Please contact Lisa Lavaysse if you would like to purchase the full PDF or a printed copy of this issue.
Continue ReadingMonth: October 2019
Ed Note 24.43/44
Greetings! Always a pleasure to share words of wisdom and updates with our faithful Beat readers! What can we say, the work has been non-stop. The writing is flooding in at all hours, from our workshop particpants to the submissions we receive via mail and email. We’re keeping up, but it’s truly a juggle at times. FYI, when we are not working on this one of a kind issue, we are constantly meeting new colleagues and allies, establishing new partnerships and workshop locations, while fund raising and doing our best with the various demands that require our attention to keep
Continue ReadingA Chance for Change
by J We live in a world of chances. Day by day, we all make mistakes. Nobody in this world was born to be perfect. Our mistakes are what makes us the strongest. We learn from our experiences, failures, and our past. We also have the power and choice to use the knowledge of our experiences to better equip ourselves to face the present and the future. The real challenge is change and adjustment. Some become so used to living a certain way and can’t change, and won’t change. We must learn to do our best, no matter where we
Continue ReadingAll Was Forgiven
by Nephew We give second chances in hopes that one would get it together. That piece of humanity within us seeks to pull it out of others. With tough love that shouts louder than for those whose team is losing, we yell: “God, if you give me a second chance I promise I won’t do it no more!” And if not yelled, then whispered to yourself… For a second I ask that you imagine, using your imagination will take you there and beyond. The youngest of eight boys, no father figure, so I mimicked everything that I found to be
Continue ReadingBrother, Can We talkºRestorative Justice in the Criminal Justice System
by Matthew Feeney Restorative Justice is an age-old philosophy which is more recently being applied to the Criminal Justice System. Based on traditions of the Original Peoples, Restorative Justice is the belief that harm was done, so healing must happen in order to restore things closer to where they were. Restorative Justice also takes into account that there is always more than one person affected by a single crime. Friends, families and people in the community are all affected and need to be involved in the healing process. One of the amazing components of Restorative Justice involves a “Healing Circle.”
Continue ReadingVolume 24.41/42
Please contact Lisa Lavaysse if you would like to purchase the full PDF or a printed copy of this issue.
Continue ReadingEd Note 24.41/42
Greetings friends of The Beat Within! Welcome to double issue, 24.41/42! This issue is truly packed with plenty of thoughtful writers and we are grateful! This week, like most issues, we have our right hand man, OT, stepping up to the plate to share his insights with us readers of The Beat Within. OT, has been a great colleague and friend of The Beat Within for many years and for that we are incredibly grateful. His love and commitment speaks volumes. Given we are on such a tight deadline, lets pass the keyboard to OT!!! We would like welcome you
Continue ReadingForgiving Family
by Jazper Everyone has that one person they wish they could forgive, but they don’t know how to do it, so they never bring it up until it’s too late. For me, the was my Uncle Polo. When I was younger, my uncle would buy my cousins candy or ice cream and buy me nothing just to make me upset. He would pick on me all the time when we were around each other — even when I was with my family or by myself. He would also call me names like sissy, snitch and cry baby. That made me feel like everyone was better than
Continue ReadingJudged in Life
by S Are we judged in life? I say we are, they look down on us for mistakes young people do. That’s not right in my way, nobody should in anyway. We’re still kids. Sometimes we forget about it because the system gives us time that makes us think we ain’t kids no more. The only punishment we should get is by the ones who care for us and love us not the system. The system judges us, they could care less about us and have no hope in us. We give up on things. It’s no more happiest being judge it holds onto you. No one can see it, not even you. Sometimes deep down inside
Continue ReadingThe Way We Look at Life
by Robert Barnes The way we look at life, it should not matter that 95% of live in a fantasy world, surrounded by things we feel matter to us the most with vain attempts to replace our yesterdays and tomorrows with today, although today will forever be yesterday’s news, on the views, on the way we look at life. Scientifically speaking, I have the brain of Albert that comes with a kite. This is the way I look at life because in all honesty my perception becomes only what I perceive as the way things should be. The beat within me never just plays one tune.
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