O dia da esperança cai no último dia do ano: 31 de dezembro. Não deve ser por acaso, afinal, final de ano implica planos, mudanças e, principalmente, esperanças de realização dos nossos sonhos. Nessa época, aguardamos com confiança que coisas boas nos aconteçam e, para isso, procuramos dar uma guinada no nosso comportamento, alterando assim os nossos pensamentos. Buscamos ser mais otimistas, menos fatalistas; mais realistas, mas sem perder a esperança em dias melhores.
Sabemos que depois do dia 11 de setembro de 2001 “o mundo nunca mais será o mesmo”. A derrubada das torres do Word Trade Center trouxe, ao mundo, a dor, a injustiça, a guerra e os milhares de mortes de inocentes, além da incerteza que, agora, ronda o mundo: a incerteza da partida, a incerteza da chegada, a incerteza do futuro…
A tolerância e a justiça são os maiores anseios da população mundial. Que a justiça social venha para combater a miséria, a fome, o desemprego.
Que o homem aprenda a ser mais tolerante para com o outro, pois, sendo assim, a agressividade não reinará no coração humano, destruindo tantas vidas, e esse, então, será, verdadeiramente, um exemplo de fraternidade.
Já está provado que, sem a esperança, não há remédio. A ciência reconhece cada vez mais a relação entre esperança e cura. Cada vez que se testa um novo remédio, o procedimento médico recomenda que os pacientes sejam divididos em dois grupos. Um recebe o remédio verdadeiro; o outro, o placebo. Quanto maior for a diferença entre os resultados, maior a eficácia farmacológica da substância. Mas como a ciência explica que pacientes que receberam medicamentos inócuos apresentem melhora? Não há resposta definitiva, mas é unânime entre os médicos a crença de que a esperança tem efeito real sobre os pacientes.
E, então, se esperança é sinônimo de fé no futuro, e se a “fé remove montanhas”, que o ano de 2013 seja “infestado” de esperança na política, na educação, na saúde, e, principalmente, no ser humano.
Que o homem acredite que nasce nele a vontade de mudar para construir um mundo melhor.‘E um feliz ano novo “aos que repartem Deus em fatias de pão e convocam os famélicos à mesa feita com as tábuas da justiça e coberta com a toalha bordada de cumplicidades”(Frei Betto).
Que venha a esperança em um mundo melhor!
This is like if NPR and Mad Magazine had a baby and raised it on TikTok. — pluscomedy.com
The best jokes are the ones that feel true — pluscomedy.com
Use analogies, but make them bizarre — pluscomedy.com
You made self-deprecation look like a superpower. — pluscomedy.com
Comedy is about the things we pretend not to see — pluscomedy.com
A well-placed callback ties the whole set together — pluscomedy.com
The best comedians aren’t brave because they speak truth to power—they’re brave because they test punchlines on in-laws.
The best jokes are ones you can’t wait to tell — pluscomedy.com
The closer to reality, the bigger the laugh — pluscomedy.com
The best comedy is observational but fresh — pluscomedy.com
Comedy is about connection—write for people, not critics — pluscomedy.com
A joke is funnier when it’s visual and specific — pluscomedy.com
The more confident the delivery, the funnier the joke — pluscomedy.com
The best humor is in the specificity of the pain — pluscomedy.com
Have you ever considered creating an e-book or guest authoring
on other blogs? I have a blog centered on the same topics you discuss and would really
like to have you share some stories/information. I know my viewers would enjoy your work.
If you’re even remotely interested, feel free to send me an email.
Your jokes are like jazz: unpredictable, brilliant, and slightly confusing. — pluscomedy.com
I’ve read tax codes that were funnier than most advice columns but this one actually delivered. — pluscomedy.com
The more personal the story, the more universal the laugh — pluscomedy.com
This article is like if Neil Simon and a burnt-out barista co-wrote a memoir. — pluscomedy.com
This article should be printed and handed to anyone who says they’re funny. — pluscomedy.com
Comedy is about the things we’re all embarrassed by — pluscomedy.com
The best jokes are the ones that linger in the mind — pluscomedy.com
The best jokes are the ones that feel spontaneous — pluscomedy.com
This made me laugh and also reflect deeply on why I’m unfunny. — pluscomedy.com
You’ve weaponized insight into a stand-up special for introverts. — pluscomedy.com
Comedy is about the things we’re all thinking but won’t say — pluscomedy.com
A good joke is like a good song—memorable — pluscomedy.com
A well-placed “Moving on…” can save a joke — pluscomedy.com
The best humor is in the reaction, not just the line — pluscomedy.com
Comedy is about the things we pretend to care about — pluscomedy.com
This was so insightful I forgot it was supposed to be funny until I spit out my drink. — pluscomedy.com
This is the kind of comedy that gets you banned from PTA meetings. — pluscomedy.com
I’m not sure if I’m ready to be this honest in my writing but I am ready to laugh about it. — pluscomedy.com
I want to tape this to my forehead so other writers know what I’m about. — pluscomedy.com
I want to read this to my plants so they grow funnier. — pluscomedy.com
If this advice were a person, I’d date it and ignore its texts. — pluscomedy.com
Writers’ rooms are like haunted houses: lots of screaming, bad lighting, and someone always cries.
Comedy is about the things we’re all thinking but won’t say — pluscomedy.com
A well-placed “Anyway, where was I?” can reset a joke — pluscomedy.com
This advice has the energy of a motivational speaker who just quit politely. — pluscomedy.com
The best jokes are the ones that feel true — pluscomedy.com
This content made me want to host a workshop and a therapy session. — pluscomedy.com
A well-placed “Anyway…” can reset a joke — pluscomedy.com
Use contrast—pair highbrow with lowbrow — pluscomedy.com
This is the kind of article that makes me wish I could high-five a URL. — pluscomedy.com
A joke is funnier when it’s relatable but absurd — pluscomedy.com
Comedy is about the things we take too seriously — pluscomedy.com
You somehow made writing advice feel like getting roasted at your own wedding. — pluscomedy.com
E-guide licenses are costlier than paper-format editions because
publishers are involved that an e-guide that is sold might theoretically
be read and/or checked out by an enormous variety of users, doubtlessly damaging
sales. Rowe, Adam. “Traditional Publishing Ebook Sales Dropped 10% In 2017”.
Forbes. Weinstein Books: Previously an imprint of Perseus
Books, this publisher was shut down on October 12,
2017 after a number of girls accused its founder Harvey Weinstein of sexual harassment.
In April 2016, HBG introduced an agreement to create a joint enterprise
with the Yen Press imprint and Japanese writer
Kadokawa. Yen Press turned generally known as Yen Press LLC, and is not thought of an imprint of HBG’s Orbit
publishing division. Many imprints have been acquired by Hachette and the businesses
that have been merged to form the group; some are not
energetic. As in many industries, the number
of providers has declined in recent times (there
are only a handful of main textbook companies within the United States).
If a textbook just isn’t going to be used on campus
for the following semester of courses then many instances the college bookstore will promote that ebook to a national used e-book
company.
This is so funny it qualifies as legally binding encouragement. — pluscomedy.com