The Travel Edition Issue #4, August 2019
@hindles_
Editor’s Voice What have I learned? Admitting your own fortune is always a funny thing to actually do. I seem to always have this weird boiling feeling inside my stomach whenever I talk about it, like a little voice reminding me how much I’ve taken for granted. That doesn’t mean life has always been easy, no one is that lucky. But I am highly aware of all the opportunities and luxuries I’ve had. I first travelled outside the country when I was probably five years old, something a lot of people may never do. Antarctica is the only continent I haven’t been on, and I’ve seen more countries and cultures than I have fingers and toes (I checked). The saddest thing is how many of those memories I’ve lost over time. That’s the worst thing – if you believe, as I do, that experiences and knowledge are among the most important things in life, then losing them is almost shameful. But even if I can’t recall the colour of the walls of churches older than I can fathom, or the textures on the stone monuments placed by ancient folk who knew no more about the why of the world than I do, I can certainly chart where those memories lay by the mark they’ve made on my character. If anything, travel to me means moving yourself far to get closer to the person you should be. And that doesn’t take much. Expansive distances help but you can do that within your own city if you’re clever enough. What I want is to take a moment to put up my weary feet and really ask myself how I’ve grown from my experiences. That means getting down into the dirt to trace these lines of thread back to the spools I drew them from. I’ve rounded up a few companions here, too, all going about that process in their own way. Maybe you’d like to join us? Or maybe this all means something entirely different to you, I don’t mind. As long as you get where you’re headed on time. Travel well, friend. Chris
CONTENT 7
Writing Competition
8
Travelling with an Eternal Purpose by Kira-leigh Josey
10
The Long and Dangerous Journey by Sally-Mae Herford
14
Restless (again) by Kemy Ogendi
18
Mountains by Bec Colley
P. 2
EDITORIAL
P. 4 - 5
CONTRIBUTORS
P. 6
CONTACT/PAGES TO LIKE
P. 12 - 13
WO/MAN
P. 16 - 17
REAL TALK
P. 20 - 21 #AVONDALEXP P. 22 - 23 THE CHEAT SHEET
C O N T R I B U T O R S
Emmerson Grey
Chris McClelland Secondary Education student, untalented art enthusiast and, ineffective procrastination combatant. Ask me about my mild addiction to video essays.
Kemy Ogendi Kemy is a chronic over-sharer, a lover of laughter and a proud sweet potato enthusiast (baked, roasted, doused in coconut cream… you name it, she’ll eat it.)
THANK YOU TO EVERYONE ELSE WHO HAS CONTRIBUTED // OTHER IMAGES SOURCED FROM #AVONDALEXP // GRAPHIC DESIGNER: ANGELA WOOD
Sally-Mae Herford
Sally-Mae is a secondary education student who really just wants to be sleeping in and complaining about how she didn’t get enough sleep. As well as having seen every movie ever made, Sally-Mae loves looking out car windows pretending she’s in a music video.
Thanks & No Thanks Bec Colley
I like to think I’m good at sport, but realistically, I probably have no idea what I’m doing. I just like to eat cookies.
Thanks: Flannelette sheets White tea Rediscovering old music No Thanks: Shipping costs Holes in socks Winter colds
Kira-leigh Josey Kira-leigh is a fourth-year student who is always willing to debate the best way to make haystacks.
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Emmerson is like most other stereotypical college students: she loves to binge Netflix, hype up her peers, complain about not sleeping enough and downplay her life problems with sarcastic remarks.
GET IN CONTACT Security: Phone: (02) 4980 2333
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Email: scott.hill@avondale.edu.au College Church Phone: (02) 4980 2272 Email: collegechurch@avondale.edu.au Or message the College Church Facebook Page. College Counsellors: Phone: 0403478994 Email: counsellingclinic@avondale.edu.au Our counsellors offer confidential counselling to students experiencing a range of academic, mental health and personal concerns.
PAGES TO LIKE The Voice LAMP ministries (@AvondaleSAM) College Church ASA student association Avondale College One Mission SALT Avondale
#wearewatson
Lost & Found Travel Micro Writing Competition
To celebrate the new semester, we are running a writing competition – we want stories about either losing or finding something or someone. Fact or fiction is up to you, but it must be under 300 words.
Cash prize of $100 for our judge’s favourite and $50 for the runner up, as judged by Lynnette Lounsbury (lecturer and edixtor of Avondale College Travel Blog Ytravel), and Voice Editor Christian McClelland. The top four picks will be published on Ytravel, with the winner also being featured here in The Voice. Send your stories to Lynnette.Lounsbury@avondale.edu.au by the 10th of September with the subject line ‘Lost and Found Writing Competition’ to enter. Best of luck!
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Travelling with an Eternal The greatest command given to Christians is found in Matthew 28:19, where His followers are mandated to make “disciples of all nations.” These, some of the last words of Jesus on earth are known as the Great Commission. It is appropriate that the words are treated with their deserving weight as sharing the message of the gospel is a vital part of Christian discipleship. In the coming years, thousands of Christians embarked on journeys to the unknown with the intention of converting ‘unreached people groups’- those without any constant Christian influence. As history tells us, for the most part, these journeys were done with the right intentions; some of the methods used are not above reproach. So, over two thousand years on from Jesus’ words, how well has the Christian church gone at meeting the lofty task of reaching all nations? Distressingly, about 51% of American Christians do not know what the Great Commission even says. Not a very promising beginning to our study! As nations with sovereign borders did not exist in Jesus’ time, we can assume that when Jesus said, “all nations”, he was referring to ethnic groups. According to the Joshua Project, there are over 17 000 people groups in the world. Of these, approximately 7 000 people groups have had no Christian exposure. This statistic is challenging to perceive as a Christian in Australia, where at times, it seems that there is a Church on every street corner. The term ’10-40’ window was created by missionary strategist Luis Bush in 1990, referring to countries between 10 and 40 degrees north of the equator which have the lowest exposure to Christianity. The countries in this area of the world are generally less educated, with higher rates of both poverty and illiteracy. Most people in this area do not even know a Christian. Of the countries involved, 23 are Muslim, 18 are Hindu, 6 are Buddhist, 2 have ethnic religions, and one country is non-religious. Several of these countries have no separation of church and state. In some of these countries, it is even deadly to be a Christian with many people facing persecution for practising their faith. Most alarmingly, only 3% of all missionaries work in this area! The region with arguably, the highest need in the world to hear the gospel. Approximately 1 600 language groups do not even have a translation of the Bible accessible to them. The obvious solution is to work on creating translations in these languages. Many of these language groups have oral rather than written histories. We must also recognise that the way that we experience and practice our faith will not be the same to other people depending on their past experiences. Billy Graham’s statement, “We are the Bibles the world is reading; we are the creeds the world is needing; we are the sermons the world is heeding” speaks to this sentiment beautifully- actions can speak louder than words. There is, of course, much mission that can be done in your local area without the need to travel overseas. Even in Australia, there are still people who have not heard the life-altering message of Jesus. However, it is the Christian responsibility to take the word of God to all corners of the earth. It is not just preachers that are needed in the mission field; it is people willing to walk aside others and show them what it means to be a Christian and to live a changed life. This area needs people who are educators, health professionals and administrators and most of all, those who are compassionate. The Christian is called to be an active follower. We grow in Christ by sharing with others. If we keep our faith to ourselves, without sharing it with others, then we are not fulfilling our mandate. As Oswald J. Smith states “Any church not involved in the Great Commission has forfeited its biblical right to exist.” We cannot be Christian without an active mission. Perhaps you feel the calling on your heart to travel and to do so with an eternal purpose. There is a great need for God to be shared with those overseas. Isobel Kuhn, a missionary to China and Thailand powerfully said “I believe that in each generation God has called enough men and women to evangelise all the yet unreached tribes of the earth. It is not God who does not call. It is man who does not respond.” Listen to God’s call on your heart. Take in what He says. What we hear may scare us, or it may sound impossible, but God gives us the privilege of sharing His word, and if you do not listen to the call you feel now eventually, they may stop coming. Wherever it is He is calling you, travel in faith and go where He sends.
Purpose
by Kira-leigh Josey
# caferejuveau @ collegechurchau
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The Long and Dangerous Journey
by Sally-Mae Herford
It is no secret to any friend of my families that J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings series is beloved to an almost unhealthy length by every one of my family members. All six of us, from oldest to youngest, have seen, not only the theatrical version but all three extended editions of Peter Jackson’s adaptations of the books, countless times. I cannot total the numerous sick days spent at home re-watching the movies or the number of times I’ve come home on a Friday afternoon to find my mother cooking and having Return of the King playing in the background while she prepared the house for Sabbath. It even reached a point where, instead of re-watching the movies again, we watched the hours and hours of special features on how each of the movies were made. I may not know algebra, but I do know the dialogue to many, many scenes throughout these beloved films. Re-watching and reading the movies and books have become an annual tradition. As well as being the inspiration to many different creative outlets for me and my siblings, be it the score to the dialogue. However, not just the physical aspects of these stories are what drive our love for Tolkien’s works. One thing that I feel was the basis of my family’s adoration for this series is the idea of a journey. Tolkien’s books centre on the idea that no one person is too small, too young, too unintelligent, or too insignificant to embark on such a journey as the one that Frodo Baggins did. For many people, such a journey can take many faces: starting a new job, moving homes, ending a relationship, or starting a new one. For me, it was beginning University and moving hours away from all that was safe to me. Back then, I genuinely felt like I could relate to Frodo, with his naivety to the world around him, scared to venture out past the green hills into darker places filled with uncertainty and potential danger. Much like my hometown, with similar green hills and comforting, familiar faces, Frodo’s fears became my own. I understood what it was like to be wary of the outside world. It simply didn’t seem wise to venture out into such uncertainty. What if, like Frodo, I would come across a danger that I was not equipped to handle? How would I defeat such enemies and live to tell the tale? The darkness seemed inevitable, and I was not prepared to face such peril. However, much like Frodo, my curiosity began to grow. Yes, there would be rainy days, difficult decisions, lonely times and possibly heartbreak. But would it have been better to experience them than not to experience at all? Where Frodo had the option to stay in his Shire and live a quiet and simple life, he also had the choice to step out and become something more than his origin. This daunting uncertainty can spark a fire that cannot be easily snuffed out by such things and much like Frodo’s journey; my own was not easy. The world throws things at you that force you to grow in every which way. Decisions must be made, and the consequences must be faced. Life doesn’t merely allow you to cruise through with comfort and ease. If Frodo and his fellowship of eleven just sauntered into Mordor and popped the ring into the fires of Mount “It’s a dangerous Doom with such ease the movies would not be so business, Frodo, beloved today. I genuinely believe that without the going out your door. pain, anger, fear, loss, and hardship, the end result would be worthless. One of the hardest life lessons You step onto the that I was forced to learn was understanding and road, and if you finding out for myself that nothing significant will don’t keep your feet, ever be achieved from your comfort zone – not one single thing. It is the journey not taken that there’s no knowing will inevitably lead to destruction and darkness where you might be and the road paved with peril that shines with a distant eternal light. From the uncertainty and swept off to.” danger comes adventure, for I believe it was J.R.R. Tolkien once was a grumpy, old wizard that said, “It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.” (Tolkien)
@jo_hanburyk
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Keira-lyn Kate Turner
WO /
1. Do you prefer to swim in pools or at the beach? I prefer pools mostly, I feel safer. Less sunburn and more feeling like a mermaid. At the beach I get sunburnt and I feel like I’m about to be eaten, but I’ve had some nice times. 2. Would you prefer to stay in one fancy hotel with all the luxuries at your fingertips, or go backpacking across a country? Absolutely a five-star hotel with every single luxury. 3. What’s your ideal holiday breakfast? Veggie sausages and baked beans, veggie juice (fresh) along with dairy free mashed potatoes. Otherwise, I like pancakes with fresh berries lots of maple syrup and fresh fruit chopped small along with a hot chocolate. But honestly, when it comes to food, I’m the least fussy person out there. 4. What is the best and worst place you’ve visited in Australia? I really like N.S.W and the south parts of Australia for scenery as its greener the air is nice and cool, when I’ve travelled north it’s hot as and the flies are everywhere. Everything looks half dead and struggling from the human-created hole in the ozone. However, despite being further north toward the saltwater crocodiles and a severe lack of jobs available, I did make some wonderful friends up in northern QLD. 5. Have you ever been outside of the country? Where have you been or where would you like to go? I haven’t even left the country, However, I’m off to Hawaii this year so pretty keen for that. Hope we have a super safe flight and all goes well, but yes I’m pumped. 6. What was the strangest thing that happened to you this break? Being able to have some downtime, you know, time alone to think with my thoughts and sleep thoroughly, I really needed and appreciated this and I’m now feeling thoroughly refreshed. 7. What time did you wake up most days during the break? Be honest… If I’m not surrounded by night owls that keep me up till 3am I will get up anywhere from 7-8am. 8. Have you ever had a life-changing moment while travelling? Travelling for family events, absolutely. Love my family more than anything so meeting up with them is always a blessing. 9. Are you proud of what you’ve achieved so far this semester? Absolutely! Two distinctions on essays and on my overall grades got some credits. And to think I was a jokey before this that only got to grade 10, I’m a happy girl. 10. Who is someone you feel deserves a shout-out, either in the college or not? My big brother, he is an absolute legend I think he has helped me through life more than anyone on this earth ever... I love him so much he honestly deserves the world. If anyone was to be a human angel it is him, he is a blessing to everyone he ever meets and just one of the best people on this planet.
/ MAN Jesse Duperouzel
1. Do you prefer to swim in pools or at the beach? Pools, I’m 90% less likely to be eaten by a shark in the pool and 80% more likely to look like an Italian mafia boss going for a swim. 2. Would you prefer to stay in one fancy hotel with all the luxuries at your fingertips, or go backpacking across a country? Fancy hotels, it would give me a nice change from the camping experience that is dorms. 3. What’s your ideal holiday breakfast? Maccas breakfast. Don’t @ me. 4.What is the best and worst place you’ve visited in Australia? Best place is Uluru (the actual rock), worst place is the Uluru resort, but only because my idiot self decided to eat oysters in the middle of the desert and got food poisoning. Would probably prefer food poisoning to Brisbane, though. 5. Have you ever been outside of the country? Where have you been or where would you like to go? Yes, I’ve been to Fiji, New Caledonia, and Vanuatu. All fun places, got seasick after the cruise to Vanuatu though. 6. What was the strangest thing that happened to you this break? Was in the middle of a conversation with a lecturer at the train station and a guy came up and stood between us and told me to listen to his mixtape on Soundcloud. What’s worse is that it was atrocious. 7. What time did you wake up most days during the break? Be honest… If we averaged it out it would be like 9, but that’s because my early shifts at work start real early and I compensate for that by sleeping until 11am on my late shift days. I’m living that health message life. 8. Have you ever had a life-changing moment while travelling? Yes, my life changed when my dad pointed out the stupidity of eating oysters thousands of km’s from the nearest ocean. 9. Are you proud of what you’ve achieved so far this semester? Lol. 10. Who is someone you feel deserves a shout-out, either in the college or not? The Holy Spirit never gets enough credit. I got you, Holy!
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Restless (again) By Kemy Ogendi I live a long way from home – 2, 772.9 kilometres away, to be exact. That’s twenty-nine hours by car. Or five hundred and six hours by foot. If I started walking right now, I could be home in twenty-one days. I could get there even earlier if I didn’t stop to sleep or eat… Look, it’s tempting – I tend to feel restless around this time of year, I start craving home real bad. There are certain sights, sounds and smells that remind me who I am; there are certain people and places that make me feel grounded, known, safe… and right now, I miss them a lot. (Disclaimer: this is not a complaint about homesickness, I promise! It’s a celebration: I have a home and family worth missing. If that isn’t cause for gratitude, I don’t know what is) Remember that quote from Winnie the Pooh? “How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.” Those words have been on my mind a whole lot lately. My siblings are incredible, my parents are wise and good and kind. My home is beautiful and I like being there! My roots are safe, steady, secure… it’s a blessing for which I’m grateful. Am I still grumpy, tired and homesick? Absolutely. But that’s a kind of pain that I’m privileged to know. Editor’s Note: This piece, submitted with inclusion in The Voice, was originally published on Kemy’s blog on the 5th of June 2019. This post can be found, along with similar entries, at kemyoh.wordpress.com
@samjuke
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Think about the culture we have in college and in Australia. Do you think these cultures do enough to encourage people to be kind, open, and community oriented? Jefferson Shaw: As Australians, I think we have a long-standing culture of encouraging mateship, which unfortunately does not always shine through, and historically doesn’t always extend to everyone. I think as a society, we’re becoming more aware and informed on life experiences other than our own, but the culture is splitting apart politically. The culture we have is more open to acknowledging that other people’s life experiences are different to our own, and extending kindness to those experiences, but less accepting of the ideological conclusions or individual moral values that we hold. These values are often represented through a political stance, which means we can’t be completely open with others within our culture without conflict. It should be noted conflict can be so helpful in overcoming differences, but it’s so divisive that, unless it’s within a proper context, it just becomes damaging drivel. Despite this, I think we the individual that make up the culture can always do more to be a little more kind, a little more loving, and little more gracious every day.
Francheska Sandoval: It’s a bit tricky to answer what the culture of college is, because once you’ve been here for a while, you start to notice there are various sub-”culture” groups among students on campus. These groups function based on different values and what they see as community. However, I can clearly see that the college wish is for a student body that will be united in Christ. As for the country, it is hard for me to say. As an international student and having lived here for only 2 and a half
Real
This week’s panel: Jefferson
years, I am not completely familiar with Australia’s sense of community and its foundation. However, I can say that Australians are an incredibly friendly bunch. Therefore, I think in the way in which Avondale encourages interaction (dating) with each other is a positive thing.
What role do you think you play in this culture, for good and for ill? What could you do to make these cultures better?
Jefferson Shaw: A friend once told me, character isn’t built in the big decisions, but in the little choices you make every day. I can’t be sure of what roles I will undertake or what decisions I would need to make to encourage a culture to be kinder and communityoriented, except by making small decisions every day to be a better person, and lead by example. Through the college experience, I’ve found most of my decisions are about furthering myself; which isn’t a terrible thing. But what I’ve seen in studying
Talk
Shaw and Francheska Sandoval
the Bible and through my experience, by loving the people around me and helping them, I can, by extension, better my character in the process. I don’t think I’m doing tremendous things in my contributions to our culture, but I do in my everyday decisions, helping at church, volunteering at camps, and trying my best to be a loving and supportive friend to those around me. Francheska Sandoval: I think I play the role that all of us as Christian’s do: try to show Jesus’s love, compassion and forgiveness wherever I can.
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Mountains
By Bec Colley
There is a lot to be said about mountains. People travel all around the world to see mountains. Mount Everest. Matterhorn. Mount Fuji. The Rocky Mountains. Kilimanjaro. There is something about these giants of nature that is worthy of awe. But it is one thing to admire them in the distance, and another to climb them. Climbing a mountain is no easy feat. Sometimes it seems impossible, but eagles will take on the mountains without fear, time and time again. For the Avondale Eagles, the mountain they faced in July was none other than UniSport Division 2 Nationals. For some, this mountain had been climbed before. For others, it was a brand-new challenge. For all, it was a task that required months of preparation. It was a challenge that demanded all their willpower. It was a week that would see how much the Eagles could persevere. The competition was fierce, and often more prepared than our Eagles. Many of our teams were knocked back on day one of the competition but came back with just as much fight the next day, and the day after that. They could not be held down. They were determined to conquer the mountain, playing every game as if it was their first. Led by our Student-Coaches, our athletes competed with a grit that could not be deterred. The Men’s Touch team led the way for our Eagles, earning their place in the Grand Final, where they claimed the silver medal. The Women’s Volleyball team also finished off the week strong, with four straight wins. Both the Men’s and Women’s Basketball teams also finished their week with two wins on the final day of competition, along with some great efforts from our Men’s Futsal, Women’s Touch and Women’s Football teams. An Eagle doesn’t climb a mountain on its own wings. It will find an updraught that carries it further than it could go on its own. Our Eagles had an updraught of their own – their team spirit. After a tough week at Nationals, nobody could fault the spirit of our athletes. They trusted their teammates, and saw each challenge as a team effort. The Eagles stood apart from other universities on and off the field, becoming fan favourites amongst their competitors, from our Men’s Touch team to our Women’s Football team because of this spirit. Equally as admirable as the Men’s Touch results, was their postgame ritual – prayer with their opponents. The team took a knee and, in a prayer huddle with the other team, thanking God for the opportunity to play, and asked for guidance and healing for both teams. By the time the Grand Final rolled around, the team had the likes of Bond University and UTS cheering them on. The Women’s Football team also earned the respect of teams such as UNE and ACU, who commented on the team’s spirit and wished them the best of luck, after seeing the Eagles huddle for prayer before the matches and play with the determination of champions. The same team spirit was present in all of our Eagles athletes. The dedication and team spirit of our Eagles saw them reach new heights. Our Men’s Touch team qualified for Division 1 Nationals, where they will need to bring the same qualities they displayed in Division 2. Our other teams positioned themselves at cliffs edges, ready to jump and fly into next year’s Division 2 competition and push themselves up the mountain before them once again. Our teams never gave up. They fought and climbed the mountain. Whatever mountains appear in the horizon, take the spirit of the Eagles in your journey. Pray and play like a champion.
@joshstadnik
#avon dalexp
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The Voice now has Instagram! @thevoiceavondale Tag us in your photos for your chance to win some amazing gifts and features on our page.
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The Cheat Sheet
Wow, we are back already. Well, you guys all are, I’m currently on placement. Don’t worry, I’m sure I’ll still be working just as hard as I would if I was there. Anyway, once again we’re just gonna list off a few things that you might be interested in looking at to keep productive, motivated, inspired, and some other positive sounding adjectives.
APPS Lightworks: I used this video editing software for an assignment last semester. The whole $0 price tag made it pretty attractive to me, and the fact that it was a professional level product used in a lot of Hollywood films made me very enthusiastic. Actually using it though, I wasn’t so sure anymore. I had to stop and google to find how to do a lot of things, and a lot of the tutorials on the company’s own site are for a previous version of the software. Most of the time it’s pretty unintuitive –exporting, for example, isn’t just a button press, you have to click and drag the button onto the timeline. With enough practice, maybe it would be useful, but I’d only recommend this one to the especially passionate. {6.5/10} Microsoft Whiteboard: I wasn’t going to include this one because I figured it was a Windows exclusive, but I did a little digging and it turns out it’s also available on iOS devices, and since I’ve seen a number of iPads floating around I think that it’s worth including. The app itself basically does the same thing as Google Jamboard, so you can share a digital ‘whiteboard’ with people you’re collaborating with to exchange ideas, but it feels just a little bit more polished and useful. {8/10} Ecosia: How attached are you to Google for searching purposes? I ask because Ecosia is a search engine that uses the revenue generated by your searching to fund the planting of trees. They keep a tally of how many they’ve funded – both by your searches and by the searches of all users, which is currently up to 60 and a half million at time of writing and increasing by about one every second. It’s also a very aesthetically pleasing experience to use as well, though it can be a bit of a hassle when it comes to finding what you want. I am probably going to use Ecosia as my default search engine – at least for the next while. {8/10}
TED TALK
Often, we get so caught up listening to just a handful of voices on certain topics. Our family, pastors, teachers, and while they do have a lot of worthwhile things to say, we can’t let them be our sole sources of information to the exclusion of people who live experiences beyond our own every day. If we ignore their perspectives, we lose sight of empathy as a motivator. This is a story about just that.
Playlists & Podcasts Coastal Drive: So last time I recommended Songs to Sing in the Car, which was just a variety pack of fun songs from the past decade to keep you feeling good for hours. This gets to the same destination but via a very different route (ha, a travel joke). They’re all pretty new, largely Australian, but once again diverse enough to keep you feeling bouncy. Movie Scores for Better Test Scores: This isn’t trying to be a set of iconic movie themes to treat your nostalgia to or anything, rather what we have here is a collection of (largely orchestral) pieces from film soundtracks to just play in the background while you work. I can sure see this helping me focus. Stuff You Should Know: For the curious amongst you. If you appreciate a little bit of general knowledge, this might be a podcast to follow. I’ve always held the belief that knowledge is a keystone in building wisdom, as though knowledge is seeing what the jigsaw should look like and wisdom is putting the pieces in their place. Or maybe I’m nuts.
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Passing the mic to migrant farmer workers | Mónica Ramírez
Rising up. Speaking out.
@maddiegrace98