A bit too long comment ... but if you have patience then you are welcome to read Sending Hugssss and Love ,sweet Friend
This is your life.
You’re allowed to change your mind. To change your heart. You’re allowed to be a different person. To wake up one day and not want to do the things you’ve been doing all your life.
You’re allowed to love who you want.
To move on from the people who are not good to you.
To let go of anyone without any kind of explanation. Without any kind of regret.
You’re allowed to make mistakes. To learn from them. Or not to learn from them and experience everything all over again.
You’re allowed to forget your past if you want to. Or to stay in it but you must also understand that this is not how you will grow.
You’re allowed to change careers. To dress differently. To chase different dreams. To change locations, even if, at first, you’re terrified to do so.
You’re allowed to dislike yourself but also allowed to change those same parts you don’t see eye to eye with. To work on them until you’re completely comfortable with who you are.
This is for the ones who are str*ggling right now. This is for the ones who have been having a rough day or week or even year. The ones who feel like this storm will never end.
Keep fighting for you. Not for your friends, not for your family, but for you.
Keep fighting because deep down you hold a tiny voice that knows you were meant for far more than this sadness and pain you are feeling. Keep fighting because the person you will be on the other side of all this is cheering for you so much. Keep fighting because you will get there. And it will be worth it.
ON YOUTUBE.COM FROM NBC'S SHOWBOAT OF ANNETTE SINGING GO TO:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5uQFNZTzPM
Annette Hanshaw - Just Couldn't Say Goodbye (1933)
Video clip from "Captain Henry's Showboat" (1933) with Annette Hanshaw singing "We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye". This is Annette's only appearance on film.
Catherine Annette Hanshaw was an American Jazz Age singer. She was one of the most popular radio stars of the late 1920s and early 1930s, with many of her most notable performances taking place on NBC's Maxwell House Show Boat. Over four million of her records had been sold by 1934, following the peak of her popularity.
In her ten-year recording career, she recorded about 250 sides. In a 1934 poll conducted by Radio Stars magazine, she received the title of best female popular singer. Second place went to Ethel Shutta, third place went to Ruth Etting, and fourth place went to Kate Smith.