Without Prejudice Mervelee Myers Expert Authority On Subjects Cradle To Grave Make My Implicit Knowledge Explicit To Save The Huw Edwards From Reaching Scandal Before Getting Help With PTSD 13/7


Without Prejudice Mervelee Myers Philosophy Of Brains MAPS Story Boards Of Strong Women Like Huw Edwards’ Wife Who Stands Shoulders With Her Husband In Public Probably Kick His Ass In Private For Landing Their Family In A Scandal That Could Have Been Averted If He Knew To Confide In Her Or A Friend No More ASHTER Nembhard Must Die In Jail Alone After Death Of Mama Lou With Dementia I Was Made A Criminal Need ERT To Cover LEYF June O’Sullivan UEL Richard Harty MIC Abusers At HOC Nursery Duchess Kate Launch Child Mental Health Stockwell Theresa May Rejected Petition For Inquiry In EYFS H4W Barclays Santander Nationwide FOS HMCTS CPS CJS MOPAC IOPC JCIO BSB SRA CCMCC HMPPS DBS CLCC Colluded To Cover Haters 75


merveleeconsultancy's avatarFight4justice

Refer to

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing your memories on Facebook, from the most recent to those long ago.

We hope you enjoy looking back and sharing…

View original post 5,487 more words

Without Prejudice Who Is Mervelee Myers That HMCTS CPS CJS Say Is A Criminal Need ERT To Cover LEYF The June O’Sullivan UEL Richard Harty MIC Operate HOC Nursery 2010 I Was Participant In Dr. Maria Hudson Experience Of Multiple Discrimination Dr. Juanita Cox Must Not White Wash Windrush Oral History Resources Am A Repressed Journalist Writes For Therapy


Without Prejudice Mervelee Myers Investments To Share My Story Boards Of How Not To Accept Giving Up As An Option Even If Families Friends Abandon Reject Me Makes Me Proud Of Huw Edwards Wife Standing Beside Him In His Time Of Needs In Public Even If In Private She Might Do Something Differently Strong Women Have To Be There For Our Men When They Reach Crisis And Regress To A Baby Needing Mama Reasons HMCTS CPS CJS MOPAC IOPC JCIO CCMCC BSB SRA DBS HMPPS Involve In Systematic Discrimination After Mama Lou Died With Dementia H4W Letter Make Me Reach Out To Neighbour No One Deserve To Be Stitch Up For Being Made Vulnerable Call Me When You Need A Friend 13/7


merveleeconsultancy's avatarFight4justice

Refer to

Refer to

Colonization In Reverse(1966)

Wat a joyful news, miss Mattie,
I feel like me heart gwine burs
Jamaica people colonizin
Englan in reverse.

By de hundred, by de tousan
From country and from town,
By de ship-load, by de plane-load
Jamaica is Englan boun.

Dem a pour out a Jamaica
Everybody future plan
Is fe get a big-time job
An settle in de mother lan.

What a islan! What a people!
Man an woman, old an young
Jus a pack dem bag an baggage
An tun history upside dung!

Some people doan like travel,
But fe show dem loyalty
Dem all a open up cheap-fare-
To-Englan agency.

An week by week dem shippin off
Dem countryman like fire,
Fe immigrate an populate
De seat a de Empire.

Oonoo see how life is funny,
Oonoo see de tunabout?
Jamaica live fe box bread
Out a English people mout’.

View original post 461 more words

Without Prejudice Mervelee Myers Must Share My Passion As A Writer Of Therapy Who Is A Repress Journalist Investing MAPS Philosophy Of BRAINS To Apply Open Book Lifestyle To Support Others Experience PTSD To Seek Help Before It Reaches Huw Edwards Scandal


Without Prejudice Mervelee Myers Mama Lou 1 Gal Lends Support To Huw Edwards Wife & Family As The Philosophy Of BRAINS MAPS My Journey Of 64 Years Share My Story Boards Of How The Strong Women Make Sacrifices Protect Our Loved Ones Don’t Accept Giving Up As An Option Please Join Fight4justice Mental Health & Send Advocacy Activism To Save Families From PTSD Via Early Intervention Strategies To Help People Like Mama Lou To Talk Before It Reaches Scandal Point


merveleeconsultancy's avatarMervelee Advocacy

Refer to

Colonization In Reverse(1966)

Wat a joyful news, miss Mattie,
I feel like me heart gwine burs
Jamaica people colonizin
Englan in reverse.

By de hundred, by de tousan
From country and from town,
By de ship-load, by de plane-load
Jamaica is Englan boun.

Dem a pour out a Jamaica
Everybody future plan
Is fe get a big-time job
An settle in de mother lan.

What a islan! What a people!
Man an woman, old an young
Jus a pack dem bag an baggage
An tun history upside dung!

Some people doan like travel,
But fe show dem loyalty
Dem all a open up cheap-fare-
To-Englan agency.

An week by week dem shippin off
Dem countryman like fire,
Fe immigrate an populate
De seat a de Empire.

Oonoo see how life is funny,
Oonoo see de tunabout?
Jamaica live fe box bread
Out a English people mout’.

For wen…

View original post 459 more words

Without Prejudice Mervelee Myers Mama Lou 1 Gal Lends Support To Huw Edwards Wife & Family As The Philosophy Of BRAINS MAPS My Journey Of 64 Years Share My Story Boards Of How The Strong Women Make Sacrifices Protect Our Loved Ones Don’t Accept Giving Up As An Option Please Join Fight4justice Mental Health & Send Advocacy Activism To Save Families From PTSD Via Early Intervention Strategies To Help People Like Mama Lou To Talk Before It Reaches Scandal Point


Refer to

Colonization In Reverse (1966)

Wat a joyful news, miss Mattie,
I feel like me heart gwine burs
Jamaica people colonizin
Englan in reverse.

By de hundred, by de tousan
From country and from town,
By de ship-load, by de plane-load
Jamaica is Englan boun.

Dem a pour out a Jamaica
Everybody future plan
Is fe get a big-time job
An settle in de mother lan.

What a islan! What a people!
Man an woman, old an young
Jus a pack dem bag an baggage
An tun history upside dung!

Some people doan like travel,
But fe show dem loyalty
Dem all a open up cheap-fare-
To-Englan agency.

An week by week dem shippin off
Dem countryman like fire,
Fe immigrate an populate
De seat a de Empire.

Oonoo see how life is funny,
Oonoo see de tunabout?
Jamaica live fe box bread
Out a English people mout’.

For wen dem ketch a Englan,
An start play dem different role,
Some will settle down to work
An some will settle fe de dole.

Jane say de dole is not too bad
Because dey payin she
Two pounds a week fe seek a job
Dat suit her dignity.

Me say Jane will never fine work
At de rate how she dah look,
For all day she stay pon Aunt Fan couch
An read love-story book.

Wat a devilment a Englan!
Dem face war an brave de worse,
But me wonderin how dem gwine stan
Colonizin in reverse.

Poem © by Louise Bennett Coverley, from Jamaica Labrish, published by Sangsters (1966). With permission from Louise Bennett Coverley Estate and Coverley Holdings Inc.

Image © With permission from Louise Bennett Coverley Estate

Refer to

About the poet

Louise Bennett was born in Kingston, the capital of Jamaica, and raised by her mother after her father’s death. She began writing at a young age, having her first poetry published in the national newspaper The Daily Gleaner. Bennett was a pioneer of writing in a literary version of Jamaican patois. This is a rich and creative language, with English and West African influences, that emerged from the troubled history of British enslavement of African people. She experienced criticism for this, as at the time it was rare for British and Jamaican readers to encounter anything other than standard British English in mainstream literature. Her first book of poetry was called Dialect Verses. In 1943 Bennett was awarded a British Council scholarship to study at London’s Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the first black student to do so. Shortly after, she began working as a BBC radio host hosting a thirty-minute programme called Caribbean Carnival. She returned to Jamaica in 1954.

On her return, Bennett immersed herself in studying Jamaican folklore and oral tradition. In Jamaica she became known as ‘Miss Lou’. The nickname originated from a radio show she presented from 1965 to 1982, which showcased the country’s culture and invited guest performers. Her most famous collection of poetry, Jamaica Labrish, was published in 1966. Instantly recognisable by her traditional way of dress and her catchphrase ‘walk good’ – a patois expression for ‘goodbye’ – Bennett-Coverley became one of the most famous people in Jamaica. She was a passionate advocate of the country’s artistic expression and the adoption of patois as a national language. She served as a national Cultural Ambassador and in 2001 she was appointed a Member of the Order of Merit of Jamaica. Her career path and trailblazing use of Jamaican patois in her poetry is said to have influenced numerous poets such as Linton Kwesi Johnson, Valerie Bloom and Kamau Brathwaite. She died in Toronto, Canada, in 2006.