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Feb 24, 2015

Best Wedding Pictures From Around The World...Guaranteed to take your breath away

Unknown - 12:17 PM

Some of the best ways to see some of the best photography work is to attend a photography contest. An example of one of these elite contest are held by The International Society of Professional Wedding Photographers. Quarterly they hold a competition with their members to see who can capture the best wedding pictures.

The 20 diverse categories are that photos can be entered into are meant to highlight different parts that can make a great wedding Things like lighting composition, and dynamic movement or raw emotion. The ISPWP’s website shows how challenging and special the craft can be.


May 27, 2014

the body builder with no arms!

Unknown - 1:49 PM
Dailymail reports that this past weekend at the NPC Junior USA Bodybuilding Championship, only one bodybuilder among hundreds of the men and women competing got a standing ovation. 


Though she didn't win any major awards, armless bodybuilder Barbie Thomas had the Charleston, South Carolina crowd cheering and on their feet. 

The 37-year-old mother-of-two lost both her arms during a horrific electrical accident as a toddler - but that hasn't stopped her from pursuing her bodybuilding dream.


 Thomas says she can do anything an average person can do - except she uses her feet. 
That includes brushing her teeth, making dinner, taking milk out of the fridge, texting, shopping, putting on makeup and even driving.


The single mom - who has been married three times - began bodybuilding back in 2003.
She said: 'I used to read about all the fitness competitors in magazines - and I thought that was the coolest thing ever. I wanted to be like them and do the things they were doing. I thought it was amazing.' 
Thomas decided to take the plunge into the sport after years of doubting herself and wondering if she'd even qualify because she didn't have arms to do the competition mandatories: 'I finally called the locale chairperson and talked to him about it; and he gave me the green light.


Thomas lost her arms when she was two years old. She climbed onto an electrical transformer and grabbed the wires. The electricity entered her hands and surged through her body - scorching her arms down to the bone and turning them into something 'like charcoal.'

'The doctor said I wouldn't live - and if I did live, I'd probably be a vegetable,' she said.

'But God had a different plan for me; I'm still here, healthy, and alive and well.'
 
 
 
 
 
So what's your excuse? share this amazing story with family and friends across social media by clicking on any of the share buttons below.

May 26, 2014

Best Piece Of Advice You'd Ever Need.... Whether You Are 20 or 7O!

Unknown - 1:53 PM
A quora user asked the question, 'I am in my late 20s and feel I have wasted a lot of time. Is it too late?' and got the most awesome answer one could get in a situation like this. I particularly found this particular reply awesome, out of the many he got, because it fits everybody no matter how young or old they are.

Below is the reply by a quora user, James Altucher.

When I was 27 I had yet to do (or even start) anything or any path that eventually led to future successes. I had not started any companies. I later started over 10. I had not written any published books. I later published 10 and have another 5 this year. I had yet to be asked my opinion on anything important. I had yet to date someone I loved. I had yet to have kids. I had yet to travel to many of the countries I've since traveled to.

Most importantly, I had yet to massively fail. I did that all through my 30s.

Here are other examples  of people who found great success not only after the age of 27, but after the age of 45:

Rodney Dangerfield didn’t succeed in comedy until his 40s. One of the funniest guys ever, he was an aluminum siding salesman. And then he had to start his own comedy club, Dangerfields, in order to actually perform as a comedian. He chose himself to succeed! But not until his 40s.

Ray Kroc was a milkshake salesman into his 50s. Then he stumbled onto a clean restaurant that served a good hamburger run by two brothers with the last name McDonald. He bought McDonalds when he was 52.

Henry Miller wrote his first big novel, Tropic of Cancer, at age 40.

Raymond Chandler, the most successful noir novelist of all time, wrote his first novel at age 52. But he was young compared with Frank McCourt, who won the Pulitzer for his first novel, Angela’s Ashes, written when he was 66. And, of course, Julia Child was a young 50 when she wrote her first cookbook.

One of my favorite writers of all time: Stan Lee, created the entire universe for which he is known for: the Marvel Universe, when he was 44, inventing the characters Spiderman, The Fantastic Four, the Avengers, etc.

If you don’t like to kill people but still need a weapon, consider the Taser, invented by Jack Cover when he was 50. He didn’t sell a single one until he was 60.

If you like restaurant reviews you might have read Zagats. Started by Tim Zagat who quit his job as a lawyer in order to create the book of reviews when he was 51.

Harry Bernstein was a total failure when he wrote his best selling memoir, “The Invisible Wall”. His prior 40 (Forty!) novels had been rejected by publishers. When his memoir came out he was 93 years old. A quote from him: “If I had not lived until I was 90, I would not have been able to write this book, God knows what other potentials lurk in other people, if we could only keep them alive well into their 90s.”

Peter Roget was a mediocre doctor who was finally forced to retire in his early 70s. But he became obsessed with words that have similar meanings. Was his “purpose” as a medical practitioner or as a guy who could play with words? Do you know him as a doctor or as the author of Roget’s Thesaurus which he wrote when he was 73.

When I was in college I ate Ramen noodles every day. One time in a grocery store a woman tried to tell me they were the worst thing I could eat. Really? Like worse than eating a brick, for instance? That was when I was 19. Now I’m 45. It didn’t hurt me that much that I ate Ramen noodles for an entire year because it was the only thing I could afford. If something costs 25 cents and has a few slivers of peas in it then its ok by me. Meanwhile, the inventor of Ramen noodles didn’t invent it until he was 48 years old. Thank god for him!

(I would have died of starvation if not for the guy who invented this).
  
Charles Darwin was a little bit “off” by most standards. He liked to just collect plants and butterflies on remote islands in the Pacific. And then he wrote Origin of Species when he was 50.

To top it all off, Henry Ford was a failure at his first Model T car, invented when he was 45, because he didn’t yet have the productivity efficiencies of the assembly line, which he developed when he was 60.

This is not meant to be inspirational. You might never have your “great” thing that you do. I’m not even saying “it’s the journey that one should love”. Because some journeys are very painful. And nobody says you get special marks in death if you wrote a great novel at the age of 50. Or came up with a great chicken, or a way to stuff lots of people into factories.

I’ve stumbled and fallen and got up and survived enough that I’m sick of goals and purposes and journeys. I want to cut out the middleman. The journey. The desperation and despair that thinking of a “purpose” entails. Fuck purpose. It’s ok to be happy without one. You don’t need to pay with lots of unhappiness to buy happiness.

Meanwhile, Harlan Sanders made such a great chicken that even though he had barely made a dime off of it (that would happen 15 years later), at the tender age of 45 the Governor of Kentucky made Sanders an honorary colonel.

Last week i turned 45 years old. So there’s still hope for me.


Share this motivating story with your friends and families by clicking on any of the share buttons below


May 22, 2014

Married to the mob: the man who married 107 women ... and had 185 kids

Unknown - 2:17 PM
He fell in love with his first wife because she was sincere and eager to please. His second wife, a cousin, was irresistible because she did everything he wished and nothing he didn't.
I get a revelation from God telling me any woman I'm going to marry. If it wasn't from God, I wouldn't have gone beyond two 
"That alone made me love her."
His third wife won him because she submitted to his every request. "I saw her, I liked her. I went to her parents and asked for her hand in marriage."

Wife No. 4 was very obedient.

So was wife No. 5.

Wife No. 6, the same.

As were wives 7 and 8 and 9 and ...

Well, by then - it was the late 1980s - things had taken off for Bello Maasaba, an Islamic faith healer from this city in Niger state. He went from a wedding every few months to one every few weeks. All told, the 87-year-old has married 107 women, which, even in a society with a tradition of polygamy, is on the high side. The Nigerian government is not amused. Neither are Islamic authorities in the state.

But he's still marrying, every time Miss Right comes along.
He now has 86 wives, the youngest 19 and the oldest 64.

Nine have died and 12 he divorced (for disobedience).

But how on earth does he ... ?

To ask the delicate question about how a man with so many wives, well, manages, one first has to cross a dusty street in this hot city in northern Nigeria where the sun bleaches the colour from the street.

Droning Chinese motorcycles belch choking fumes. Women in flowing garments sit under umbrellas in the market, selling fruit and vegetables. A looming four-storey house with 89 rooms and a broad verandah supported by gold columns overlooks the street with an air of faded grandeur.But its view is inauspicious: an open gutter running from a bank of rickety street toilets, their wooden doors askew.

On the porch, dozens of men are seated - some relations, some followers. They rustle in excitement at the approach of guests. Choruses of "You are welcome" echo like bells as visitors are seated on a red couch beside a large, patterned red rug. The carpet, an island in the sea of Maasaba's followers, lies bare but for one white pillow and one white facecloth.

The pillow awaits. Suddenly, the crowd of men leap up, bursting into a traditional song of praise.

He is coming.

At the doorway, his long, pointy white shoes are removed by aides and placed in an empty plastic shoe rack tacked high on the wall. Then he rustles in, enveloped by a tumble of shiny white cloth, which the aides spring forward to arrange whenever he stands or sits.

He ignores the pillow and sits beside it. He wears a tall white hat, and smiles a crooked-toothed smile. The pouches under his eyes give him a mournful air. But there's barely a wrinkle on his forehead, and he professes to have no worries.

An aide proffers a microphone hooked up to speakers on every floor of the house so his wives and children can listen. Questions are blasted through speakers over the street so his followers (and anyone happening by) can hear.

Which makes it a little awkward to ask that delicate one. He begins with his family history, almost singing the story of his roots. After school, he led an ordinary life for 21 years, involved in the clothing business and later working for a sugar company, keeping just two wives.

Life was normal until a religious "vision" in the 1970s, which he says involved a visit from the archangel Gabriel. He fell deeply ill, unable to eat or sleep for days, and all the medicine the doctors gave him only made him worse. He gave up work and became a traditional faith healer who eschewed medicine. The angel also instructed him to take wife after wife after wife.

"I get a revelation from God telling me any woman I'm going to marry. If it wasn't from God, I wouldn't have gone beyond two," he explains in a wispy, singsong voice.
Maasaba has to pause to remember the number of children he has - an ever growing figure, with the youngest just one month old.

He has fathered 185, and 133 are still living. He has acquired an extended family of some 5000 people, many who live in the sprawling compound in the block surrounding his house. It takes three enormous sacks of rice a day and prodigious quantities of meat and vegetables to feed his enormous clan.
He's rich because of the handsome fees paid by those who come to be healed.

Maasaba's many marriages underscore the gulf between modern urban Nigeria and traditional rural towns, where women often have few choices.

Aishetu Ndayako, about 57 years old, clocked in at wife No. 40 or so.

She had heard Maasaba was a good man who looked after his wives and solved all the problems of the family. She was a widow with six children and no means of support when she married him, leaving her children living in her late husband's house.

"There were no problems between the wives. They were all very peaceful. Honestly, we never had a quarrel, not even once," she says. "He loved me. The food was good. He slaughtered a cow so many times. He gave enough money to each of the wives.

"I was always happy in his house. I understood the man. I felt he was sent by God."

But after five years, her children demanded that she return.

"They said no one was with them, and they were lonely," she says. "They asked me, and I felt I should go because of my love for them."

After leaving Maasaba's house, she never saw him again.

"I really miss him," she says.

Three years ago, Islamic authorities in Niger, a majority Muslim state with Shariah, or Islamic law, ordered that Maasaba divorce 82 of his wives, keeping four.

He refused and was ordered by the Shariah court to leave town. (Muslim scholars generally agree that the Quran allows up to four wives, provided each gets equal treatment.) Police raided Maasaba's house at 3:45 a.m. on September 15, 2008. He was taken away to jail. Disobedience, the trait intolerable in a wife, was his own sin.

"In prison they asked me what was my offence. I said they hate me because I won't do what they want me to do."

Refused bail, Maasaba spent 22 days behind bars, while his wives (11 of them pregnant) demonstrated for his release. In the end, a group of civil rights lawyers came to Maasaba's rescue and had him freed on bail. That November, at the High Court in the capital, Abuja, the lawyers called in his wives and their parents, one by one, to testify that they had agreed to marriage.

At wife No. 57, the court told the lawyers to stop, and ordered Maasaba freed. Some of the wives, wearing bright costumes of pink and blue, gold and yellow, meet visitors to the house in a white-tiled entry room, chorusing hellos. Others, surrounded by a clutch of children, cascade down a wooden staircase and peer curiously around a door.

As Maasaba talks, they are hidden within, listening to the squawking speakers, as the delicate question is finally posed. With so many wives, how does he meet their romantic needs?

He smiles. Everyone asks him that.

"In his wisdom, God has given me the power and strength to give them the sexual portion they need," he says. "If I didn't satisfy them, they would leave."

Then he stands up, and his aides rush to him, putting his white shoes on his feet and arranging his white
costume, just so.

May 21, 2014

More Suicide Notes

Unknown - 2:18 PM
As said in the previous post, these notes are to give people a glimpse into the lives of people who took their own lives (no pun intended). Even though names have been changed, ages and sexes are correct. i hope these inspires someone to not do the unthinkable!









The Suicide Prevention Hotline can be reached at any time by calling 1-800-273-8255. I don't really know if I'm being noble or just stupid, but if you find yourself in that situation with no one to turn to, my e-mail is mbiobaku@gmail.com.  I may not be the smartest person in the world, but I can at least listen.

share these post with the people who matter in your life!
The Suicide Prevention Hotline can be reached at any time by calling 1-800-273-8255. I don't really know if I'm being noble or just stupid, but if you find yourself in that situation with no one to turn to, my e-mail is mbiobaku@gmail.com.  I may not be the smartest person in the world, but I can at least listen.

share these post with the people who matter in your life - See more at: http://www.wtzbuzz.com/2014/05/suicide-notes-note-of-encouragement-to.html#sthash.q3fYAjEY.dpuf

Suicide Notes; a note of encouragement to those who need them

Unknown - 1:38 PM
What you are about to read are actual suicide notes from people who took their own lives.  They were gathered by a psychiatrist who specializes in suicidal cases and who wished to remain anonymous.  Names have been changed, but the age and sex of the letter-writers are real.

Many of you will probably wonder why I'm posting something so macabre on a site known for humor and other happy things.  Truth is, I've been plagued by depression all of my life -- it's like some dark thing inside me that boils to the surface and, when it does, I have to fight to keep it at bay.  There are days, however, when it just about wins and I actually consider doing to myself what these poor people have done.  Reading these notes is sad business and it's hard to do, but it's important that you realize as you read them that there is doubt behind every single one... as if that person just needed one other human being to pull them back from the brink.








The Suicide Prevention Hotline can be reached at any time by calling 1-800-273-8255. I don't really know if I'm being noble or just stupid, but if you find yourself in that situation with no one to turn to, my e-mail is mbiobaku@gmail.com.  I may not be the smartest person in the world, but I can at least listen.

share these post with the people who matter in your life and also click here to read the second part of this post.

May 3, 2014

Pictures from the zoo of death

Unknown - 1:31 AM
Warning: The photos you are about to see are disturbing.

The Surabaya Zoo in Indonesia is called the Zoo of Death, and is a living nightmare for the animals there. It mistreats the animals so terribly, that they don’t even get basic care, nutrition, or proper living conditions. 25 animals die each month from unnatural causes, and most of the other animals are starving.
There was an online petition to stop the cruelty in the Surabaya Zoo, but it is now closed. A representative from Cee4life delivered the petition. Their latest update said, “The zoo is not going to close down anytime soon, and the animals cannot be re-homed due to diseases. Cee4life has been supplying diet information, along with enclosure and enrichment. We were able to rescue Melani the tiger and she is doing well. The animals need aid and we are doing everything we can to do that. There are 4 other people coming at the end of April to try and also help.”

You can stay updated on the progress to save these animals and give them your support on Facebook and their website.

Please sign and share this petition.

The animals who don’t stave to death end up euthanized due to other conditions.

The animals sit on cold concrete floors just wasting away.

 Kilwon the giraffe died with a 40 pound wad of plastic the size of a beach ball in its stomach.

The cages are too small and overcrowded.

No matter what your opinion is on zoos in general, most people should agree that this zoo should be closed forever.




This enclosure is a living hell for this poor bear.


The misery these animals endure is heartbreaking.
It is rumored that the animals who die here have their most valuable body parts sold to the illegal wildlife trade.
I don't normally do these type of posts, but I felt that this is VERY important, and these animals need our help! I hope enough people see this post and we can shut this zoo down forever. Please share this with your friends and family. Thank you.

May 1, 2014

Some more rare historical pictures.

Unknown - 3:13 AM
Even if you consider yourself a history buff, when you see these rare photos from history you may realize you know less than you think. These unique historic photos show a completely different side to stories you may already know. World War II, the Taliban, John F. Kennedy, Tiananmen Square and other historic events and figures may feel completely different to you once you scroll through these pictures.

Sporting a different mustache than we are used to, Adolf Hitler (on the right) during his military service sometime between 1916-1919.

The crew of Apollo 11 enjoy the traditional steak and egg breakfast before departing for the moon, July 16 1969.
Sad clown Emmett Kelly, in his performer’s makeup, carrying a bucket of water in the aftermath of the Hartford circus fire of July 6, 1944, in which at least 167 people were killed. The tragedy is often called “the day the clown cried.”
Recording the MGM Lion in 1929.
The “Great Manta” that was captured by Captain A.L. Kahn on August 26, 1933.
Marilyn Monroe with Ella Fitzgerald at the the Mocambo. A popular Hollywood night club at the time. That would not book Ella because of segregation. Marilyn told the manager that she would reserve a front row table every night Ella performed there. Ella performed a week later. 1955.
Federal Ironclad USS GALENA James River, Virgina. 1862.
The last commercial sailing ship, Pamir, to round Cape Horn in 1949.
A Worker on beam of building at 40 Wall Street, 1930.
Sailors at Pearl Harbor watch as the USS Shaw explodes during the Japanese attack. December 7, 1941.
Women protesting the forced Hijab in Iran days after the 1979 revolution.
Railway gun prepares for the invasion of Poland in September, 1939.
The Rothschild’s Illuminati Ball. December 12, 1972.
A Japanese merchant in 1901.
The good old days before those pesky labor laws... Pin Boys working in Brooklyn's subway bowling alleys in 1910 after one in the morning.  According to the photographer, there were three younger children who the boss kept out of the photo.
The Beatles at the Palais des Sports in France, June 1965.
American Nazi organization rally at Madison Square Garden, New York City, 1939.
Douglas Faribanks hoists Charlie Chaplin in the air in 1918.
Women boxing in the roof sometime in the 1930s.
Pacific Southwest Airlines stewardesses in 1972.
A crowded ship bringing American troops back to New York harbor after V-E Day, May 8th, 1945.
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