Home Actress Jennie Jacques HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers December 2022 Jennie Jacques Instagram - My great Grandparents fleed Poland during WW1 (1914-1918) They arrived in England & swiftly changed their last name. This book holds personal space in my heart ♥️ & no doubt many others. “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms - to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Frankl, the author, an Austrian Psychiatrist, survived Auschwitz. If you don’t get goose pimples reading this, further educate yourself on the history of the holocaust, WW2 (1939-1945) “When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.” Starved, exhausted, persecuted (& if one is lucky enough to escape getting gassed) a brutal (& totally unnecessary) end persisted highly likely to prevail. “An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behaviour.” Frankl speaks from a place, most readers will never know. Approx 85% sent to this “extermination camp” were killed; Frankl, lived. Hundreds of thousands of human beings murdered & tortured & eventually millions (yes, millions) more, as the Nazis carried out their systemic murder, the “final solution.” I am sickened, sickened. There are no words. Yet, Frankl somehow uses his to renew faith & reinforce the “hope” we all, as human beings, must cling to, in any given situation. Profound statements throughout strike the chord of your soul. Frankl found beauty & humour at times when all appeared lost. Despite everything he not only highlights the good in humankind but inspires his reader(s) on how to strive to be the best version of oneself. First half is an account of his experiences within the camp, second focuses on his personal gift to psychology - Logotherapy; the importance & ultimately the “motivational force” behind the meaning of life; “Those who have a 'why' to live, can bear with almost any ‘how.’” This is a book about love, fear, suffering, mental health, what it means to be human & a super power; HOPE.

Jennie Jacques Instagram – My great Grandparents fleed Poland during WW1 (1914-1918) They arrived in England & swiftly changed their last name. This book holds personal space in my heart ♥️ & no doubt many others. “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Frankl, the author, an Austrian Psychiatrist, survived Auschwitz. If you don’t get goose pimples reading this, further educate yourself on the history of the holocaust, WW2 (1939-1945) “When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.” Starved, exhausted, persecuted (& if one is lucky enough to escape getting gassed) a brutal (& totally unnecessary) end persisted highly likely to prevail. “An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behaviour.” Frankl speaks from a place, most readers will never know. Approx 85% sent to this “extermination camp” were killed; Frankl, lived. Hundreds of thousands of human beings murdered & tortured & eventually millions (yes, millions) more, as the Nazis carried out their systemic murder, the “final solution.” I am sickened, sickened. There are no words. Yet, Frankl somehow uses his to renew faith & reinforce the “hope” we all, as human beings, must cling to, in any given situation. Profound statements throughout strike the chord of your soul. Frankl found beauty & humour at times when all appeared lost. Despite everything he not only highlights the good in humankind but inspires his reader(s) on how to strive to be the best version of oneself. First half is an account of his experiences within the camp, second focuses on his personal gift to psychology – Logotherapy; the importance & ultimately the “motivational force” behind the meaning of life; “Those who have a ‘why’ to live, can bear with almost any ‘how.’” This is a book about love, fear, suffering, mental health, what it means to be human & a super power; HOPE.

Jennie Jacques Instagram - My great Grandparents fleed Poland during WW1 (1914-1918) They arrived in England & swiftly changed their last name. This book holds personal space in my heart ♥️ & no doubt many others. “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms - to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Frankl, the author, an Austrian Psychiatrist, survived Auschwitz. If you don’t get goose pimples reading this, further educate yourself on the history of the holocaust, WW2 (1939-1945) “When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.” Starved, exhausted, persecuted (& if one is lucky enough to escape getting gassed) a brutal (& totally unnecessary) end persisted highly likely to prevail. “An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behaviour.” Frankl speaks from a place, most readers will never know. Approx 85% sent to this “extermination camp” were killed; Frankl, lived. Hundreds of thousands of human beings murdered & tortured & eventually millions (yes, millions) more, as the Nazis carried out their systemic murder, the “final solution.” I am sickened, sickened. There are no words. Yet, Frankl somehow uses his to renew faith & reinforce the “hope” we all, as human beings, must cling to, in any given situation. Profound statements throughout strike the chord of your soul. Frankl found beauty & humour at times when all appeared lost. Despite everything he not only highlights the good in humankind but inspires his reader(s) on how to strive to be the best version of oneself. First half is an account of his experiences within the camp, second focuses on his personal gift to psychology - Logotherapy; the importance & ultimately the “motivational force” behind the meaning of life; “Those who have a 'why' to live, can bear with almost any ‘how.’” This is a book about love, fear, suffering, mental health, what it means to be human & a super power; HOPE.

Jennie Jacques Instagram – My great Grandparents fleed Poland during WW1 (1914-1918) They arrived in England & swiftly changed their last name. This book holds personal space in my heart ♥️ & no doubt many others.

“Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”

Frankl, the author, an Austrian Psychiatrist, survived Auschwitz. If you don’t get goose pimples reading this, further educate yourself on the history of the holocaust, WW2 (1939-1945)

“When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.”

Starved, exhausted, persecuted (& if one is lucky enough to escape getting gassed) a brutal (& totally unnecessary) end persisted highly likely to prevail.

“An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behaviour.”

Frankl speaks from a place, most readers will never know. Approx 85% sent to this “extermination camp” were killed; Frankl, lived. Hundreds of thousands of human beings murdered & tortured & eventually millions (yes, millions) more, as the Nazis carried out their systemic murder, the “final solution.”

I am sickened, sickened. There are no words. Yet, Frankl somehow uses his to renew faith & reinforce the “hope” we all, as human beings, must cling to, in any given situation.

Profound statements throughout strike the chord of your soul. Frankl found beauty & humour at times when all appeared lost.

Despite everything he not only highlights the good in humankind but inspires his reader(s) on how to strive to be the best version of oneself.

First half is an account of his experiences within the camp, second focuses on his personal gift to psychology – Logotherapy; the importance & ultimately the “motivational force” behind the meaning of life;

“Those who have a ‘why’ to live, can bear with almost any ‘how.’”

This is a book about love, fear, suffering, mental health, what it means to be human & a super power; HOPE. | Posted on 05/Dec/2022 01:23:21

Jennie Jacques Instagram – @redbulletin #articlereview – so @rosemac01 introduced me to @redbull tv, mags (all the #sportsadventure 💥) & I can vouch it’s beyond the ordinary. The art of football & photography meet head to head in this write up! Turns out, athletes & artists aren’t too dissimilar? To create or to exert, that is the question 🎭 All one big performance on stage & on the pitch – whether it’s feigning injury or gettin’ ya ear 👂 lobbed off on set @historyvikings – “all the men & women are merely players” – tongue out of cheek, I couldn’t agree more with this overall concept linking art & sport. As 2010, political sportswriter Dave Zirin states, “amid the politics & pain that engulf & sometimes threaten to smother professional sport, there is also an art that can take your breath away.” Watching @england play, I often feel breathless (& dizzy 😵‍💫) it’s the passion, dedication, mindset; the aesthetic, the players (the pub, the wine, the crisps 😂)
To bring you up to speed, Red Bull’s “Depth of Field Project” & the charity @positiveviewfoundation have provided tutelage under the magnificent  @davidsimsofficial enabling a group of young photographers access to a dream mentorship & to shoot the Liverpudlian talent ⚽️ @trentarnold66 💥 The photos are on form! & the interview kicks about the idea of the cross overs between footy & art. I’ve included @kittysharpart stadium pics to compliment my review of this write up too – plus the three graces!
“Can you call strategy art? I think you can,” says Sims on the topic of the art of the team commicating & taking their manager’s direction. A unique piece & a beating opportunity for youngsters to learn, build & believe in their own capacity to fulfil their dreams. “If you’re ready to dedicate yourself & make sacrifices, there’s no reason why you can’t achieve, at anything.” ♥️ #liverpool #photography #football #art
Jennie Jacques Instagram – The most beautiful book I own. A few days ago, I curled up on my sofa re-reading it – Labradors (finally!) at rest across my lap. My friend text me, “it’s on tele, now!” 💫 the serendipity. I’m more of a reader than a watcher, but the movie has been cleverly translated. I bought 2 more copies for loved ones. A strong yet gentle story glittered with quotes about friendship, self-worth, kindness, perspective, love & courage – it captures that raw complexity of human feelings – then somehow simplifies (& pacifies) the knots of emotion. Pretty genius. Most of us have experienced being, well, just a little bit lost & this is addressed in such a helpful & ♥️ warming way. Each quote finds a slightly different part of me & there’s a gorgeous pen & ink drawing connected. This Christmas 🎄 has been good – I’m lucky – but a monumental personal loss landed unexpectedly at the heart of my 2022… With all the ups & downs in life, it’s vital to find something like this book to uplift the spirit & hug the soul. I am yet to read from start to finish & I don’t know if reading in chronological order is something I’ll ever do? I tend to dip in & out of it, choosing each page at random, swept ever so slightly off my tootsies 👣 by the wisdom, each time. There should be a copy in every persons home 🎁 ♥️ #charliemackesy #bookstagram #reading #artistsoninstagram #books

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