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Sunday 17 April 2022

WEEKLY WELLBEING: IS PRAYER A GENUINE FORM OF COMMUNICATION? 🙏

Report by Duncan Williams @ViewNewsUK

In a world where communication is king, it's easy to overlook the power of prayer. But can prayer truly be considered the keystone of all successful communication?

At its core, prayer is a form of communication with a higher power. We might all have differing concepts of what this might actually mean to us individually. Yet it is agreed that powers greater than ourselves surround us daily - things such as gravity, time or our personally chosen deity. Whether it's through meditation, reciting prayers or simply speaking from the heart, prayer allows individuals to express their deepest thoughts, desires and fears to a force beyond themselves.

But what does this have to do with successful communication in the everyday world?

The answer lies in the importance of listening. In order for communication to be truly successful, both parties must be actively engaged in the conversation. This means not only speaking clearly and effectively, but also actively listening to the other person's words and trying to understand their perspective.

Prayer teaches us to listen, not just to the words of the person we're speaking to, but also to the voice of the divine within us and outside of us as well. By taking the time to quiet our minds and focus on our spiritual connection, we learn to be better listeners in all areas of our lives.

In this practical way prayer can help us to approach communication with a sense of empathy and compassion. When we pray for others, we're forced to consider their needs and desires, and to put ourselves in their shoes. This translates to our everyday interactions, where we can approach conversations with a sense of understanding and kindness, rather than defensiveness or aggression.

Of course, this doesn't mean that prayer is a magic solution to all communication problems. Effective communication still requires skill, practice and patience. But by incorporating prayer into our daily lives, we can cultivate the qualities that make communication successful - listening, empathy and understanding - and approach all conversations with a sense of grace and compassion.

So can prayer really be considered as the keystone of all successful communication? Perhaps not in a literal sense, but there's no denying the powerful impact that spirituality can have on our ability to connect with others. By taking time to connect with the divine, we can become better communicators, and build stronger relationships with those around us. 



Saturday 19 February 2022

Free Media Studies Courses

PULMAN’S WEEKLY NEWS & ADVERTISER SERIES is an award winning media group founded in 1857 by West Country publisher George Philip Rigney Pulman.
In keeping with our founder's original aim to best serve the people, businesses and communities of Devon, Dorset & Somerset, we are please to be able to offer our readers and employees a wide range of free online learning opportunities.
In recent years, digital publishing and news outreach has proved highly successful for all our titles.
Pulman's has always been amongst the first to move with publishing innovations.
We feel confident that an online platform, such as this, which provides access to career enhancing education and skills training - both for our own staff and our readers - is a progressive step forward for a newspaper industry that long ago abandoned its confines to paper only outreach.
After all, news has always sought to enlighten and communicate facts. So too does good education and learning.


Wednesday 15 December 2021

007 agent, film star and former Launceston College student - A look into the life of Roger Moore

Local report by Rosie Cripps for Launceston Life
Most people remember the late Sir Roger Moore as the effortlessly cool 007 agent James Bond, but many in our little community will also know that he spent a brief time as a student at Launceston College, after evacuation from London during the Second World War.


The star’s brief encounter with our little Cornish town is recorded by Duncan Williams in a 2014 issue of SORTED magazine, which goes into depth about his time spent in north Cornwall as an evacuee.


A young Roger Moore was first evacuated in 1939 to Worthing in Sussex and soon became very homesick. It was when his father came to visit him and noticed how the separation from his parents had affected him, that Roger was put on the next train home to London. He was then sent to live in Chester with his mother, but as no bombs had dropped on London by 1940, the pair returned home, only for Roger to be evacuated again after the Blitz.


In the summer of 1941, Roger was carted off to Bude where he and two other evacuees stayed on a farm. It’s said that he enjoyed life there, swimming in the Tamar River and eating many a blackberry and apple pie with clotted cream.

With his life temporarily being based in Bude, Roger attended Launceston College - but unfortunately he did not enjoy going to school as much as he enjoyed swimming in the Tamar and eating fruit pies.


He told Duncan, a former Launceston College student himself: “I can’t say that I liked Launceston College, possibly because I was expected to study hard. I wrote to my parents begging to come home and adding that I’d happily cycle all the way back to London as I only had sixpence and that would not buy a train ticket.”

With this, his parents promptly put him on the train back to his beloved home city.


Of course, after the war, life went on for the Moore family, with Roger eventually ‘falling into’ the world of film after landing a role as an extra in the movie Caesar and Cleopatra in 1945. He was spotted by a talent scout and went to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) before starring in plays at the Cambridge Arts Theatre and was ‘seduced by MGM’. He first became well known as Simon Templar in the hit TV series ‘The Saint’, then of course became known to everyone as the third actor to play James Bond.


Duncan, who was given the chance to chat to the famous star a few years ago when Cornish based biographer Frank Worral invited him along to meet the 007 star, was director of SORTED’s publishing company SCM Ltd at the time and did several interviews which were used in the men’s magazine.

He said: “It was a pleasure to meet Roger Moore, particularly because of his connection with Launceston College. I was something of a Bond film nut as a kid and can promise you I saw ‘The Spy Who Loved Me’ nine times when it was first released, which included several screenings at the old Lanson flea pit, The Tower Cinema, formerly in Market Street.

“Roger Moore was promoting the publication of his autobiography at the time I met him and was in great demand to give journalists an interview about his life and recollections. He eventually agreed to turn up to meet me at Elstree Studios in Hertfordshire. This was very familiar territory for him, having acted in dozens of episodes of The Saint back here in the 1960s.”


Roger turned up to meet Duncan right on time in a small, black Smart car - a little different to the flashy Aston Martin which famously appears in the James Bond films.


As a journalist and editor, Duncan has been fortunate enough to meet a number of British stars over the years, with some being more pleasant to speak to than others: “But in Roger Moore’s case, I can honestly say that he left quite a lasting impression of being a genuinely decent person. He was always first to mock himself and his acting style, yet was quiet and modest about his years of dedicated hard work for the United Nations Children’s Trust.”

He added: “I feel that Launceston would be wise to acknowledge Roger Moore’s link to the town more often. Perhaps his evacuation years at our school were not his happiest, but his short attendance at the college must have helped shape him, even to the smallest degree.”


To read the full article with Roger Moore in SORTED magazine, go to https://issuu.com/duncanwilliams/docs/sortedmagazine2014c/58