“Share From My Recovery Blog ~“My Honor, Tribute, And A Day Of Mourning For Poet & Author ~Maya Angelou And Her Passing Today”

Remembering And Honor Dr. Maya Angelou….

“The renowned poet, author and civil rights activist with the unmistakably regal voice died on May 28 at the age of 86.”


(Story Courtesy Of MSNBC ~ Rehema Ellis and Elizabeth Chuck)
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Maya Angelou, the renowned poet, author and civil rights activist with the unmistakably regal voice, has died. The author of the celebrated autobiography “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” was 86 years old.

Her death comes less than a week after Angelou announced she would not attend the 2014 MLB Beacon Awards Luncheon, where she was to be honored, citing “health reasons.” Last month, she also canceled an event in Fayetteville, Arkansas, because she was recovering from an “unexpected ailment” that left her hospitalized.
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“The mayor is very saddened to hear the loss of a woman of such renowned phenomenal status as Dr. Angelou. Our prayers are with her family, her staff and all the people she has worked with,” Linda Jackson-Barnes, assistant to Winston-Salem Mayor Allen Joines, said.

Angelou was born on April 4, 1928, in St. Louis, Missouri, under the name Marguerite Annie Johnson, and was raised in Stamps, Arkansas, and San Francisco, after her parents sent her off to live with her grandmother in California when she was fresh with a white store clerk in Arkansas, the Associated Press reported.

She grew up to become a singer, dancer, actress, writer and Hollywood’s first female black director.

Angelou had an impressive list of accolades: She was a three-time Grammy winner and was nominated for a Pulitzer, a Tony, and an Emmy for her role in the 1977 groundbreaking television mini-series “Roots.”

But her success didn’t come easily. Angelou’s life struggles were fodder for her work.

Her childhood had been marked by sexual abuse, which she detailed in “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” — the first of six autobiographies she wrote.

A few weeks after she finished high school, at 17, she gave birth to her son, Guy. A single mother, she supported her son by working as a waitress and a cook, but music, dance, and poetry were her true passions.

Her first big break came as a singer in the 1950s, when she toured Europe with a production of the opera “Porgy and Bess.” In 1957, she recorded her first album, “Calypso Lady.”
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In 1960, she moved to Cairo, where she edited an English-language weekly newspaper. The following year, she went to Ghana to teach music and drama. It was in Ghana that she met Malcolm X, coming back to the U.S. in 1964 with him to help him build his new coalition, the Organization of African-American Unity.

It was in 1970 that she published “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” a painful tale of growing up in Jim Crow South, which is now on children’s reading lists in schools across the country (along with sometimes being censored for its raw account of rape and teen pregnancy).

“‘I thought that it was a mild book. There’s no profanity,” Angelou once told the AP. “It speaks about surviving, and it really doesn’t make ogres of many people. I was shocked to find there were people who really wanted it banned, and I still believe people who are against the book have never read the book.”

Between Angelou’s fiction, non-fiction, and published verse, she amassed more than 30 bestselling titles.

Angelou was also a trailblazer in film. She wrote the screenplay and composed the score for the 1972 film “Georgia,” and the script, the first-ever by an African-American woman to be filmed, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.
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In more recent years, it was her interactions with presidents that made headlines. In 1993, she wowed the world when her reading of her poem “On the Pulse of the Morning” was broadcast live globally from former President Bill Clinton’s first inauguration. She stayed so close with the Clinton’s that in 2008, she supported Hillary Clinton’s candidacy over Barack Obama’s.

She also counted Nelson Mandela and the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., as friends, and served as a mentor to Oprah Winfrey when Winfrey was starting out as a local TV reporter. When she was in her 20s, Angelou met Billie Holiday, who told her: “You’re going to be famous. But it won’t be for singing.”

Angelou read another poem, “Amazing Peace,” for former President George W. Bush at the 2005 Christmas tree-lighting ceremony at the White House.

In North Carolina, Angelou lived in an 18-room house, the AP reported, and taught American Studies at Wake Forest University.

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“What more can I add to this *Beautiful Tribute* To Maya Angelou”…
She inspired me to love what I do as a Writer and Author. She encouraged me with her words in my recovery, and showed by example how to help others from addiction. She was one of the most *Inspirational Souls* I’ve ever know, and she taught many generations of us to be better people with no Color, Race, Creed, or Religious barriers…
There will be no other like, Dr. Maya Angelou”…
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“May You Rest In Peace In The Arms Of Our Father In Heaven”…


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God Bless,
Author, Catherine Townsend-Lyon

“A Moment Of Silence And Prayers To Those Lost On Flight 370 & Their Families”

“Dear Lord, Please Wrap Your Loving Arms Around Those Who Have Come To You From This Tragic Event, And Love In The Hearts Of All Those Who Lost A Loved One On “Flight 370″…….AMEN”…..

View image on Twitter

REALLY?  A TEXT?   SHAMEFUL…….

Dear Copenhagen Zoo, WTF Were You All Thinking?

OK,……IS IT JUST ME, OR IS ANYONE ELSE “OUTRAGED” ABOUT THE KILLING OF A HEALTHY ANIMAL AT DENMARK’S, COPENHAGEN ZOO?
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(Warning: Strong Word and my writing is a hot mess due to getting my point across)
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I found my own photo to use for my blog post, as I didn’t want to indulge the “Copenhagen Zoo” by using one of theirs, and the “POOR JUDGEMENT” &  ACT of MURDER of an innocent giraffe!
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What the HELL were you all thinking? I guess you weren’t when you SHOT & KILLED a giraffe for nothing more than OVER POPULATION?? AND THEN, you cut it up in pieces and fed the giraffe to your lions?
WHAT WORLD DO ALL LIVE IN?
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It surely is not planet earth. I just happen to see the zoo curator on CNN news trying to defend what HE allowed at his zoo, and he had the F_ _KING BALLS to say that, “WE in America may not understand their countries actions to over population of animals. Then he also had the NERVE to say that they shot the giraffe while attendees at the zoo WATCHED!! AND OF COURSE,…..Most were young children!! AGAIN, WTF?
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The curator explained it as a “Learning Lesson of Life” for the children. WTF? I watched one little girl pull her beanie cap down over her eyes on CNN as to not want to LOOK AT THE DEAD GIRAFFE!! I mean, this is SO WRONG on SO MANY LEVELS!
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Yes, I’m hopping F_ _KING MAD! I think this curator, and the zoo should be prosecuted for “Animal Mutilation, Cruelty to animals, and INHUMANE TREATMENT OF ANIMALS at the least”!!  NOW honestly, what parent would let their children stand around and watch an animal get shot in the head?? What kind of PARENTS are these people? They let their kids watch this Brutality? I think I can safely say,…..NOW I’VE SEEN IT ALL!!

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IS IT ME? AM I missing something from this violent act to an animal. Yes, we do need to teach our children about life, and the cycle. We are born, we live, and yes, we die. But I’m sure as HELL there is a more appropriate way to teach them then going to your local zoo and let them watch an animal get shot in the head POINT BLANK isn’t there? Here is some of the CNN story sort of, kind of defending the zoo’s actions:….
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**OH, and by the way, I deleted most the photo’s that CNN had, as they showed the zoo showing and talking to THE VISITORS about the Autopsy he performed on the giraffe and the photo’s of the zoo showing all the visitors them feeding the poor animal to THEIR LIONS!!

Protestors demonstrate outside the Copenhagen Zoo against the killing of the giraffe on February 9.
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Danish Zoo criticized for killing giraffe

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CNN:
Our European Endangered Species Programmes (EEP) have been established to ensure a viable future for endangered animals — including giraffes — despite the destruction of their habitats and rampant poaching of wild animals.
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More than 700 giraffes are kept within our institutions to the highest possible standards of welfare and care by zoos such as Copenhagen, and EAZA monitors breeding closely to ensure that the species has the genetic diversity it needs to have the best possible chance of survival in the long-term.
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While we understand that some members of the public are upset by the euthanization of the giraffe at Copenhagen zoo, the protection of the species as a whole must be our priority.
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Our resources are regrettably finite, and as a result, the EEP must prioritize animals which can give to the overall genetic health of the captive population.
This means that in rare cases (five in the case of giraffes in EAZA zoos since records began in 1828), animals must be removed from the population by management euthanasia.
Compare this to the 60 billion+ healthy, young animals killed each year worldwide for human consumption. In-breeding is a serious problem that can lead to genes being passed on that increase the population’s susceptibility to disease and other chronic conditions which threaten the future of the species in our care.
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Zoo staff get death threats
As for alternative solutions, we cannot in good conscience recommend the transfer of animals under our protection to zoos which are not our members and therefore not subject to our strict standards of animal husbandry and welfare; transfer within our network does not represent a solution to the unsuitability of the individual animal for breeding. Contraception is difficult and in its infancy for female giraffes, and can be irreversible.
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Castration of a male animal can have also undesirable side-effects, and a place that could otherwise be reserved for an animal that can contribute to its species’ future is lost.
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Release into the wild of this single individual would almost certainly result in early death for the animal, after a long and stressful journey of thousands of kilometers — reintroduction is an intensive and complicated matter and we would not countenance this unless recommended to by the IUCN, the paramount global body for nature conservation. All of these alternatives were explored, and none were found to be viable; in addition, EAZA’s position is supported by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
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EAZA members do not euthanize animals lightly, and we are saddened by the death of any animal in our care.
Nonetheless, we strongly support Copenhagen Zoo, which has an exemplary record of animal welfare, education, research and conservation, and which took great pains to be transparent about the situation — 7,000 visitors came to Copenhagen Zoo on Sunday, while 15 protesters stood outside.
The Copenhagen public spoke with their tickets to the zoo and left knowing far more about the real threats to conservation of giraffes in the wild.
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OK, so do by the explanation? I sure as hell don’t. They can Spin It anyway they want. This was pure and simple
“Animal Cruelty” in it’s Finest Form…..SHAME ON YOU Copenhagen Zoo!
What are your “Thoughts”?
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Author, Catherine Townsend-Lyon