YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE LONELY ANYMORE

LOVE THE ONE YOU’RE (NOT) WITH 🤷‍♂️

Who do you match up with throughout history? Who do you suppose you could relate to throughout history -some famous person maybe? 🤷‍♂️

I just thought of an idea a couple of minutes ago. A website with dossiers of notable people throughout history that we could relate to (History-Match.com.). I mean with God there is no boundary of time or space right?

It doesn’t matter if you’re perfect. What matters is if you’re perfect for each other.

LONELINESS, IS SUCH A SAD AFFAIR

A thought from several years ago 🤔 Only humans perhaps, have the distinction of facing “overpopulation” and “loneliness” at the same time! Shakes his head. So, how does this happen? “ATTITUDE”

•Sub-title #1 taken from song of same name by Stephen Stills. Performed by the supergroup “Crosby, Still, Nash & Young”.

•Sub-title #2 is an excerpt taken from the song “Superstar” written by Bonnie Bramble and Leon Russell (1969). Sung by “The Carpenters” (1971).

While looking up source-information on the title for the post “Feelings”, I stumbled across an artist/singer by the name of Mike Brant (great voice BTW). His story began to pick my interest. I think some of it, as it turns out -is very much in line with this post. God? 🤷‍♂️

Mike Brant (born Moshe Michael BrandHebrew: משה מיכאל ברנד‎, 1 February 1947[1] – 25 April 1975) was an Israeli singer and songwriter who achieved fame after moving to France. His most successful hit was “Laisse-moi t’aimer” (“Let Me Love You”). Brant committed suicide at the height of his career by jumping from a window of an apartment in Paris. He was known for his vocal range going from baritone to high tenor and also a very high and powerful falsetto.

Mike Brant
By 1973, he was giving 250 concerts a year, some attended by 6,000–10,000 people. This went on for two years. He suffered from depression and loneliness, and from the Second Generation Syndrome (family history of the Holocaust), and would alternate, sometimes enjoying life and at other times slipping back into depression.[5] On 22 November 1974, he attempted suicide, jumping out the window of his manager’s hotel room in Geneva. He suffered fractures but survived. He cut the number of performances and concentrated on another album, Dis-lui (“Tell Her”, French version of “Feeling”). In January 1975, he released two singles, “Qui pourra lui dire” and “Elle a gardé ses yeux d’enfants” (written by Richard Seff and Michel Jourdan).[5]
On 25 April 1975, the day his new album was released, Brant leapt to his death from an apartment located at rue Erlanger in Paris. He was 28.[6]
Mike Brant was buried in Haifa.[7][Source:https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Brant]

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