Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Lecrae - Anomaly (2014) Full Free Album Download and WhatsApp+ v6.26D Download

Note: This post is specifically as per request and that is why I have not reviewed the music and uploads herein. (I can do that later.)

Guys, here is a full download of Lecrae's latest album Anomaly released this year plus a bonus track they gave out for free on Reach Records website.

There is also WhatsApp+ for guys who've been requesting that I post a link.

Stay blessed.

Bonface Morris.











Friday, October 17, 2014

Writer’s Block

Well, the funny thing is that I don’t have what to write about today; oh, and most funny about it all is that I am going to force myself to write about not being able to write [at all] and stuff like that.

Well, (again, you’ll have to get used to me now when I use this awesome word), if you are into developing habits, or at one time or another you have had a chance to know how habits are developed, you have probably already read somewhere (or have been yelled at by some “expert” at a seminar as you yawned yourself away before lunch break) that you can learn anything and come to making it part of your character in 21 days. 21 days? Yeah, that’s how they get us all duped. You can’t learn anything and become good at it in 21 days. (Yeah unless it is involving food, movies or having a good time). I’ve tried it buddies. It has never worked. (At least for me.)

Side note: I think there should also be another cliché teaching us on how to unlearn things in such and such a number of days. *Sigh* And they surely (whoever does this bad stuff to us good people) will get us all derailed from the awesomeness of not knowing too much useless stuff.

Anyway, because I have just realized that I have never learned anything in 21 days (which is spectacular because I don’t want to be part of the crowd that qualifies such an Ipsos Synovate thingy - they always lie to us anyway), I now embark on justifying my point: you don’t have to learn anything in 21 days, and that you can actually enjoy writer’s block and learn from it instead of being stressed and brought down by it. Yes, you don’t have to be demeaned by your own makings and unmaking(s).

Another side note: You laymen (ahem) don’t know how demeaning it is to know that you can’t just get stuff and words and things to write about even when you really want to, and that it has been happening to you for kinda since your dad send you pocket money (oh, brilliant, now you get it.)


Back to the road...

There are quite a number of habits I have learned without even learning. There are. Quite a lot. Really. My bandwagon of such habits consists of things like waking up late. Come on, don’t give me that eye roll. We were never ever (ahem) taught how to wake up late. None of us was. Did you learn it in 21 days? Naaah, I don’t think so. You didn’t have to.
Okay, the smart ones amongst us may now be having an argument at this point and may be having an avalanche towards telling me, “Those ‘experts’ are actually talking about good habits, Morris!” Oh, good. Great. Well and good, I have a surprise for you. My bandwagon has got good habits too. Check this one out: we have learned how to avoid and deal with criticism in so many ways, and it did not take 21 days. We keep learning and unlearning it. This is life - learning and unlearning habits.

Habits like reading our Bibles have been developed over differing periods of time. Other bad but unprecedented habits include writer’s block, which only requires one or two occasions and you are an expert at it (and the period of learning it is never actually 21 days.) Habits like believing in something (having Faith) and loving people unconditionally take a much longer time to learn and adopt to (ask Thomas and married people about it). Others like unfaithfulness and infidelity can occur in milliseconds.

So what am I trying to say? I am saying that each one of us has a way and a period within which we may study, learn and adopt to a given habit. We do it differently for different habits.
The habit we are trying to deal with here is writer’s block (oh, actually, some may say that it is a condition). We learn it over time, get used to it and eventually make it part of us. It doesn’t just occur. We nurture and cultivate it (just as we do with other good or bad habits) over a given period of time.

...........................................................

The thing about writing that is also common with other arts is that it takes time for you to develop your style - your own genre so to say - in any piece of art. As long as you are not trying to duplicate someone else’s style, you remain relevant; but if you are trying to wear another person’s shoes, know that that is the beginning of your fall. We can never fit in anyone else’s shoes, no matter how big or small.

Writer’s block is a result of many things, but the main point is this: you are a writer, and you either don’t have what to write about so you are now scared of "the blank page" or you don’t feel like writing [at all]. (And this applies to all artists, by the way.)

So how do we deal with it?

On a light note, you can overcome it through the following ways (oh you can);

1.   Visiting your blog or that folder you save your write-outs in somewhere on your laptop or phone or tablet, staring at the awesome posts you have already posted, sighing, counting them again, sighing a second time, closing the folder and congratulating yourself: “Yaaay, I am a ninja...!!” It won’t change a thing but it may help. Really.
2.   Get to Google and type “How to overcome writer’s block in 21 days...” After that, stare at the search results, click on a few links, click back, re-read an article, smile about it, do a few Opera or Chrome keyboard shortcuts just to prove to and remind your awesome self that you have acquired ninja status and go on with your miserable writing-less life. Yes, go on with your life, buddy. We won’t judge you. After all, the pen, the keyboard, the screen, the energy, the brain, the sacrifice to write and so forth and so on are all yours. We won’t judge you, I promise.
3.   Post to your social media platforms something like this: “I need to do something about not writing... It’s been a long time” and wait for the ooooooohhhs and aaaaaaahhs that arise. Argue with friends a little to why you are not writing and then just disappear from the comments. You are the bause, remember, you are the bause.
4.   Mourn about it until you fall asleep or until you become hungry and eat it away. Of course you’ll add weight due to binge eating. And of course that’s another bad habit you’re slowly developing...

Or, on a serious note, you can do the following;

1.   Try to understand when and why you stopped writing.
Is it a problem you can overcome or do something about? Then do it. Is it a problem with a change of environment and as a result you are still trying to acclimatize or is it a change of friends and the work-space? Inspiration differs depending with our environments, achievements and the challenges we encounter along the way. These things may be happening to us or to the people around us. I may stop writing or my style of writing may switch swiftly from one to another depending on people around me and the things I see, touch, smell, think about, feel, like and love from moment to moment and day to day: was I previously single? Am I still single? Am I from a broken relationship? Have we clashed with God or are we in good terms? Am I married? Do I now have kids e.t.c. These things redefine art. A lot. And writing is not a exception.

2.   Ask your writing friends about how they overcome the block.
Birds of the same feather flop together (Experts et al), remember? At a personal level, I deal with mine by doing exactly what I am doing today... Writing about it. But best of all, I have so many unfinished writing mini-projects and I always use one or two of them to get me back up again. Once I contribute to a certain topic I was addressing somewhere in the underground, everything else (my thought process, my grasp for inspiration and my passion) just falls in place. Someone else may give you a point or two to help you pick yourself up again.

3.   Stop believing that lie that you can undo the block in 21 days.
This is not some sort of theory, my friend. Writing is serious business, so if you don’t want to do it (or you don’t feel thrilled doing it), it will take you 21 years to get anything done. Yes, 21 years or even more. Mark my words. (I actually have a certain writing project that has stayed untouched for four years... and I am still counting...) Yeah, this thing is real.

4.   Take advantage of modern technology.
Own a notebook (paper, if you are all conventional and stuff), a phone with a note-taking app, a tablet or a laptop with note-taking apps that sync across all platforms (phone-tablet-laptop/desktop). This way, you can start writing something on one platform and finish it off elsewhere once you get the time and opportunity. What mostly contributes to our failure to write - that is if we have not befriended technology - is when an idea chips in and we don’t note it down, or we note it on a piece of paper which gets lost, gets torn or gets rained on thus losing information and leaving us with an overwhelming sense of helplessness.

5.   Stop wanting to be like someone else.
Admire people’s work, but stick to your own style. Read a lot yeah, but don’t duplicate someone’s writing style into your own. You are prone to fail if you do so. The weird thing about art is that counterfeits don’t last long, so stop being one. Yes, counterfeits, copy-cats and wannabes never bounce back after a burnout or after the block creeps in.

6.   Manage your time well.
There is always time to write and there is always time to rehearse. Always. If you are passionate about it, you will always find time. You only need three hours (at most) to write something exponential i.e. you write the whole unedited script of three pages (of a Word document of course) in 1 hour, edit it in the next 30 minutes, go walk for 20 minutes to clear up your head, come back and review it anew for 40 minutes or so before posting it or stacking it on top of other writings your already have. You can spread the 3 hours across a week by getting to write at least 30 minutes a day. You don’t need 21 days, you just need 30 minutes per day for a lifetime.

7.   Don’t judge yourself so harshly when you aren’t able to write for a while, but congratulate yourself when you do.
You do this for a while and you come to realize that there is nothing that works better in art than self-motivation. Motivate yourself to achievement or die seeking for compliments from ghosts. :-)

8.   Don’t write nothing if you have nothing to write.
It is better you shut up and write nothing than fill up people’s faces and minds with unrefined art. There is nothing as bad as everyone wondering, “Oh Morris, who really forced you to write that?” Or “You could have prepared more, man. We’d appreciate more if you did so!!” Preparation and research are key to perfecting any gift or talent, so thoroughly work on them before spreading your block woes to everyone else around you.

9.   You don’t have to figure out the beginning to the end of what you want to write about - nobody does that all the time.
You just have to see the beginning, a little of the middle (the body) and some part of the end of the work of art. If you wait to see the whole thing before embarking on writing, you may actually end up seeing nothing hence write nothing.

10. Never procrastinate your writing time. Ever.
Writing, like every other art, requires discipline and consistency in order to achieve great (not just good) results. Once you break this order of things, you are likely to fall off really fast. (Ask me about it.)

11. Don’t restrict yourself to one style of writing.
Art, unlike science, is always exploratory and changing. The Shakespearean style of writing can e revived today if we choose to. We can write the same things in many different ways... And as I always say, “Writers and movie-makers are gods...”, there is nothing that a writer can’t possibly do to his/her style or the very things they address in their works of art. So go on and make yourself a god with your work being your creation...


Until next time,




Bonface Morris.  

Monday, October 13, 2014

Nothing

Yo man, yo gal
So you think you are nothing?
Wait, do you really think you are nothing?
Nothing can't breathe, and nothing can't read what I'm writing
Nothing can't tread the earth, and nothing can't bleed with life
Nothing ain't nuthin'


Listen bruh, and listen bae...

There is a tale I used to hear of old, of near-old
Buddies used to shout and sing it all over
It went somethin' this;
"Yo, there ain't no way somebody's gonna roll
And roll really deep
Yeah, deep like pizzas down the raw yo
Without being sumthin
To roll like you really rolling, you gotta be sumthin
And you ain't gotta be sumthin by being nothing
Nothing ain't nuthin..."


Later, I realized this;

There's a time when one thinks they are nothing
And they depend on men and women to validate their worth
And they worship them
For they long for the filling of that emptiness and the scraping away of nothingness
And loneliness and ill relationships creep into their lives while trynna be something
They travail in the agony of nothingness
And plead with mankind to fill their emptiness
Men trample on their worth and feed on it
Women drink their blood and spit on their cloth
Exhaustion, regret, pain and blackmail take their toll
Hatred, dishonesty, imbalance and low self esteem create their fall
Leaving them without meaning and with a destiny forged by the arms of men...
But ain't they something?
Wain't we all created in God's awesomeness? In His image?
Ain't we, therefore, all awesome?


Listen...

We may all want to justify our being "nothing" by our levels of education:
That we have not stepped in a school to receive even the most basic education
Or we may want to define our lives by our failures (and they are many)
Or see ourselves through the eyes of others: the words they've told us, the curses they've hurled at us and the betrayals they have made us experience
Or because of where we have come from: our "fallen" families, the divorces around us and all our failed relationships
Or that all our days we've been being told that we are useless and nothing
And we let drugs define us
And people, and our weaknesses, and pride, and arrogance, and selfishness
And sorrow, and anger, and fury, and unforgiveness and grudges
All in the name of trying to escape being the nothing we've been told we are
But does all this matter?
Does it change our feeling of being nothing?
Does it make us feel worthy, wanted or even better?
Does it draw new portraits of reality: the reality of who we TRULY are?
Does living to satisfy other people's demands of us make us better?
It ain't nuthin
We can't define ourselves through nuthin-ness
We can't thrive if we remain wanting to define our lives through the words and actions of the people around us
It ain't nuthin


Pain will still hold us captive
We will still live in unbelief
Stress will still make us less positive
Life will still give us reasons to find no relief
People will still find us uninteresting
And we will die with blame games and be buried nothing


Listen...

We need to turn around and stop hurting ourselves and paining those we love
I need to do so, you need to do so
Until we realize we are something in God's eyes,
Until we define ourselves through His eyes: how awesome, beautiful, worthy, loved, cared for... we are
Man will never satisfy our crave for identity...
And we'll die nothing, for nothing
It is in God, in Christ, that all our experiences with men unfold our worth
It is only in Him where our pains and our regrets are turned to worth
He clothes us into something, into His children
And He calls us by name;
"Morris, er, (fill in your name), you are something to me
I gave up myself, my life, for you
I love you... I have always loved you with an unfailing love...
I won't give up on you...
Come to me child, I will never give up on you...
You are something to me - you are my child... you ca
n't be nothing to me..."

To sum up, here's Lecrae's outro from Nuthin'
Hey man, the way I see it
I think we were made for mor
Than just, ya know, the simple things that we aspire toward
We were made for more than just telling stories about
How much money we can get by selling poison to people
It's time to talk about who we are and who we can be
And we need to build each other up and not put each other down
I feel like we not talking about nothing right now


And here is Francesca Battistelli's own words in He Knows My Name;
I don't need my name in lights
I'm famous in my Father's eyes
Make no mistake, He knows my name...


That's how the Creator of the universe wants us to define ourselves: we are not nothing , He knows our names. They're written on the palm of His hand...


Bonface Morris.