You Can’t Force Play

Posted by admin - December 31st, 2008

A student once asked me; “How come sometimes the music comes freely while other times, I feel blocked and can’t play?”

A perfectly valid question and one that many students of improvisation ask. You see, the problem is that many think they should be able to just sit down at the piano and play anytime anywhere. But this is unrealistic. Why? Because you can’t force play!

Improvisation is play. And when you try to force the music to appear, the exact opposite happens. Blocks to receiving the music are set up and the spirit is let down. All this can be avoided if we learn that there is a certain ebb and flow to creativity. Respect this natural tendency. Learn to see the creative force as one that naturally goes away, only to come back again, stronger and revitalized!

There is a natural order to creating that, if respected and trusted, will serve you well. Listen to yourself and don’t let your ego get the best of you.

Many students fear that if they can’t go to the piano and play, they’re creativity is dried up. Not true! They may be experiencing an ebb tide period. During this time, it’s best to take a break from playing and come back later on when the creative waters return.

EzineArticles Expert Author Edward Weiss

Edward Weiss is a pianist/composer and webmaster of Quiescence Music’s online piano lessons. He has been helping students learn how to play piano in the New Age style for over 14 years and works with students in private, in groups, and now over the internet. Stop by now at http://www.quiescencemusic.com/piano_lessons.html for a FREE piano lesson!

Learn to Play the Piano the Easy Way

Posted by admin - December 31st, 2008

Here are some pointers to help you on your journey in learning to play the piano:

1. Take some lessons with a good classical teacher.

2. Use the Hanon exercises (especially the scales and arpeggios) to gain finger dexterity and to know the correct piano fingering of the scales and arpeggios. Always use a metronome when you’re doing these exercises to develop your sense of timing. If you don’t have a metronome try putting an accent on the “one” count of every sixteenth note (e.g. ONE,two,three,four; ONE,two,three,four…etc…).

3. After learning the basics/rudiments of playing the instrument, find another teacher who can teach you how to play the chords (a good jazz piano improvisation teacher will do!) and how to improvise.

4. Master the five qualities of chords (major seventh, dominant seventh, minor seventh, half-diminished, and the diminished seventh) their inversions, arpeggios and scales.

5. Try to apply what you are learning to your favorite songs especially jazz standard songs even to some classical music pieces. You can use songbooks, fake books, real books and music sheets, which are readily available at your local music stores or online.

6. Listen to all types of music and try to transcribe phrases/passages/riffs/licks or songs that interests you. Listen to piano players - the way they play, improvise and learn from them. Try to read their biography to learn how they study, practice, who influenced them and their achievements. I believe these can help to make you a well-rounded piano player.

7. Play with other musicians or join a band in your school or in your neighborhood.

8. Try to sing the melody of the song you are playing (you might have a hidden talent in singing) or if you are improvising, sing (scat) what you are playing.

9. Buy some piano lesson books, magazines, piano lesson videos, piano lesson software or CD-ROM.

10. Practice, practice and practice!

Playing in Googlebot’s Sandbox with Slurp, Teoma, & MSNbot - Spiders Display Differing Personalities

Posted by admin - December 30th, 2008

There has been endless webmaster speculation and worry about
the so-called “Google Sandbox” - the indexing time delay for
new domain names - rumored to last for at least 45 days from
the date of first “discovery” by Googlebot. This recognized
listing delay came to be called the “Google Sandbox effect.”

Ruminations on the algorithmic elements of this sandbox time
delay have ranged widely since the indexing delay was first
noticed in spring of 2004. Some believe it to be an issue of
one single element of good search engine optimization such
as linking campaigns. Link building has been the focus of
most discussion, but others have focused on the possibility
of size of a new site or internal linking structure or just
specific time delays as most relevant algorithmic elements.

Rather than contribute to this speculation and further
muddy the Sandbox, we’ll be looking at a case study of a
site on a new domain name, established May 11, 2005 and the
specific site structure, submissions activity, external and
internal linking. We’ll see how this plays out in search
engine spider activity vs. indexing dates at the top four
search engines.

Ready? We’ll give dates and crawler action in daily lists and
see how this all plays out on this single new site over time.

* May 11, 2005 Basic text on large site posted on newly
purchased domain name and going live by days end. Search
friendly structure implemented with text linking making
full discovery of all content possible by robots. Home
page updated with 10 new text content pages added daily.
Submitted site at Google’s “Add URL” submission page.

* May 12 - 14 - No visits by Slurp, MSNbot, Teoma or Google.
(Slurp is Yahoo’s spider and Teoma is from Ask Jeeves)
Posted link on WebSite101 to new domain at Publish101.com

* May 15 - Googlebot arrives and eagerly crawls 245 pages
on new domain after looking for, but not finding the
robots.txt file. Oooops! Gotta add that robots.txt file!

* May 16 - Googlebot returns for 5 more pages and stops.
Slurp greedily gobbles 1480 pages and 1892 bad links!
Those bad links were caused by our email masking meant
to keep out bad bots. How ironic slurp likes these.

* May 17 - Slurp finds 1409 more masking links & only 209
new content pages. MSNbot visits for the first time and
asks for robots.txt 75 times during the day, but leaves
when it finds that file missing! Finally get around to
add robots.txt by days end & stop slurp crawling email
masking links and let MSNbot know it’s safe to come in!

* May 23 - Teoma spider shows up for the first time and
crawls 93 pages. Site gets slammed by BecomeBot, a spider
that hits a page every 5 to 7 seconds and strains our
resources with 2409 rapid fire requests for pages. Added
BecomeBot to robots.txt exclusion list to keep ‘em out.

* May 24 - MSNbot has stopped showing up for a week since
finding the robots.txt file missing. Slurp is showing up
every few hours looking at robots.txt and leaving again
without crawling anything now that it is excluded from
the email masking links. BecomeBot appears to be honoring
the robots.txt exclusion but asks for that file 109 times
during the day. Teoma crawls 139 more pages.

* May 25 - We realize that we need to re-allocate server
resources and database design and this requires changes
to URL’s, which means all previously crawled pages are
now bad links! Implement subdomains and wonder what now?
Slurp shows up and finds thousands of new email masking
links as the robots.txt was not moved to new directory
structures. Spiders are getting errors pages upon new
visits. Scampering to put out fires after wide-ranging
changes to site, we miss this for a week. Spider action
is spotty for 10 days until we fix robots.txt

* June 4 - Teoma returns and crawls 590 pages! No others.

* June 5 - Teoma returns and crawls 1902 pages! No others.

* June 6 - Teoma returns and crawls 290 pages. No others.

* June 7 - Teoma returns and crawls 471 pages. No others.

* June 8-14 Odd spider behavior, looking at robots.txt only.

* June 15 - Slurp gets thirsty, gulps 1396 pages! No others.

* June 16 - Slurp still thirsty, gulps 1379 pages! No others.

So we’ll take a break here at the 5 weeks point and take note
of the very different behavior of the top crawlers. Googlebot
visits once and looks at a substantial number of pages but
doesn’t return for over a month. Slurp finds bad links and
seems addicted to them as it stops crawling good pages until
it is told to lay off the bad liquor, er that is links by
getting robots.txt to slap slurp to its senses. MSNbot visits
looking for that robots.txt and won’t crawl any pages until
told what NOT to do by the robots.txt file. Teoma just crawls
like crazy, takes breaks, then comes back for more.

This behavior may imitate the differing personalities of the
software engineers who designed them. Teoma is tenacious and
hard working. MSNbot is timid and needs instruction and some
reassurance it is doing the right thing, picks up pages slowly
and carefully. Slurp has addictive personality and performs
erratically on a random schedule. Googlebot takes a good long
look and leaves. Who knows whether it will be back and when.

Now let’s look at indexing by each engine. As of this writing
on July 7, each engine also shows differing indexing behavior
as well. Google shows no pages indexed although it crawled
250 pages nearly two months ago. Yahoo has three pages indexed
in a clear aging routine that doesn’t list any of the nearly
8,000 pages it has crawled to date (not all itemized above.)
MSN has 187 pages indexed while crawling fewer pages than
any of the others. Ask Jeeves has crawled more pages to date
than any search engine, yet has not indexed a single page.

Each of the engines will show the number of pages indexed if
you use the query operator “site:publish101.com” without the
quotes. MSN 187 pages, Ask none, Yahoo 3 pages, Google none.

The daily activity not listed in the three weeks since June 16
above has not varied dramatically, with Teoma crawling a bit
more than other engines, Slurp erratically up and down and
MSN slowly gathering 30 to 50 pages daily. Google is absent.

Linking campaign has been minimal with posts to discussion
lists, a couple of articles and some blog activity. Looking
back over this time it is apparent that a listing delay is
actually quite sensible from the view of the search engines.
Our site restructuring and bobbled robots.txt implementation
seems to have abruptly stalled crawling but the indexing
behavior of each engine displays distinctly differing policy
by each major player.

The sandbox is apparently not just Google’s playground, but
it is certainly tiresome after nearly two months. I think I’d
like to leave for home, have some lunch and take a nap now.

Back to class before we leave for the day kiddies. What did
we learn today? Watch early crawler activity and be certain
to implement robots.txt early and adjust often for bad bots.
Oh yes, and the sandbox belongs to all search engines.

Mike Banks Valentine is a search engine optimization specialist
who operates http://WebSite101.com and
will continue reports of
case study chronicling search indexing of http://Publish101.com

Digital Photography Printing: The ABC’s of DPI’s, JPEG’s, and KB’s

Posted by admin - December 28th, 2008

Digital photography printing has opened a completely new world for amateur and professional photographers alike.

For most photographers, the backup of digital photography printing offers unprecedented freedom to get the best digital shots. No more worrying about that precious piece of film running out too soon - all without you knowing for sure that anything worthwhile is on it!

However, when it comes to getting the actual digital photography printing done, there are some things to keep in mind to prevent wasting too much of your quality photo paper - not to mention your costly printing ink.

With digital photography printing in mind, the first thing to look at is to ensure that you download the pictures at their full resolution. If you end up with 72dpi (dots per inch) pictures, your print quality will be useless. A 72dpi resolution is only good for viewing on your computer screen, but 200 - 300dpi will give a good quality 8×10 print.

Large prints are usually viewed from a greater distance, therefore for a 13×19 inch print 200 pixels per inch is probably enough, whereas for a 5×7 inch print you might need around 300 pixels per inch.

By looking at the file size you will quickly learn to be an expert judge on quality. A picture of 100kb (kilobytes) or less, is most probably too low-resolution for good quality digital photography printing. Once you get up to a minimum of 400kb, you are working with a more useful resolution for an 8×10 print.

When doing digital photography printing, you will mostly work with the JPEG file format. Keep in mind that every time you open and save a JPEG file, you lose some of the image information. You’ll therefore want to do all your changes in one sitting, and then save them only once.

If you’re proud enough of your photographic effort - or if you want those family shots to be available for the next generation - you’ll want your prints to be done on decent paper, just like you were used to in the ‘old days’ of photographic paper! In the end, your digital photography printing will be only as good as the paper you are using.

There are many new coated papers available specifically for this purpose, and you should look at what is recommended for the printer you are using.

These digital photography printing papers don’t come cheap, so plan carefully. Print only after final cropping, or on completion of other changes, such as adding a border with your imaging software.

The longest-lasting paper is acid free, usually called archival paper in the world of inkjet printing.

Regular color inkjet and laser printers are good for text and charts, but not always great for digital photography printing. Printers which are PictBridge-enabled, allow you to do digital photography printing directly from the camera. Portable printers, such as the HP Photosmart 320 series, allow you to take a snap and print out 4×6 digital photography pictures anywhere on the move.

Incidentally, for smaller 4×6 inch prints, dye-sublimation printers give excellent quality prints, and they are usually waterproof - like the film prints you were used to! However, the materials for such digital photography printing do not come cheap!

If you can’t get good enough results with your own digital photography printing, especially if you’re printing larger than 8×10, you may want to try one of the brick-and-mortar, or even online photo labs which make use of dedicated photo printers with excellent results.

Photo labs can handle digital files directly from your memory card. Take your homemade CD, your digital camera, or your memory card along for professional quality digital photography printing.

For more information visit Best-Digital-Photography.com

Rika Susan of Article-Alert.com researches, writes, and publishes full-time on the Web. Copyright of this article: 2006 Rika Susan. This article may be reprinted if the resource box and hyperlinks are left intact.

Digital Film Processing is Really the Only Option for Truly Quality Prints

Posted by admin - December 28th, 2008

Digital photography has taken off like wildfire these days, primarily due to its ease and quality in its digital film processing. With a good digital camera, it’s as though you’re using the very best Kodak film for every single one of your digital photos. Moreover, digital film processing can be done from the comfort of your own home with the right digital film processing software or with digital photo developing online.

The most standard form of digital film processing is digital photos of 4×5 film processing. By using this size, you can make sure to get the very best in cost and quality, as many digital cameras are designed to function their very best at that level. Moreover, if cost is your primary concern, then you’ll enjoy the advantage that comes with bulk digital photo developing for all of your parties and other important occasions where many people will be wanting copies.

Just like a standard camera with film, digital cameras use a lens and a shutter, except instead recording your image on film, it is captured electronically by way of a sensor, which converts it into a digital file. This file is saved on a memory device, which is frequently removable. This way, you can choose where you’d like to keep your pictures, and specifically what sort of digital film processing is best for you.

For example, some of your digital photos may be fine if they’re kept in digital form on your computer, but others, such as wedding photos, may require better quality digital film processing. This allows you to print your digital pictures on regular paper, photo quality paper, use a home digital film processing printer, or even take it for the professionals to manage, as you would regular film.

When it is your regular digital photography that you’ll be digital film processing, however, you’ll love the great benefits of having your digital photo quickly, easily, and accurately.

Dave Gonzalez

http://www.digital-film-developing.com/

Info Advice regarding TV Stands

Posted by admin - December 28th, 2008

When you are selecting to procure a spanking new television, one of the principal decisions that you have to make, particularly if you have a young family, is whether you require to wall-mount you’re TV, house it inside a living room cabinet or on a TV stand.

If you decide that you would like to lay your telly on a telly stand, it’s prudent to buy your stand alongside when you lay your hands on your new pristine telly in order that you are capable to erect it up as soon as it arrives.

Many makes of TV’s come with a stand as standard, even if you’ve selected TV is not one of these that do, you will be called for to choose on if you want to obtain a stand purposely designed for your telly or a basic telly stand that is especially produced to fit any type of television.

If you choose a television stand explicitly made by your TV’s producer, you will undoubtedly have to ensure that you have the correct model number of your specific telly close by when you are looking for the stand to go with it. Visit www.digitaldirect.co.uk for huge savings on many TV Stands.

Additionally, there are also quite a lot of styles of telly stands to be had, therefore you will have to choose whether or not you would like a ground stand, a plinth stand or just a desk-top stand. You may perhaps wish to get what is known as an “open cabinet”. Open cabinets are television stands which, unlike the traditional furniture television cabinets, consist of open shelves so that you can store your computer games whilst still being capable to get clear access to the cables & the back of your television when you need to.

Opting for the correct cabinet to suit your set-up can be exceedingly problematic, specially considering the number of television manufacturers in the market currently. To support you in making the right choice there is a significant collection of guides available online presently.

When you acquire a television or home cinema system, you may possibility wish for some accessories to go with it. There’s a substantial range of TV accessories available for you which include; remote controls, TV stands, television cabinets, wall-mount fixings and television cables.

Patriotic Music: Surprising Secrets About Those Flag-Waving Sounds

Posted by admin - December 27th, 2008

Whether played by a marching band, an orchestra, or a rock group, there are patriotic tunes that everyone in America finds familiar, exciting and uplifting. But how much do you know about how these songs were created? And what do you know about the people who wrote them?

There are some surprising facts behind all of this glorious music.

So, fire up the barbecue grill, look up at the fireworks, and strike up the band as we reveal the secrets behind the most influential nationalistic musical moments of all time.

“Star Spangled Banner,” Francis Scott Key, 1814.
Schoolchildren in America all learn how Key watched the British bombardment of Fort McHenry during the War of 1812 and so admired the courage of the beleaguered American forces that he wrote four stanzas of “The Star Spangled Banner” (only the first is usually performed). Key based the melody on an English drinking song called “To Anacreon in Heaven.” The song has only been the national anthem since 1931, and there was a strong movement to replace it with one of the other songs on this list.

“America (My Country ‘Tis of Thee),” Samuel F. Smith, 1832.
The music was composed in the 1700s, sometimes attributed to Henry Cary. First popular in Great Britain as “God Save the King (Queen),” the song became bi-continental in 1832. Modern audiences have been greatly moved by the R&B version by Ray Charles, a truly wonderful blending of emotion with what musicians call “the groove.”

“Rally ‘Round the Flag,” George F. Root, 1862.
Written for the Union army and its supporters during the Civil War, the song was hugely popular in the North. This didn’t prevent Confederate troops from writing their own lyrics and singing the song throughout the South.

“When Johnny Comes Marching Home,” Louis Lambert, c. 1863.
Lambert was a pseudonym for Union Army Bandmaster Patrick S. Gilmore. His lyrics, set to an old Irish folk song, were popular through the whole Reconstruction Era (1865-1896). It appears in an extended instrumental version on the soundtrack of Stanley Kubrick’s film “Dr. Strangelove.”

“Battle Hymn of the Republic,” Julia W. Howe, 1861.
Howe is another lyricist who succeeded by utilizing a pre-existing piece of music, in this case a camp meeting tune of the 19th century (which also became “John Brown’s Body”). The profound power of the words combined with the compelling melody cannot be denied, and it was sung at the funerals of Winston Churchill, Robert Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan.

“Overture: 1812,” Petr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, 1880.
Patriotic music doesn’t always revolve around the July 4th celebration, or even refer to the USA. Tchaikovsky got Russian hearts a-pounding with his “1812 Overture in E Flat Major Op. 49,” written to celebrate the 70th anniversary of his country’s victory battle during the Napoleonic Wars.

“Semper Fidelis,” John Philip Sousa, 1889.
Popular ever since it was first performed, the effective and spirited tune takes its name from the U.S. Marine Corps motto meaning “always faithful” and is dedicated to the Marines.

“America the Beautiful,” Katharine Lee Bates, 1895, 1904, 1913.
Originally a poem that Bates twice revised after its first publication in 1885, “America the Beautiful” was sung to several different melodies. The song associated with it today is “Materna,” composed by Samuel A. Ward in 1882, but it was also often performed to the tune of “Auld Lang Syne.”

“Stars and Stripes Forever,” John Philip Sousa, 1896.
Composed on Christmas Day, “The Stars and Stripes Forever” has become the country’s official march (US Code, Title 36 Chapter 10). Sousa wrote lyrics to the song, but they are little known today (sample: “Let martial note in triumph float / And liberty extend its mighty hand / A flag appears ‘mid thunderous cheers, / The banner of the Western land.)”

“Yankee Doodle Boy,” George M. Cohan, 1904.
“You’re A Grand Old Flag,” George M. Cohan, 1906.
“Over There,” George M. Cohan, 1917.
Known as “the man who owned Broadway,” Cohan was a superstar before the term was coined. While his film biography is called “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” the title of his first big tribute to America is actually “The Yankee Doodle Boy.” Cohan excited U.S. audiences again in 1906 with “You’re a Grand Old Flag,” although the original line was “You’re a Grand Old Rag.” It was America’s entrance into World War I in 1917 that inspired Cohan to write “Over There,” for which he received a congressional medal.

“God Bless America,” Irving Berlin, 1938.
The prolific Berlin (900+ songs despite being unable to read music) originally wrote this song right after the first World War, but did not complete it until just before World War II. Kate Smith first performed it during her radio show on Armistice Day, 1938. An immediate sensation, the song was often suggested to replace the “Star Spangled Banner” as the national anthem.

“Star Spangled Banner,” Jimi Hendrix, 1969.
The legendary guitarist took the stage near dawn on the final day of the Woodstock Music and Art Fair. The 13th song in his hour-long set was an incendiary rendition of the venerable tune. In a performance that was somehow savage and grand at the same time, Hendrix wrestled new levels of emotion from the song and generations have never heard it quite the same way again.

“Apocalypse Now,” Francis Ford Coppola, 1979.
The music in question is “Ride of the Valkyries,” from Richard Wagner’s opera, “Die Walkure” (1854-56). The composition fit perfectly into director Coppola’s nightmarish vision of the Vietnam War. The sequence, featuring a helicopter attack at dawn, never fails to raise the emotions of viewers.

EzineArticles Expert Author Scott G

Scott G owns G-Man Music & Radical Radio (http://www.gmanmusic.com) where he makes radio commercials for Verizon Wireless, Goodrich, Micron, National Steel, the Auto Club, and many others. He is also recording artist The G-Man, with 4 albums on iTunes and Delvian Records.

http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/immedia@pacbell.net
/detail?.dir=8e52&.dnm=dd51.jpg&.src=ph

Innovation The Secret Of Giant Success

Posted by admin - December 25th, 2008

Surf the Web for more than about five minutes and you’ll start to recognize a pattern: there are a small number of great sites that do fantastic things… and a very large number of me-too sites that try to make money by doing the exact same thing.

Now I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with those me-too sites. I’m all in favor of competition and sometimes a me-too site can offer features that improve on the original. They might make less money than the original but even if they only make a fraction of the first site’s income, that can often be enough for the copycat site’s owner.

But when you come up with a brand new idea, you can really clean up.

I’ve just launched a new site: www.500words.com. The idea is very simple. I’ve put 500 words on a page and publishers can sponsor a link from that word to their site. The links stay up for two years, give traffic and provide a novel experience for both visitors and sponsors. For a slightly larger fee, publishers can also add their own keywords.

Within three days, 300 of the original words had been sold. I’ve also been inundated with requests for the script I used to create the site.

I didn’t sell those words because they were particularly valuable. I sold them because the site had created a buzz and that’s what happens when you create a new idea online.

The Web is a very gossipy world. Whenever something new and exciting happens, word gets around very, very fast. Links are posted, emails exchanged and people start asking each other if they’ve seen your site. In no time at all, you’ve got more traffic than you could have possibly imagined. That viral marketing is the real power of the Internet.

Coming up with innovative ideas isn’t that hard. The idea for 500words.com was inspired by MillionDollarHomepage.com. I saw what I liked about that site, recognized where it was weak and came up with a whole new idea. I didn’t put up another sponsored pixel site no one would have been interested in that I produced something new.

As you’re surfing the Web, ask yourself what new ideas you can come up with. Make it exciting and innovative, and you’ll generate a ton of interest.

Joel Comm is The Internet Revenue Expert. Online for over 20 years, Joel teaches people how to make money in the digital age. The recognized authority on Google AdSense, Joel teaches how to multiply your AdSense income at The AdSense Code. To ask Joel Comm a question about making money online, visit http://www.AskJoelComm.com Joel invites you to visit his word site, http://www.500words.com

Joel Comm - EzineArticles Expert Author

No Load Life Insurance

Posted by admin - December 25th, 2008

Many types of life insurance policies are often pushed by agents because of the commissions that they generate from them. For a traditional insurance policy the agent could be looking at 10-20 years worth of commissions, which all adds up to higher costs for your when trying to obtain a policy. There is an alternative in no load policies that take out the traditional commission and marketing fees and usually are sold for a flat fee by the broker. Some of these policies are even sold directly to consumers by the insurance companies eliminating the agent altogether.

No-load life insurance is offered mainly through financial brokers who may work with a number of different insurers. They will usually receive a flat fee based on the size and length of the policy. One of the greatest advantages for the consumer is since the policy does not charge commissions and other fees this can mean lower premiums for the purchaser. For variable life insurance, these lower expenses mean a higher percentage of your premium goes to work for you right away, allowing you to build your cash value faster.

If you are interested in finding out more about these types of policies you should consult with your agent or check out the insurance services section of your local bank or financial brokerage. Many times they deal exclusively with no-load policies and can help you setup a policy that will secure your financial future for your family at a much lower cost to you.

Marvin Toller is a writer and internet publisher who likes to give people Life Insurance Information together with other insurance info. Check out his life insurance news and in depth information website best-rates-on-life-insurance.com

together again

Posted by admin - December 25th, 2008

Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean I am not there
doesn’t mean I can’t hear you
doesn’t mean I don’t know
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean I don’t care
doesn’t mean I can’t see you
doesn’t mean I am not watching over you
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean I am not a star in the sky
doesn’t mean I am not next to you
doesn’t mean you can’t miss me
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean I can’t be in your heart
doesn’t mean we have to stop loving one another
doesn’t mean I am not touching you
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean we can’t be together again
doesn’t mean I am not holding you
doesn’t mean I am not hugging you
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean I am not smiling at you
doesn’t mean that we can’t be friends
doesn’t mean that you can’t have hope
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean you have to stop living your life
doesn’t mean you can’t talk to me
doesn’t mean I can’t be in your thoughts
Just because you can’t see me…
doesn’t mean you can’t have happiness
doesn’t mean you can’t dream of me
doesn’t mean I can’t be in your prayers
doesn’t mean you have to lose faith

Doesn’t mean we will never find one another again. We will be together again before to long

Just because you can’t see me

www.originalpoetry.com

  1. In or into a single group, mass, or place: We gather together.
  2. In or into contact: The cars crashed together. She mixed the chemicals together.
    1. In association with or in relationship to one another; mutually or reciprocally: getting along together.
    2. By joint or cooperative effort: We ironed the entire load of clothes together.
  3. Regarded collectively; in total: She is worth more than all of us together. Considered together, the proposals made little sense.
  4. In or into a unified structure or arrangement: put the food processor together.
  5. Simultaneously: The bells rang out together.
  6. In harmony or accord: We stand together on this issue.
  7. Informal Into an effective, coherent condition: Get yourself together.

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