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Re: [] Boyle: Now Arms

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That has been the best thing about going to "Curves" - it really firmed up my arms. My belly is another story! But if anyone is looking for an exercise program I highly recommend it.

Kathy

Re: [DownSyndromeInfoExchange] Boyle: Singing Sensation, Disability Pride

I am so glad to know that someone else has arm wings to LOL I know what you mean about the celebs my age. I guess I could look like that also if I only ate a stick of celery for the day and had a personal trainer and a plastic surgeon at my finger tips. One of my oldest girlfriends husbands in a mortician so our joke is we will look great when everyone takes there last look at us on this earth....LOL

Rhonda†

http://jfactivist. typepad.com/ jfactivist/ 2009/04/susan- boyle-singing- sensation- disability- pride.html

Boyle: Singing Sensation, Disability Pride

New at Penny for your thoughts (4/23/09):

The Triumph of Boyle and Why So Many of Us Are Still Celebrating!

My introduction to Boyle's angelic voice came, as it did for so many others, via a link to the YouTube video http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=9lp0IWv8QZY that arrived inside an e-mail message on the Monday following her April 11 appearance on an "American Idol" kind of show that had run on British TV. Although the e-mail was clearly "Off Topic" for the list-serv, not one person on the e-mail list complained! And every single one of us has felt enriched by experiencing Boyle's triumph at the Britain's Got Talent competition ever since! Most of us, I'm sure, sent that link on to friends and family, which accounts for the more than 39 million hits at YouTube already, and saved the link in our "Favorites List for a future day when we know we'll need a spiritual lift!

Why the excitement? Why has the middle-aged woman described by the person who sent me the link as "looking like Mrs. Doubtfire,"with the seemingly incongruously angelic voice touched so many people, and sparked dinner-table and water-cooler conversations all over the country and the world? She truly does have a voice like an angel. And "I Dream A Dream" from "Les Miserables," the song she chose to sing is beautiful, the kind of thing that tugs at the heartstrings of even the most cynical among us. But, that's not all. I think it's because every single one of us who has ever had a moment of self doubt about the way we look, or sound, or come across, rejoices when we watch the video. We feel as though we are rejoicing right along with Ms. Boil as we celebrate her courage and her talent, and her triumph; and any misgivings about her appearance, her life in a remote and unsophisticated village in Scotland, her mostly stay-at-home existence of giving care to another simply fall away because her talent erases them all! When Boyle shows up on stage, many of us, especially those of us who have coped with our own disabilities and dealt with the hurtful words and attitudes of unthinking classmates or malicious bullies, feel an instant empathy with her. She is not beautiful. Her answers to the questions the panel asks are neither sparkling nor sophisticated. It's obvious to those of us who are way too attuned to being misjudged, prejudged, and expected to fail that what is about to happen will make us cringe. We hold our collective breath and clench our fists in anxious anticipation of what we know is about to happen. We are prepared to feel sorry for Ms. Boyle, and, in turn, to feel sorry for ourselves for all the times when someone made fun of us – for tripping, or saying the wrong thing, or getting a horrible grade, or missing the ball, or spilling ketchup on the front of our shirt, or embarrassing a mother or a father or a sibling or an instantly former best friend. When sings that gorgeous song and the audience bursts straight away into jubilant astonished applause, and the judges are nearly speechless with amazement, we are overcome with relief, and vindication, and jubilation, and feeling just as ecstatic as , herself, must have felt at that moment! 's very public triumph seems almost like our own personal triumph, especially for those of us who have worried that our disabilities set us too far apart from what is normal, or that others would define us by our dis-abilities, instead of all the talents and abilities that are a truer definition of the women and men we actually are. READ MORE HERE: http://tinyurl. com/ceydlm

Enjoy, and if you haven't visited the YouTube link, do take a minute and revel in the experience.Penny

>>> For the Full Column

Added by , JFA Moderator:

Additionally, Ms. Boyle has publicly disclosed her own disability and stated, "I want to raise awareness - I want to turn my disability into ability." From BBC NEWS.

>>>For more on Boyle's disability

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my first stop after dropping off all three kids at 3 drifferant schools. I have not notice my arms yet but evertime my mother sees my ankles she laughs cause she is all 60 pds I have lost was in my ankles.....

Rhonda†

http://jfactivist. typepad.com/ jfactivist/ 2009/04/susan- boyle-singing- sensation- disability- pride.html

Boyle: Singing Sensation, Disability Pride

New at Penny for your thoughts (4/23/09):

The Triumph of Boyle and Why So Many of Us Are Still Celebrating!

My introduction to Boyle's angelic voice came, as it did for so many others, via a link to the YouTube video http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=9lp0IWv8QZY that arrived inside an e-mail message on the Monday following her April 11 appearance on an "American Idol" kind of show that had run on British TV. Although the e-mail was clearly "Off Topic" for the list-serv, not one person on the e-mail list complained! And every single one of us has felt enriched by experiencing Boyle's triumph at the Britain's Got Talent competition ever since! Most of us, I'm sure, sent that link on to friends and family, which accounts for the more than 39 million hits at YouTube already, and saved the link in our "Favorites List for a future day when we know we'll need a spiritual

lift!

Why the excitement? Why has the middle-aged woman described by the person who sent me the link as "looking like Mrs. Doubtfire,"with the seemingly incongruously angelic voice touched so many people, and sparked dinner-table and water-cooler conversations all over the country and the world? She truly does have a voice like an angel. And "I Dream A Dream" from "Les Miserables," the song she chose to sing is beautiful, the kind of thing that tugs at the heartstrings of even the most cynical among us. But, that's not all. I think it's because every single one of us who has ever had a moment of self doubt about the way we look, or sound, or come across, rejoices when we watch the video. We feel as though we are rejoicing right along with Ms. Boil as we celebrate her courage and her talent, and her triumph; and any misgivings about her appearance, her life in a remote and unsophisticated village in Scotland, her mostly

stay-at-home existence of giving care to another simply fall away because her talent erases them all! When Boyle shows up on stage, many of us, especially those of us who have coped with our own disabilities and dealt with the hurtful words and attitudes of unthinking classmates or malicious bullies, feel an instant empathy with her. She is not beautiful. Her answers to the questions the panel asks are neither sparkling nor sophisticated. It's obvious to those of us who are way too attuned to being misjudged, prejudged, and expected to fail that what is about to happen will make us cringe. We hold our collective breath and clench our fists in anxious anticipation of what we know is about to happen. We are prepared to feel sorry for Ms. Boyle, and, in turn, to feel sorry for ourselves for all the times when someone made fun of us – for tripping, or saying the wrong thing, or getting a horrible grade, or

missing the ball, or spilling ketchup on the front of our shirt, or embarrassing a mother or a father or a sibling or an instantly former best friend. When sings that gorgeous song and the audience bursts straight away into jubilant astonished applause, and the judges are nearly speechless with amazement, we are overcome with relief, and vindication, and jubilation, and feeling just as ecstatic as , herself, must have felt at that moment! 's very public triumph seems almost like our own personal triumph, especially for those of us who have worried that our disabilities set us too far apart from what is normal, or that others would define us by our dis-abilities, instead of all the talents and abilities that are a truer definition of the women and men we actually are. READ MORE HERE: http://tinyurl.

com/ceydlm

Enjoy, and if you haven't visited the YouTube link, do take a minute and revel in the experience.Penny

>>> For the Full Column

Added by , JFA Moderator:

Additionally, Ms. Boyle has publicly disclosed her own disability and stated, "I want to raise awareness - I want to turn my disability into ability." From BBC NEWS.

>>>For more on Boyle's disability

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