinions or beliefs). ![]() I was simply answering a comment on the live feed. "This is one of those moments that I did not plan or think through. The 43-year-old singer, who has been open about his battles with anxiety and depression, took to his Instagram on Thursday (December 30) to share a short clip from an earlier Instagram Live video he made, and he included the following message: "I thought this particular part was worth a share if nothing else then to shed some light on why I am not screaming and preaching my (ever changing) opinions (be it political or about this virus) all over social media. We've known each other since we were 11 years old, and we got engaged about a month ago.KILLSWITCH ENGAGE frontman Jesse Leach has implored his social media followers to engage in civil discourse about sometimes divisive issues, saying we "have much to learn from one another even if we do feel a stark disagreement with another." "It's based on the girl who is now my fiancee. "I was into ZZ Top when I wrote that," Buckley says. Most personal, however, is "Rendez-Voodoo," which has a blues boogie undertow. "Me and some friends were in a historically themed bar one night, The Founding Fathers," says Buckley, "and there's this flag hanging in there that is one of the first of the republic and it has the motto, 'Don't give up the ship.' So I decided I was gonna have to work that into a song." There's also a Buffalo-inspired line in "Rebel Without Applause," which takes to task bands who are the antithesis of what they portray - "Don't give up the ship/We'd rather sink than admit it." The things you do on tour become a routine when you get home."īuckley also says the song is "very relevant" to his favorite movie, It's a Wonderful Life, noting that in his version of the Frank Capra classic, "Jimmy Stewart sings it to his wife, Donna Reed." "It's me considering my life when I get home from tour," Buckley says. Most obviously, there's "Buffalo Girls," which opens with the line, "We're makin' habits out of vanities." Buckley holds his hometown near and dear, and it figures prominently in The Big Dirty.
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