when you push a pull

daily musings, rants, and updates from life on a tiny rock in the middle of the mediterranean sea...among other things

Jun 3

i need to learn to control myself…

…sometimes I forget where my standards are. 


Jun 1

seven days

Yes, seven (7) days until Euro Cup 2012. Of course, I’m cheering for Greece.


peppersprout:

sarahchristine:

amanda-rae:

Mike Lowery for the Oxford American
Pretty much hit the nail on the head with this one.

MISS YOU BABY.

I want to go back.

Obligatory reblog of my home <3

peppersprout:

sarahchristine:

amanda-rae:

Mike Lowery for the Oxford American

Pretty much hit the nail on the head with this one.

MISS YOU BABY.

I want to go back.

Obligatory reblog of my home <3


May 31
lyn-not-line:

ohmalta:

Today is my last day of class. I am about 2 hours away from being done with the taught portion of two (!!!) masters degrees. 

So proud of you! We will party when you get back to the States! In the meantime, I’ll take a shot for you before I go to work. Just to make the day more interesting.

Do people do this? Do they just keep reblogging each other? I&#8217;m not sure because I&#8217;m still new to this tumblr stuff, but I risked it and reblogged again anyways.
Care is the best. We will most definitely celebrate by drinking ALL of the drinks we missed out on while I&#8217;ve been away. Enjoy that shot and have a few more after work! Miss you!!

lyn-not-line:

ohmalta:

Today is my last day of class. I am about 2 hours away from being done with the taught portion of two (!!!) masters degrees. 

So proud of you! We will party when you get back to the States! In the meantime, I’ll take a shot for you before I go to work. Just to make the day more interesting.

Do people do this? Do they just keep reblogging each other? I’m not sure because I’m still new to this tumblr stuff, but I risked it and reblogged again anyways.

Care is the best. We will most definitely celebrate by drinking ALL of the drinks we missed out on while I’ve been away. Enjoy that shot and have a few more after work! Miss you!!


maggie-explains-it-all:

My dashboard has been all a buzz with posts about these two talented young sisters, Lennon and Maisy. Their cover of Robyn’s “Call Your Girlfriend” has been reblogged more times than I can count. Man is it good.

But… when I clicked over to their Youtube channel I found this video that I think is ever better. I’m obsessed with this Jason Mraz “I Won’t Give Up” cover.

Lennon’s voice is incredible. Someone get these girls a record contract. 

I want to be these girls. Really. 



Today is my last day of class. I am about 2 hours away from being done with the taught portion of two (!!!) masters degrees. 

Today is my last day of class. I am about 2 hours away from being done with the taught portion of two (!!!) masters degrees. 


May 29

this week is for

  • friends
  • beach
  • finishing my grad school classes (!!!)
  • EU Parliament movie nights
  • wine
  • saving money
  • music
  • sleeping
  • new bus routes
  • thesis writing
  • end of classes party
  • beer pong
  • more beach
  • more friends


Saving the children

Fr George Grima has spent 25 years working with the poorest of the poor

This is the written response my class compiled in response to the above article. 

‘When I feed the poor, they call me a saint; when I ask why the poor are hungry, they call me a communist’. These were the words of Brazilian Bishop Helder Camara some three decades ago. This ongoing debate about hunger in a world of abundant plenty is, unfortunately still with us as was illustrated by the article ‘Saving the Children’ in the Times of Malta, Monday May 14th. The article attempts to remind readers of the inequity occurring around the world when children die of readily preventable causes. And it offers a simple solution, in this case individual charity donated to a Maltese charitable organisation working in Ethiopia. And, in doing so, it manages to avoid most of the important questions that need to be asked.

Once again, we are presented with images and a story designed to pull at heartstrings, one of heroic work by western aid workers saving the lives and dreams of African children in a cruel and savage country that apparently cares little or nothing for its disabled who are, we are led to believe, dumped on rubbish mounds. We are informed that Ethiopian children are introduced to bread (the ‘staff of life’) by a westerner for the first time even though it has never been part of the normal Ethiopian diet. The only projects and carers presented are westerners, surely this cannot be accurate? Unfortunately, in trying to ‘do good’ the article instead does a great dis-service to the issue of world hunger for a number of reasons, principally that it provides no context whatsoever through which to judge what is described.

• It treats the issue as a matter of individual charity and giving rather than as one of justice and injustice
• Ethiopia is presented as a strange, cruel and savage place devoid of local people who care
• We are presented with a case study of one child without knowing, in any way, if it is representative
• The successes of the Ethiopian government and of many local Ethiopian organisations with regard to children’s health and well-being are studiously ignored (Ethiopia’s infant mortality rate and its under 5 mortality rate have been very significantly reduced over the past 3 decades thanks to the work of Ethiopians)
• A very important world issue – the well-being of children – is used to promote the work of one organisation without question
• Once again, we are (wrongly) told that an Ethiopian child’s well-being can be had for €28 per month through sponsorship
• And, we are presented with discredited images of the white man as saviour, the black child as helpless victim and African society as cruel and heartless – this is hugely distorting and grossly inaccurate.

We welcome the fact that the Times and its journalist highlight this pressing issue but we request that promotional material is not presented as reportage; that context and accuracy are included and that tired old western clichés and images are set aside.

Drafted by a group of 22 Maltese and foreign students who have had the privilege of studying here at the University


“είναι στιγμές που λέν’ τα μάτια πολλά” Νίκος Βέρτης-Μόνο για σένα

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