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REQUIEM

Requiem

If we can get Jen Groark out of the water long enough to dry, we might be lucky to see her in class again soon. But, we're so proud of what she and her husband Bryce are doing that we want to support them in any way possible.

They have recently completed a shark conservation film entitled Requiem through what they call a "super low budget Jen and Bryce production":

The story follows Jen - as she learns more about sharks and their battle to evade extinction from finning and over-fishing. Over 100 million sharks are killed worldwide every year! That's 275,000 killed every day on average!

The film has been playing all over the world and recently won an Accolade for the 2007 Best Nature/Wildlife/Environment Category and was nominated last weekend for Best Film at the North Sea FilmFestival (The Hague, Netherlands).

We made REQUIEM in association with WildAid, a non-profit organization that is on the front line protecting sharks. We have started selling copies of the film on DVD for $20 + $5 shipping. A donation of $5 from every sale is being donated to the WildAid shark fund.

Watch the Trailer (2 minutes).

Need a Christmas gift or two? You may buy some via Pay Pal from Living Ocean Productions, the Groarks' company. Alternate contact information is available on their website.

Play the Game!

Life, like all other games, becomes fun when one realizes that it's just a game.
-Nerijus Stasiulis
Chair
A story by Pierce Vincent Eckhart:

When I was a Boy Scout, we played a game when new Scouts joined the troop. We lined up chairs in a pattern, creating an obstacle course through which the new Scouts, blindfolded, were supposed to maneuver.

The Scoutmaster gave them a few moments to study the pattern before our adventure began. But as soon as the victims were blindfolded, the rest of us quietly removed the chairs.

I think life is like this game. Perhaps we spend our lives avoiding obstacles we have created for ourselves and in reality exist only in our minds. We're afraid to apply for that job, take violin lessons, learn a foreign language, call an old friend, write our Congressman - whatever it is that we would really like to do but don't because of personal obstacles.

Don't avoid any chairs until you run smack into one. And if you do, at least you'll have a place to sit down.

Ready, aim, maim.

Thedive

“The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short; but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark.” -Michelangelo

Original Photo: Jerrie Stafford

Babel

Babel

If you read the reviews, Rolling Stone describes the movie that I saw, and the New York Times, discounts what I felt.

Some movies draw you in, they take you into the period or scene and you feel like a bystander or a fly on the wall. Not unlike watching Memoirs of a Geisha. Others, the movies that I really like, strap you into your seat, move you in 6 directions and involve all your senses. Memento was like that and Babel came close.

Memento made me feel as though I had lost my short term memory and Babel felt like Google Earth with sound. Spin the world around and where you place your index finger to halt rotation, magnify it.Then go past the culture, the lanquage, the facial expression, the fear, and straight to the heart of each person. At the source, we're all the same.

If we all spoke from the heart then, would it not be the same language?