Two hearts with one mission, to dance together for eternity, is where our story begins. The steps to our much anticipated dance took patience, faith and perseverance⦠along with realizing we both have two left feet at times. Shockingly more her:) Toe stepping, no problem for our hearts, as Our hearts with this unimaginable, unexplainable love prevailed for our happily ever after.
Your love story with your beautiful lady is captivating!!! She is blessed to have your amazing love!!! Like I stated previously, your love and words you express for your lady would melt anyoneβs heartβ¦ it has mine. I wish I had this love and was loved by someone like you love her. β€οΈ
Completely not my business, but why all of this love and you left her? I realize there is probably more to your story, please feel free to share as I would hate to jump to conclusions π 2020?
Otherwise⦠go get her!!! tell her, show her, embrace her, add her!!
We have both been on here for awhile⦠why not help each other out?
Abbreviation of "that's the story". Used by Fred Dagg (John Clark), New Zealand comedian, now living and mirth-making in Australia. This expression may well have been common amongst numerous kiwis in the 70's, although it's current usage seems to rest with Fred Dagg junkies.
(1.) A script in our heads that directs how we see ourselves, and in turn, how we perceive and interact with our world.
Everyone has a memory and an environment, but how we make sense of our experiences, and react to them, is unique. That's our story. That's our personal script.
(2.) A description of how something happened (or evolved), based on a particular point of view. This context includes biographies and major historical events, but also interpersonal accounts of every day events.
(I.E. "You'll never guess who I saw at the grocery store today Sara."...)
(3.) Fictional Writing that serves as a source of entertainment. And (many times) uses that entertainment wrapping, to speak truths in a more palatable way.
One example:
-The way Charles Dickens used the guise of entertainment to make English society care about the plight of children, (even among the wealthy elite, who wouldn't be caught dead reading a book on child labor, abuse or neglect.)
Charles Dickens Novels succeeded where impersonal statistics and pamphlet propaganda could not. Because he entertained people with his stories, didn't tell them what to think, and created tangible characters readers felt they knew and wanted to root for. This is how he made the plight of abused orphans and child factory workers compelling enough, people wanted to make it their problem.
Another example:
- The way Science Fiction shows in the U.S. (like the Twilight Zone) were able to broach political topics on TV, no one else could get away with at the time, thanks to some insane censorship laws....and no one taking fictional stories seriously. (Cold War Era).
If you want to open closed minds, avoid censorship, or speak truth to an oppressive government, hide your message in a fictional story.