Nojoto: Largest Storytelling Platform

We grab the attention of everyone 😄 Good morning

We grab the attention  of everyone 😄 Good morning, writers! 😊
"In the experience of love lies the only answer to being human, lies sanity."
- Erich Fromm

Did you know? 🌸
Adrianne Haslet Davis' first thought after the Boston Marathon bombings in 2013, was whether she would survive. Her second: "If I do make it, how will I dance again?" Adrianne, a dance instructor, had been walking along the Boston Marathon sidelines enjoying the day with her husband, U.S. Air Force Capt. Adam Davis, who had just gotten home from a deployment in Afghanistan, when they heard the first blast.

The second bomb went off four feet away. "It launched us straight into the air," she said, as they landed together, both badly hurt. She dragged herself with her elbows into a nearby bar, where Adam pulled his belt off to use as a tourniquet. Others nearby tried, too. Then a man came through the crowd and said he was a doctor, "and be pulled on the tourniquet so incredibly hard I couldn't feel my leg anymore. That was a wonderful moment." At first she was only aware of the two of them, but when she was getting carried to the ambulance, she saw how many people were hurt, images she wishes she could forget. She close her eyes and pleaded for painkillers: Knock me out.
We grab the attention  of everyone 😄 Good morning, writers! 😊
"In the experience of love lies the only answer to being human, lies sanity."
- Erich Fromm

Did you know? 🌸
Adrianne Haslet Davis' first thought after the Boston Marathon bombings in 2013, was whether she would survive. Her second: "If I do make it, how will I dance again?" Adrianne, a dance instructor, had been walking along the Boston Marathon sidelines enjoying the day with her husband, U.S. Air Force Capt. Adam Davis, who had just gotten home from a deployment in Afghanistan, when they heard the first blast.

The second bomb went off four feet away. "It launched us straight into the air," she said, as they landed together, both badly hurt. She dragged herself with her elbows into a nearby bar, where Adam pulled his belt off to use as a tourniquet. Others nearby tried, too. Then a man came through the crowd and said he was a doctor, "and be pulled on the tourniquet so incredibly hard I couldn't feel my leg anymore. That was a wonderful moment." At first she was only aware of the two of them, but when she was getting carried to the ambulance, she saw how many people were hurt, images she wishes she could forget. She close her eyes and pleaded for painkillers: Knock me out.