Monday, 1 December 2014

“A career is wonderful, but you can’t curl up with it on a cold night.”



At first, most things around us provide a glimpse of what love and wealth really are. But it might be a step back for equality for women, but when you consider that both genders can use it as advice it seems more sound. While chasing a career and money many men also give up relationships because they see the two as mutually exclusive. Only later when they realize the emptiness of having success and no one to share it with do they regret their decision to pursue the almighty dollar at all costs. some time we get tired of the dollars we spent our entire life searching for, and when the right man come, you then come up saying he is not your class, what concern  class and your love life? all you ever wanted is already made man full with abundance of wealth and that same man you are eying at is also looking for a class.

 we are all of us stars, and we deserve to twinkle.

The touching side of this story is that when trying to spend much of your adult life as a star in the form of a celebrity, try as well to mingle with the less privilege because white pap we knew today comes from black pot.  We all deserve to have our time to shine, and it’s a matter of taking the opportunities that are granted to us to show what we can do. It speaks to the imbalance of attention given to only the best and brightest among us, even though we all have something to say, a talent to behold, and a spotlight that we deserve.


In the life of Monroe she said, viewing herself as a just an ordinary girl was what helped her out; Perhaps it was her way of digesting all of the fame and attention, and a way for her to make sense of it all and stay true to herself. Being the adoration of many men during her time and even having the sort of relationship she had with the president of the United States, she was anything but a small girl. But at the root of it all she held the belief that she just wanted to find love, and that’s what she set out to do, as is evidenced by the life she lived. you over there, what do you set out to do? looking from her perspective, she set out a goal of which it was accomplished. aside her privilege, she still remained an ordinary girl as she implied. one thing that impressed me about her is that she sees her self as just an ordinary as other being. am appealing to the class ladies that they should all see themselves as just as "Monroe" no matter what privilege you were opportune to, desire to change people and from changing people some times, it turns out to be the member of your family, or some time the father of your children. Try to bring dawn your eagle, put away pride, what does he has to offer me, don't say! Look for someone that has a dream if he has zero means to actualize it dream then help him actualize it, make him a better person you are looking for not already made man.


 Find a balance between your career and your love life so that you don’t end up old, bitter, and alone, is what she seems to be saying. Bless you all and may the soul of Monroe rest in perfect peace.

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