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The Things You Don't Know
There are an infinite number of things that people don't know. You can't know everything. It's impossible. But there are some things in the world that you should know, but you don't ever hear of. I've found that Americans have a very distant view of the world, as if it's struggles and tragedies were just stories that you heard on the nightly news- not real people, not real places, not real lives. I have fought myself lost in this mindset many times.
I became involved with bringing these stories to you, reader, when I was nine years old, but I didn't know it yet. My parents adopted two girls from Ethiopia, Africa seven years ago. I got to travel with them and my older brothers halfway across the Earth to finalize the adoption, and I experienced an entirely different world than my rural life in Minnesota. I heard the loud rumble of monks singing praises in the early morning hours in their monasteries, and I witnessed kids my age playing soccer with an orange peel as a ball. I saw homes made of giant leaves, sticks, and scraps of metal, and I saw children -including my sisters- fill the adoption care center. Poverty surrounded the people there. IT was shoved in their faces from the time they woke up in the dark of the morning to when they laid to sleep late that night.
But what triumphed over the poverty, the sadness, and the pain, was the undeniable, inextinguishable hope in everyone's eyes. Despite the life they had been given, they did not demand pity. They knew that to do so would be, in a sense, admitting defeat So the monks still sang praises in the mornings, and the children laughed as they played soccer with the orange peel. These people opened my eyes to a bigger world, on that I want to share with you- its tragedies, its triumphs, and its people- all of it.
This is the Unheard News,
When I was a little girl, I always had a passion for helping people.
Usually it was my twin brother or younger sister. I assumed the mother role at a young age. I'd constantly make sure they were safe and assisted them with anything they needed. Sometimes that would lead to trouble, but I had a pretty honest face to get away with things with my parents.
I was that kid that walked around with a little doctor's kit and would bandage up any 'owie.' After graduating high school, I joined the Army
and left three months later into what people referred to as "the real world." That was an experience in itself. At 18 years old, I had the privilege of knowing what I could handle physically, mentally and emotionally. It can take a person there whole life to realize and understand themselves.
I denied getting help when I desperately needed it. My mom, being a RN, begged me to go see a doctor and get on medication. My mentality of having too much pride got the best of me. I got fed up of being tired and feeling like my life was worthless. I finally reached out for help. I wouldn't be the same person I am today if I didn't. I consider myself lucky. With the help of medications and therapy, I survived one of the longest and toughest times in my life.
Features
1) Wait
2) Help
3) The Found Journal That Saved Society
4) Psychology and Colors