Ive been researching whats the bravest and most fearless horse breed in rdr2. However all the answers were referring to the online mode. Anyone got a clue whats the bravest horse in rdr2 story. idc about speed or anything like that. PLEASE BE SPECIFIC AND TELL ME WHATS THE BRAVEST HORSE.

This has been reposted with the permission of Ashley Bugge, an incredibly inspirational and brave woman, and someone I have been working with to get this story out. Last May (2018) she lost her husband in a diving tragedy. It could be thought of as a simple rebreather accident, a pre-dive checklist was not completed effectively and Brian died of hypoxia because the valve on his oxygen cylinder was not turned on. However, if we look at this through the lens of systems-thinking, human factors and a Just Culture, this was the convergence of multiple contributory and causal factors ranging from individual active failures to systemic failures at organisational and supervisory levels. Thanks to Ashley, and the context-rich story, we can see how it made sense for those on the day (and before) to do what they did.


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What is even more powerful is that Ashley is the first person I know who hasn't played the 'lawsuit card' and gone after those involved. Instead, she has decided to share the story, warts and all. Thank you, Ashley, for your bravery.

The words below are Ashley's and were posted on multiple Facebook pages. She wants this story shared as far and wide as possible. I have been working with Ashley on a project and offered to share it on LinkedIn as I have a following of around 4k LinkedIn members.

Brave Story (Japanese: , Hepburn: Bureibu Sutr) is a Japanese fantasy novel written by Miyuki Miyabe. It was serialized in various regional newspapers between November 11, 1999 and February 13, 2001, before being published in two hardcover volumes by Kadokawa Shoten inBrave Story has spawned into a substantial media franchise. The novel was adapted into a manga by Yoichiro Ono and Miyabe herself, who wrote the new story for the manga, which was serialised in Shinchosha's Weekly Comic Bunch. Shinchosha collected the chapters of Brave Story in twenty tankbon volumes and released them between April 2004 and May 2008. In the manga version Wataru is slightly older and already in high school.

Manga artist Yoichiro Ono comments that although he has kept his drawing style as close as he could to boys' manga, the story's is aimed at an adult audience and resulted in the first volume of the manga being "a lot more serious than it ended up being... and more mature".[6]

Brave Story: New Traveler was generally well received by critics earning aggregated scores of 76% from Metacritic and 79% from GameRankings.[41][42] The Brave Story film was nominated for "Animation of the Year" at the 2007 Japanese Academy Awards.[43] John Li from MovieXclusive commends the film for its animation, saying "pleasing soft pastel colors and the occasional computer animation is still refreshing and pleasant to look at".[44] Mark Schilling of The Japan Times compares Wataru to Doraemon's Nobita. He compares "the "quest for five jewels" motif" to the Dragon Ball series and The Chronicles of Narnia.[45] John Smith from Impuse Gamer commends the film for its "beautiful animation techniques and some great sound sequences".[46] Mania.com's Chris Beveridge commends the Blu-ray Disc version of Brave Story for being "very expansive in its use of the surround channels during some of the action sequences". He also commends the film for its visual quality saying, "on our 50" set at 720p, the only "problems" I could find was that I had to be six inches (152 mm) from the screen and looking at the pixels to see some of the shiftiness in the animation in the scenes where dark blues and blacks mix".[47] Mania.com's Dani Moure compares the film's "old-fashioned" character designs to Studio Ghibli's.[48] Anime News Network's Brian Hanson criticises the film as "being one of the worst-looking big-budget anime films of recent memory, the story is a mash of bizarre coincidences held together haphazardly by forced and annoying bouts of exposition, with irritating and one-dimensional characters chirping throughout".[49]

loading...google+twitterfacebookpinterestTags: Brene Brown change fear happiness love Owning Your Story self love vulnerability vulnerableNicky SehraA graduate of History & Corporate Communications and Public Relations in London, Ontario Canada, Nicky is a modern day spiritual woman who enjoys the simple pleasures of life and being in the company of her family and friends! She loves to teach yoga, travel and to inspire and empower humanity through her writings. Her aim is to leave everyone she meets with a sparkle of kindness, peace and love!

So long story short, Gotye has not gone anywhere. De Backer is an artist, composer, a singer and songwriter that does, and has done everything on his own terms. Removing himself from the limelight was not as big a decision as many people would imagine, as his ethos never changed as an artist. To create, spread and empower the music he loves so dearly.

It is one of the worst storms ever--the snow has not stopped for days and it is 30 degrees below zero. But somehow Balto must get through. He is the lead dog of his sled team. And he is carrying medicine to sick children miles away in Nome, Alaska. He is their only hope. Can Balto find his way through the terrible storm? Find out in this exciting true story!

Courage is something that lives in our hearts, not in our minds. If you want proof, talk to Elliye and Miles, two siblings who literally walked through fire to save others. Their story reveals an extraordinary capacity within the human spirit to manifest courage almost beyond comprehension.

I was glad to hear that! The story does have several layers. In fact, integrating the various aspects of the story so that it read seamlessly was part of what was so challenging in writing this book; which leads me to . . .

Eisner said he couldn't have captured the stories without the help of many folks. "They would tell me a story involving a firefighter, and tell me to talk to them. Many times they would help open the door for me."

But the history of slavery and the Underground Railroad was a tough subject matter for everyone involved. In order to relay the story, the entire cast had to come together in order to create a compelling show.

Llywelyn was struck with remorse and carried the body of his faithful dog outside the castle walls, and buried him where everyone could see the grave of this brave animal, and hear the story of his valiant fight with the wolf.

Nevertheless this story has great appeal. History and myth appear to have become a little confused when in 1793, a man called David Pritchard came to live in Beddgelert. He was the landlord of the Royal Goat Inn and knew the story of the brave dog and adapted it to fit the village, and so benefit his trade at the inn.

The theatre was dark, the music in the kind of slow, lyrical build that draws your heart into your aching throat, as I watched the story of Snape, one of the most troublesome characters in the Harry Potter series, come to its climax. My siblings and I had joined hundreds of others that evening to catch the midnight showing, delighted to witness the film closing to a story that had taken me, at least, by real surprise with its profoundly explored themes of friendship and power and sacrificial love. Of course, I'd read the books first and came to the movie with the scenes already vivid in my imagination, but I wasn't prepared for the poignancy with which the filmmakers crafted the moment of revelation that comes to Harry as he confronts the hidden sacrifice and grief and bravery of Snape's frustrated life and finds that it shows him how to love more sacrificially than he has ever imagined he could.

I sat there in wonder, awed at the way this shared story broke down the polite facades we all usually fix carefully in place and somehow allowed each of us to touch something grieved and yearning in our own hearts. I sat there amazed at how deeply this story of an unloveable but oh so brave character got to the depths of some truth that defines us, that illuminates our own struggle. And when I got home that night, I lay in bed trying to understand exactly what it was the story had given us. I came to two conclusions.

First, I think Snape, the flawed character, helps us to glimpse and accept our own imperfect reality. We see ourselves in his flawed and resentful heart wrestling with his desire to be faithful in the one love he has experienced. Glimpsing his story helped each of us in that theatre (each reader of the books, of course!) to acknowledge a little of the tragedy we carry in our own hearts. I think we were all, in a way, peering inside our own hearts in that moment of revelation, at our own yearning and frustration, our own desire for love, our own capacity for evil. I know I was thinking of all the hard things I had known recently, of my struggle to trust God, my sense of feeling unseen and unloved and the bitterness I felt growing within me. The story helped us to speak ourselves true.

But second, in Snape, I think we also saw what I think is once of the most powerful concepts we gain by exposure to great stories, and that is the possibility of agency, the knowledge that we as characters in our own story have the capacity to choose to act upon love, to fight for goodness, rather than to give in to the darkness of our own hearts or the meanness of our circumstances. Later in the series, Harry, who has spent most of his life hating Snape, names his own little son after the man and tells the child that Snape was 'the bravest man I have ever known'. Because it is Snape's act of sacrifice that helps Harry to choose the brave act on which the whole story turns. 17dc91bb1f

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