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Oh..Good one. Good information has been provided.
Whenever I hear the Azaan early in the morning I recollect my father who was bedridden in the hospital. He was undergoing critical treatment and the doctor has already expressed his inability. The chances were almost nil. I returned from the hospital with a deserted heart. I was washing my face and expecting a call. Already contacted some of the relatives and informed the position. When I heard the call there was my sister on the phone. She informed about the demise of the father . The Azan and the information on the Cell phone have I think got synchronized in their frequencies. I started weeping for my father
Since then, whenever I woke up early in the morning I automatically I recollect my father and simultaneously listening to Azan.
ThankQ for the feed.
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Love some of your thoughts on things
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I pray regularly after taking my bath. I usually get up at 4.30 and wash my face. After that sit for prayer. There will be a weed mat on which I sit and pray with open brain and closed eyes. I pray for 15 minutes chanting the name which vibrates within me. I pray for others as I need not pray for my family as His blessings are always there. I do not go to any Church or Prayer Hall. praying is an Art and one should learn it from elders only.
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I remember a passage on a prayer booklet which i often carry before it says “TAKE TIME TO PRAY FOR IT IS THE MOST POWERFUL THING ON EARTH” Pray without ceasing. When you pray, say what you mean and mean what you say! For God governs the world but prayers govern God. Truly, prayer is an act of meditation where we can be close to God, build our faith and persevere in trials. In prayer we find peace, solace, and solitude. Have you ever experience feeling down and lost and the only remedy to do is to pray? It’s very soothing to pray with all your heart, to give in the hands of God all the hurt that you felt, the sadness of loneliness, and the burden that your hiding in your heart. No one can give you such peace but God alone. Man can always turn back on you drag you down but God will always be there for you no matter what and will stick on you till the very end. Like a loving Father who always wait for her prodigal daughter to bring back to him once again…
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First this is all about monsters and any kind of supernatural .After going to a new small town,the teenager boy Zach Cooper (Dylan Minnette) he meets the beautiful girl, Hannah (Odeya Rush), living right next door.
But every silver lining has a cloud, and Zach’s comes when he learns that Hannah has a mysterious dad who is revealed to be R. L. Stine (Jack Black), the author of the bestselling Goosebumps series. It turns out that there is a reason why Stine is so strange… he is a prisoner of his own imagination – the monsters that his books made famous are real, and Stine protects his readers by keeping them locked up in their books. Zach unintentionally unleashes the monsters from their manuscripts and they begin to terrorize the town,
it’s suddenly up to Stine, Zach, Hannah, and Zach’s friend Champ (Ryan Lee) they all do their best to back all of the monsters in the book.
Goosebumps the film is made for the kids, this isn’t the type of film that is trying to bridge the age gap at being universally beloved. Lucky for the film, its makers know their market and the children in my theater loved it, and for this kid at heart, we liked it too.
One of the smartest decisions the filmmakers made in making an R.L. Stine film adaptation of the beloved book series Goosebumps was casting Jack Black as the token ‘adult’ in the film. While we know Black has aged in real life, he is one of the few men in Hollywood who hasn’t lost his wonder, and that transcends the big screen. He may put on a funny accent for the role of R.L. Stine but he has the right sentiment and that is obvious to audience members.
The rest of the cast is equally wholesome and approachable, with each of the three teens (Dylan Minnette, Odeya Rush and Ryan Lee) being equally effective in their roles. The characters they portray aren’t anything extraordinary or new, but they are archetypes we know and enjoy. The stand out among the three would be Odeya Rush and scenes where the kids are interacting with one another.
Goosebumps does one thing that we wish would’ve been a bit bolder, and that is stray away from the horror and air more on the side of family adventure comedy. It’s like Jumanji with zombies instead of a stampede of African wildlife. And that is also where it loses points for originality, as adult film goers will see the same plot line in a different skin, which is a tad disappointing for something as creative as the Goosebumps book series.
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