Musical Youth Edenderry

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Musical Youth Edenderry Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Musical Youth Edenderry, Performance & Event Venue, .

Musical Youth Edenderry is the FB page for class information on :
baby and me/Toddler Music
speech and drama/solo acting coaching
musical theatre singing coaching
youth well being tutoring

Can we help?.Yes..yes ..yes we can...Anything you can spare? One less cup of coffee out?One less treat at the shop...If ...
08/01/2025

Can we help?.

Yes..yes ..yes we can...

Anything you can spare?

One less cup of coffee out?

One less treat at the shop...

If you can, please donate đŸ„°

€35,310 has been raised, we are so far off
6 dogs and a horse have been rescued in the past few days alone!
We really really need to keep funds coming in
it’s awful to always have to worry about money when we are also worrying about poor animals that desperately need help 💔💔💔💔
Please share and support, WE NEED YOU 💖
https://donate.mylovelyhorserescue.com/donations/help-us-make-a-huge-difference/

Nice!
08/01/2025

Nice!

You are more than enough - go ding the universe

Big shout out to Brereton Fuels Edenderry !! 5 star service and thry deliver to your door, for Free! And very dependable...
07/01/2025

Big shout out to Brereton Fuels Edenderry !!

5 star service and thry deliver to your door, for Free!

And very dependable!,

👌

Memories of Christmas past đŸ„°Hope your Christmas Present 2024, was filled with moments to cherish! Baby and Me! Returns n...
07/01/2025

Memories of Christmas past

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Hope your Christmas Present 2024, was filled with moments to cherish!

Baby and Me! Returns next week, Wednesdays at 10 am to 11 am

Come join us !

New members welcome!
Message whatsapp 087 852 2082 to register!

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03/01/2025

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Flamingos lose their pink when raising their babies because it's such an intensive process, but eventually it comes back. This is such an important thing to remember when we feel we've lost ourselves in motherhood. We will get our pink back!

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[Credit: via ]

02/01/2025

We Are Music Generation from our CĂ©ilĂșradh MĂłr 2024 celebrations in Birr Theatre & Arts Centre, St. Mary's Primary School in Edenderry and Esker Arts in Tull...

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19vX9GiUjP/
02/01/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19vX9GiUjP/

Eight-year-old Anthony Hopkins sat alone at his desk in 1946, the muffled laughter of his classmates buzzing around him. He wasn’t part of their world a fact he was painfully aware of. At Cowbridge Grammar School in South Wales, Anthony was an outsider, a boy who struggled to fit in. His classmates found joy in games and jokes, but Anthony’s mind wandered elsewhere, consumed by a persistent sense of detachment. Even his teachers labeled him as “slow,” a judgment that hung over him like a cloud, further isolating him from the group.

An incident from his school years vividly illustrates his solitude. During a break, while others played in the yard, Anthony chose to sit alone on a cold bench, clutching a sketchpad. He drew intricate shapes, creating imaginary worlds far removed from the chaos around him. That day, a teacher noticed his work. “You have a gift,” she said, handing back his drawing of a castle perched atop a jagged cliff. For Anthony, those words were rare one of the few instances where he felt seen.

The piano became another refuge. By the age of nine, Anthony had discovered the dusty old piano in the school’s music room. While other boys gathered in cliques, Anthony would slip away, pressing the keys tentatively at first, then more confidently as he taught himself to play simple melodies. Music became his language, a way to express emotions he couldn’t put into words. It wasn’t long before his parents noticed his growing passion and scraped together what little they could to buy him a secondhand piano. In the evenings, after school, Anthony would lose himself in the music, finding solace in the melodies he created.

His isolation wasn’t just social it was emotional and intellectual. “I felt like an alien,” Hopkins would later recall. At school, he struggled with dyslexia, a condition that went undiagnosed at the time, leaving him frustrated and misunderstood. His inability to keep up academically only deepened his sense of inadequacy, and he would retreat further into his creative world, sketching and playing music for hours on end.

By the age of twelve, his artistic pursuits began to take shape as more than just hobbies. His sketches grew more detailed, his piano playing more sophisticated. Yet, the loneliness persisted. He watched from the sidelines as his peers bonded effortlessly, their lives seemingly filled with connections he couldn’t grasp. But instead of succumbing to despair, Anthony turned inward, channeling his feelings into his art. The solitary hours he spent with his sketchpad or at the piano honed his ability to observe, absorb, and express a skill set that would become invaluable in his future career as an actor.

Anthony’s mother, Muriel, played a pivotal role during this time. Sensing his struggle, she often reassured him. “You don’t have to be like everyone else,” she would say. “Being different is not a weakness; it’s a strength.” Her unwavering belief in his potential gave him the courage to embrace his individuality, even when it set him apart from everyone else.

As Hopkins transitioned into his teenage years, his world began to change subtly. The creative outlets he once used to escape loneliness became his anchors. His love for the piano and art evolved into a deeper understanding of himself. He began to see his outsider status not as a curse, but as a gift a perspective that allowed him to observe human nature in ways his peers could not.

This profound observation of life, born from years of solitude, would later infuse his acting with extraordinary depth. Hopkins’ ability to portray complex, layered characters can be traced back to these formative years when his loneliness forced him to see the world differently.

Anthony Hopkins’ early struggles with loneliness and alienation weren’t merely hurdles to overcome; they were the crucible in which his creativity and empathy were forged. In isolation, he found clarity. In being an outsider, he discovered the power of introspection. His journey from the lonely boy with a sketchpad to one of the greatest actors of all time is a poignant reminder that sometimes, our greatest struggles are also our greatest teachers.

01/01/2025

FOUND:- MUCKLAGH AREA.
This mostly all white cat with a striped tabby tail has been coming to a house in MUCKLAGH for the past few weeks.
The cat appears to be LOST & it is being kindly fed by the family at the home it seems to have attached itself to.
The cat is friendly & loves attention.
If this is your missing little pet please contact 0899520868
PLEASE CARE & SHARE IN MUCKLAGH & SURROUNDING AREAS to help this little lost pet to get back home. Thank you.🙏

https://youtu.be/UToHJf4LvSY?feature=shared
31/12/2024

https://youtu.be/UToHJf4LvSY?feature=shared

We Are Music Generation from our CĂ©ilĂșradh MĂłr 2024 celebrations in Birr Theatre & Arts Centre, St. Mary's Primary School in Edenderry and Esker Arts in Tull...

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CHFhW3ew3/
29/12/2024

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CHFhW3ew3/

“I don’t have the talent of Judy Garland, but we shared a lot of the fear of sharing the talent we had; of taking care of the talent that had been left in our possession. God, we were both so scared, all the time. And we both loved to perform. We both loved talent, and we talked about it like thieves after a good heist. We both craved and idolized talent, and we wanted to be so good—so damned good—but we were always terrified of the next rehearsal, the next challenge, the next performance. What we enjoyed was the conclusion—when we knew we had gotten it right or fu**ed it up or gotten a little closer to that special place where the work becomes as good as we can manage it. And then the cycle began again. Some of the luckiest people in the world are those who lived when Judy Garland was working and performing and surprising us. And the all-time luckiest ones were those who knew her, who had her as a friend, and as a buddy terrified right along with you.”—Elaine Stritch/Interview with James Grissom/1992/

By Request/

Just read an article that says, ' do NOT pour Bailey's down the sink...'Uhm.....30 years here ...And I have yet to meet ...
28/12/2024

Just read an article that says, ' do NOT pour Bailey's down the sink...'

Uhm.....

30 years here ...
And I have yet to meet anyone who would throw Baileys down the sink...

It could be 20 years old, sitting in me mother in laws cupboard...

And on Christmas Eve....SOMEBODY...would suggest...after coming home from the pub...at 1 am......

'Ah , sure. we'll just have a taste and see' ....as they rob a slice of the ham with the note beside that says. 'FOR CHRISTMAS DINNER, DO NOT EAT!'.....

'Sure...ya'd have ta? '

Sounds ok to me??

Anyone else's husband the same??

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Memories 💙💙💙💙💙💙

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28/12/2024

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I’m a clinician, an applied mental health professional. I work therapeutically with children, adolescents and their parents. In the past I have worked with autistic adults with learning disabilities, in neurodevelopmental assessment clinics and with people who have severe and enduring mental health problems as a result of trauma.

This gives me a highly privileged perspective. It means that I get to see and hear from people who never go online, or who would never post about their experiences. It means I get to see how things play out over time. I see how the things parents and professionals say to children affect them years later.

The one thing I have learnt from this is that one size never fits all. There is no one ‘right thing’ to say which includes everyone. This goes literally for everything – some people really do prefer to describe themselves as a ‘person with autism’, others still use the term ‘Asperger’s’ to describe themselves because that’s the diagnosis they were given twenty years ago and they like it. Some say that autism is a fundamental part of their identity, others say to them it’s just a diagnosis and they rarely think about it. Some young people love their diagnosis, others resent it. Some wish their parents had told them earlier, others say they wish their parents had never taken them for an assessment. Some adults think that more and earlier diagnosis will make the world more inclusive and accepting, others think that we need to move away from diagnosis all together and choose not to go down that path for their family.

All of these things can exist at the same time. Everyone does not have to think and feel in the same way.

My starting point is that each person has to work out their own relationship to their differences and that this is a journey. I am not going to tell them that there is a right way to feel, or that they must use the language I tell them is right.

I don’t want to add layers of shame and anxiety to the way that they feel about themselves by telling them that they can’t describe their experiences in the way that resonates for them.

For me, acceptance of difference includes acceptance of the many ways that humans respond to their differences. There is no single right way to think and feel about difference.

(illustration by Eliza Fricker () from When the Naughty Step Makes Things Worse)

28/12/2024

Kayla was wearing a brown flared tracksuit with fur trim when she went missing

28/12/2024

FOUND:- HARBOUR ROAD KILBEGGAN
This beautiful,very friendly,well minded young tabby/white cat has been found at Harbour Road in KILBEGGAN.
If this is your missing pet please contact
0894133323
PLEASE SHARE IN KILBEGGAN & SURROUNDING AREAS.Thank you.🙏

28/12/2024
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27/12/2024

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