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S1E7_All we need

Episode 7 of the WORDS FROM A STRANGER podcast, hosted by Rudrali J Gor, titled "S1E7_All we need" was published on April 5, 2021 and runs 3 minutes.

April 5, 2021 ·3m · WORDS FROM A STRANGER

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All we need in our life is to see people we love and care about happy and healthy...

All we need in our life is to see people we love and care about happy and healthy...
Chapter 00

Jan 2, 2026 ·17m

01 - Section 01

Jan 2, 2026 ·42m

Chapter 01

Jan 1, 2026 ·11m

02 - Section 02

Jan 1, 2026 ·38m

Chapter 02

Dec 31, 2025 ·10m

03 - Section 03

Dec 31, 2025 ·1m

Words By Seyi Seyi Dinma Samuel Let's see how the entire world can listen to words from a total stranger. Except you are a friend and you already know me.LifeRelationshipsTrending topicsEducationFinancesLocal politicsSocial MediaMovies ALIEN 'Voice From Space':Was it a Hoax? Carola Appel What if an alien spoke to you through the TV on a lazy Saturday evening? The bizarre soundtrack was mixed in with what Southern were supposed to be broadcasting. The noises from a Looney Tunes cartoon took Vrillon’s words into an even stranger dimension! Sources:https://www.gaia.com/lp/content/south...https://www.independent.co.uk/news/lo...https://science.howstuffworks.com/spa... River of Life Tabernacle's Podcast River of Life Tabernacle River of Life Tabernacle calls upon the Elohim of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. (The Elohim of Israel). We study and teach the Scriptures from a Hebrew language perspective, which reveals the true meaning of the stories and instructions we are being told. Gather the people together, men, and women, and children, and thy stranger that is within thy gates, that they may hear, and that they may learn, and fear YHVH your Elohim, and observe to do all the words of this law: –Deut 31:1  Strangers at Lisconnel by Jane Barlow Loyal Books Strangers at Lisconnel is a sequel to Jane Barlow’s Irish Idylls. The locations and most of the characters are common to both. There is great humor and concomitantly a certain melancholy in most of these stories of the most rural of rural places in Ireland. Although of a higher social class than her characters, Our Jane seems to have a touch of softness in her heart for their utter simplicity, abject poverty and naiveté. From the following brief example of dialogue, can be seen that Ms Barlow could only have come to write these words after having heard them countless times in person: Mrs. Kilfoyle: "I declare, now, you'd whiles think things knew what you was manin' in your mind, and riz themselves up agin it a' purpose to prevint you, they happen that conthráry." Although Jane Barlow did not consider her poetry worthwhile, the rythmn and music of her prose is magical to the ear.
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