{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/611162d5d45d4d00122700b4?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Lana M. 'Rochel Author - Carol of the Wings, Vintage Folk Patchwork Tale","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/611162d5d45d4d00122700b4/show-cover.jpg?height=200","description":"Lana M. 'Rochel Author features prose, poetry, and lyrics. Life isn't black and white. So is my creative writing! The gamut of genres I write is diverse. It's all about following your intuition and chemistry of words. Go along with me!\n\nFor SUBTITLES, check out Lana M. 'Rochel, YouTube \nhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHIFFQ7YxvWX0jfYwOAqyLw\n\nAuthor bio:\nLana M. 'Rochel is the pen name for a writer, poet, lyricist, and podcaster whose work has appeared in BFS Horizons, the Haiku Pea Journal of haiku and senryu, Adelaide Literary Magazine, Redemption: The best rejected manuscripts of 2020 Anthology, LitStream Literary Magazine, and The 2021 Dwarf Stars Anthology.\nQualified English teacher, Lana writes creative nonfiction, fiction, poetry, song lyrics, and children’s.\n\nLana M. 'Rochel Author has been listed in Best UK Left Wing Podcasts 2021 by BestStartup.co.uk , and the Top 20 Creative Writing Podcasts You Must Follow in 2021 by blog.feedpost.com\n\nAt present, I consider launching a page on Patreon. Would you like to read my work if there was a chance to do so? Let me know in the comments please.\n\nFor more, please follow\n@lanam.rochel, Instagram\nhttps://www.instagram.com/lanam.rochel/?hl=ru\n@lanamrochel, Facebook\nhttps://www.facebook.com/lanamrochel\n@rochel_lana, Twitter\nhttps://twitter.com/rochel_lana\nSongbay\nhttps://songbay.co/portfolio/65741\n\nLana M.'Rochel, YouTube (SUBTITLES)\nhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHIFFQ7YxvWX0jfYwOAqyLw\nSoundCloud\nhttps://soundcloud.com/user-858751093\n\nYou can listen to \nLana M.'Rochel Author \nAnchor\nhttps://anchor.fm/lana-m-rochel\nApple Podcasts\nhttps://podcasts.apple.com/ua/podcast/lana-m-rochel-author-carol-wings-vintage-folk-patchwork/id1561966940\nAudible\nhttps://www.audible.com/pd/Lana-M-Rochel-Author-Carol-of-the-Wings-Podcast/B08W4NFC8W\nTuneIn\nhttps://tunein.com/podcasts/Storytelling-Podcasts/Lana-M-Rochel-Author---Carol-of-the-Wings-Vinta-p1420467/\nPlayerFM\nhttps://player.fm/podcasts/lana-m-rochel\niVoox\nhttps://www.ivoox.com/en/perfil-lana-m-039-rochel_aj_24826790_1.html\nGoogle Podcasts\nhttps://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL3NtbXVzeWovZmVlZC54bWw\nListen Notes\nhttps://www.listennotes.com/search/?q=%22Lana%20M.%20%27Rochel%22&scope=podcast&only_in=author\nReason\nhttps://reason.fm/podcast/lana-m-rochel-author-carol-of-the-wings-vintage-folk-patchwork-tale?ref=syncify\nSpotify, Stitcher,Pocket Casts, Breaker, Deezer, and elsewhere\n\nThank you so much for listening! Your likes and comments are deeply appreciated!\n \nInterested in creative cooperation, feel free DM @lanam.rochel, Instagram\n\n\nEpisode 1 - Carol of the Wings, Vintage Folk Patchwork\n\nCarol of the Wings, Vintage Folk Patchwork Tale by Lana M. 'Rochel is a modern fable. \nBalancing between the black humour and epic, it tells an offbeat story of love and betrayal. Easy-going, rhyming, and musical, the fable debates the moral questions. Due to the quotes and 21 proverbs, Carol of the Wings delivers the global idea of humanity and justice. Empowered by the ethnic roots music, Carol of the Bells (Shchedryk) vibes the grandeur of human feelings. \n\nWhile Canada Goose can't sing, Swallow can. Have a moment of meditation! Read between the lines!\n\nIn fact, there was a real story behind \"Carol of the Wings,\" which happened before the Coronavirus time.  In a sense unique, the story is quite typical for most international couples who struggle to reunite, though. I couldn't get it why some are \"masters in law\" of others' life then. Hopefully, with humanity confronting Coronavirus, those in power will eventually understand that there cannot be \"people over people.\" You cannot give a verdict on someone unless he is proved to be guilty, for there's only one life to live for each of us. \nLive yours for full!\n\nFind out the true story behind the fable: JAM SESSION, nonfiction, Adelaide Literary Magazine #42, November 2020. Thank you!\n\nhttp://adelaidemagazine.org/2020/11/20/jam-session-by-svitlana-matiushenko-musyj/\n\nUkrainian Bell Carol, piano and instrumental cover version (fragments).\nArrangement and performance by Chelsey Joy. \nSpecial thanks to Chelsey for allowing me to use her epic and enchanting music to coat the composition \"Carol of the Wings, Vintage Folk Patchwork Tale.\"\n\nThe traditional Ukrainian Bell Carol has become an essential part of Christmas tradition all over the world. Carol of the Bells is a popular Christmas Carol composed by Ukrainian composer Mykola Leontovych in 1914 with lyrics by Peter J. Wilhousky. The song is based on a Ukrainian folk chant called \"Shchedryk.\"\n\nAudioscript:\n\nCAROL OF THE WINGS, Vintage Folk Patchwork Tale\n\nGod loved birds and invented trees.                                                                                         Man loved the birds and invented cages.\nJacques Deval                                                                                                                                                                         \n\nCanada Goose worked like a horse, days and nights to make his living bites. Once in winter, consuming one of his two fours, decided he to take a chill, his will. \n“Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or ‘god,” Aristotle thought. Thus, a mature, still good-looking feather guy tried to fish the only so as not to feel so lonely. \n“Ding dong ding dong!” he heard the song, “From everywhere, filling the air…Shchedryk shchedryk, shchedrivochka, pryletila lastivochka.” \nWhoa! He was confused: she wasn’t a goose! How come her voice and curves, and manners kept him amused?\n“All birds of feather flock together,” told to himself Canada Goose unwilling to refuse\narousing sense of passion; that carving figure hun - a swallow in his chat room barn - was fun.\nThe proverb says, “Be on alert, like the red ant that moves with its claws open.” They did try both to see the worst first, however, ended up by having no alert, instead – they got goosebumps each day or night, as Goose popped up in “yesterdays” of hers, while Swallow would be filling his “tomorrows” with bright trills. The globe wheels! And soon, he crossed the ocean to ring her foot, and boldly promised happy ever after. No laughter!\nThe Irish say, “It’s not a fish until it’s on the bank,” and their bank was full of grazing geese\nawaiting bargain. Some wise men add that “Step by step one goes very far” (if not the ruling body!).\nHey, “You can’t be lost on road that is straight” unless “It’s much of law, and little justice.” Being jubilant, small Swallow took a chance to please the mighty flock, which claimed to be \nprotecting Goose from every evil on the earth, supporting interests of the lakes, increasing riches – \nloud speeches. \nShe sang her usual song, ““La da da da da, la da da da da…Hark how the bells, sweet silver bells, all seem to say, throw cares away…Shchedryk shchedryk, sgchedrivochka, pryletila lastivochka.”\n“You never know how a cow catches a rabbit,” they say in Holland. (Really?) Why? –\nThat’s why! Surprise, surprise! Canada Geese saw graceful swallow as a specie from ‘distant garden of the poor, a black-white bird unable to lay golden eggs on their land, my friend.  \nThey said she hadn’t satisfied the chief she would be likely to have left the lakes soon after she had visited her match. Without search, Goose was the one inviting Swallow! In fact, presumption of innocence was smashed to pieces, and his opinion was laboriously ignored. Oh, Lord! \n“Who can’t pretend can’t govern,” the French remark here, “C'est la vie.”\n“A barleycorn is better than a diamond to a rooster,” the English posit – peeps experienced in life, as well as Swallow and Canada Goose, but not Canada Geese, who did refuse to recognize their buddy’s right to have her as a guest. Decision made: he’s better off without... Holy cow! \n“Beware of man’s shadow and bee’s sting” if you are not a king.  Despite Canada Goose presented her a ring, nobody thinks it gives them right to stick together having Timmy’s and listen to the call of loons, while others say that “Justice once delayed is justice being denied;” all right, all right!\nCan anybody see there’s something wrong?  It didn’t take the jury long to come to their verdict, only a few days. No interviews, no extra questions from the flock. They were sure hanging\nheavy lock on big guy’s door. \nWas Goose too short for them ‘get noticed or seemed not that well-feathered, therefore, ignored? Oh, well, as one of Geese commented once, “It’s not about flood control or any major matter of the breed; thus, matters of the heart with all their trills are not priorities to us.”  \nOkay, “You can’t wake up a person who’s pretending ‘be asleep,” as people’s wisdom says, and it occurs, “Where might is being the master, justice is the servant,” eh?\nNonetheless, “Where there are poor, there are rich. But where there’s justice, they are all\nbrothers,” the Arab tell the truth of generations almost from the times the Earth was born. \nBut it’s been ages since Canada Goose picked up the phone to listen to his darling’s song. Gave up on happiness or gone to make more loonies so as to please the flock and rock? \n“The fool who owns an ox is seldom recognized as fool,” advises folk – and, “You can cage the bird but you can’t make it sing.” \nIn solitude, Canada Goose might think whatever, however, Swallow would, “better be a dog than a caged lion,” like some are used.\nA famous figure was Aesop, who thought, “Not only… feathers…make fine birds.” \nShould be the line where story ends; hence, “a bird never flew on one wing” – one wing dance has no sense.  \nWith that being said, it is so sad to know “a hero only could appear when ‘tiger’s dead.” Though, Maya Angelou once spread a clever word about ‘bird that “doesn’t’ sing because it has an answer, it sings because it has a song.” So long! \nTry listening to ‘lonely swallow’s chimes once your mind roams beyond the scenes and figures vanish, leaving space for ‘bare soul with scars to go on stage and sing a hymn to love, \n“La da da da da, la da da da da…Hark how the bells, sweet silver bells, all seem to say, throw cares away…Shchedryk shchedryk, sgchedrivochka, pryletila lastivochka.”\n\nProverbs and Quotes (used in “Carol of the Wings”)\n1. A bird doesn’t sing because it has an answer, it sings because it has a song.\nMaya Angelou\n2. God created birds and invented trees. Man loved the birds and invented cages. Jacques Deval\n3. Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or a god. Aristotle\n4. Birds of feather flock together.\n5. Be on the alert like the red ant that moves with its claws wide open. (Ugandan Proverb)\n6. It’s not a fish until it’s on the bank. (Irish Proverb). \n7. Step by step one goes very far. (Traditional Proverb)\n8. You cannot be lost on a road that is straight. \n9. Justice delayed is justice denied. (English Proverb)\n10.It’s much of law, and little justice \n12.You never know how a cow catches a rabbit (Dutch Proverb)\n13.Who can’t pretend can’t govern (French Proverb)\n14.The fool who owns an ox is seldom recognized as a fool. (South African Proverb)\n15.“C'est la vie.” (French) English translation: It is life.\n16.A hero only appears once the tiger is dead. (Burmese Proverb)\n17.You can cage a bird but you can’t make it sing. (French Proverb)\n18.A bird never flew on one wing \n19.It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds. Aesop.\n20.A barley corn is better than a diamond to a rooster. (English Proverb)\n21.You can’t wake a person who is pretending to be asleep. (Navajo Proverb)\n22.Better to be a dog than a caged lion. (Arab Proverb)\n23.Beware of man’s shadow and a bee’s sting. (Burmese Proverb)\n24.Where there are poor, there are rich. But where there is justice, they are all brothers. (Arab Proverb)\n25.Where might is the master, justice is the servant. (German Proverb)","author_name":"Lana M. 'Rochel"}