Need Help Decorating My Living Room. Beach Themed Room Decor.



Need Help Decorating My Living Room





need help decorating my living room






    living room
  • A room in a house for general and informal everyday use

  • A living room, also known as sitting room, lounge room or lounge (in the United Kingdom and Australia), is a room for entertaining guests, reading, watching TV or other activities.

  • living room: a room in a private house or establishment where people can sit and talk and relax

  • The Living Room is a music venue on Ludlow Street on the Lower East Side in New York City that was established in 1988.





    decorating
  • Make (something) look more attractive by adding ornament to it

  • (decorate) deck: be beautiful to look at; "Flowers adorned the tables everywhere"

  • Confer an award or medal on (a member of the armed forces)

  • (decorate) award a mark of honor, such as a medal, to; "He was decorated for his services in the military"

  • (decorate) make more attractive by adding ornament, colour, etc.; "Decorate the room for the party"; "beautify yourself for the special day"

  • Provide (a room or building) with a color scheme, paint, wallpaper, etc





    need help
  • Visit our help section where you can find how to add images and get assistance with editing.

  • Call now: 0844 474 2000. Lines open 7 days a week.

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MCC initiative gives hope to deaf Nigerians




MCC initiative gives hope to deaf Nigerians





Patricia Gyang fries doughnuts with two of her children, Jemima and Joshua Jr. Gyang, who is deaf, was able to strengthen her baking business through a micro-loan from MCC’s Hope for the Deaf.

Photo by Athanasius Dapul


JOS, Nigeria – Patricia Gyang, a mother of three, cannot hear an alarm but often rises by 4 a.m. to start her bread dough. She supplies shops around Jos, Nigeria, with pastries and meat pies and bakes and decorates custom-made cakes for all occasions.

As a deaf woman living in a country where the unemployment rate, according to economywatch.com, ranges from 30 to 50 percent, she is fortunate to have her own business.

Being deaf or hard of hearing makes earning a living even more challenging than it is for those who can hear. Discrimination, lack of self-esteem, family problems and poverty leave many deaf adults with little hope for a fulfilling life, according to Athanasius Dapul, a Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) Nigeria staff person.

One reason Gyang could strengthen her struggling business is because of a $150 loan she obtained in 2006 from Hope for the Deaf, an MCC Nigeria pilot program. Hope for the Deaf is the first program in northern Nigeria to address the economic needs of deaf adults, regardless of religious affiliation.

“When my business was weak,” Gyang said, “that was the time I got the loan and I was able to push it (the business) and make it strong.”

Dapul, who has been on staff with MCC for 26 years, began Hope for the Deaf and leads it with a firm belief in the potential of deaf adults to achieve economic independence. He has designed and led structured life and business skills workshops for deaf adults. The small micro-loan program that helped Gyang also is helping other deaf adults start or improve their own businesses.

Formerly seconded by MCC to teach at Plateau School for the Deaf, Dapul, an ordained pastor, fills the roles of social worker, counselor, teacher and advocate, working to find employment, training and business opportunities for some of the 800 deaf adults living in Jos and Plateau State.

In his MCC assignment, Dapul regularly offers support and problem-solving assistance to people who own small businesses or have apprenticeships. He also helps deaf members establish bank accounts, advocates for the deaf with potential employers, and networks with other government and nonprofit organizations.

Since many deaf Nigerian children, growing up in hearing homes, are treated as less than full human beings, Dapul helps family members understand the children’s unique needs. He works on improving communication and building respect.

Lack of family support often leads to a poor sense of self, depression and insecurity – reasons some deaf people give for not gaining successful employment. Dapul challenges the deaf adults to not let their emotional hurts and physical disability control them.

“All human beings are disabled in some ways,” Dapul said. “The deaf and the hearing need to understand this and refuse to use it as an excuse for not growing up or (to avoid) gaining as much independence as possible.”

With Hope for the Deaf’s efforts, street begging among deaf people in Plateau State is almost nonexistent and people associated with the program actively confront those who are caught begging, according to officials from Plateau Association for the Deaf, a non-governmental organization. Hope for the Deaf has created opportunities for 500 people to attend workshops, 15 to gain apprenticeships or employment, and many others to run their own successful, small businesses. Fifteen members received microloans; 20 more are on the waiting list.

Hope for the Deaf and Plateau Association for the Deaf – which encourages deaf Christians and Muslims to meet together for friendship, support, problem solving and empowerment – collaborate on most of their activities.

MCC created Hope for the Deaf with the intent of merging it with an organization not run by MCC. Dapul and MCC Nigeria believe Plateau Association for the Deaf can be that organization. To reach this goal, Dapul is focusing on building its capacity and its advisory committee to ensure the organization is equipped to run Hope for the Deaf’s programs by 2010.

The positive results of empowering the deaf are unmistakable, regardless who manages the programs.

Gyang and her husband are deaf, but all three of their children hear and communicate in fluent American Sign Language. Recently the children surrounded their mother in their neat living room, clearly proud of her efforts to provide for the family and aware that no disability holds her back.

Six-year old Jemima brought a photo album to show guests and pointed to a photo of Gyang dipping dough into hot fat to make chin-chin (doughnuts).
“Look at my beautiful mother,” Jemima said.

Brenda Hartman-Souder is an MCC Nigeria representative. Linda Espenshade is MCC news coordinator. 09/25/09












New/Old Cabinet




New/Old Cabinet





This one has a history; found this in a skip when my ex and I were helping my brother to clear the house of his mother-in-law when she passed. It didn't even come from her house, the neighbours had apparently taken advantage of the skip while we were busy indoors.

Brought it home & my ex and I set about restoring it, removed the glass side panels & shelves (which were smashed) and between us we sanded it to oblivion then my ex added shelves and side panels and varnished it. In the end I didn't have space for it in my home so he kept it, but now, he doesn't have space for it in his and I do. I'm a big believer in recycling! LOL

I've removed one of the shelves and am planning to paint the inside black (to show off my dolls better; the outside will be just a tad darker, I like to see the wood but the colour isn't quite right (and it has some sun damage, my ex has a very sunny living room).

Please ignore the part-stripped walls, as usual I start a job and then feel to weak to finish, but it will get done (honest). Everything came to a standstill as there is a hole in the wall behind the cabinet that needs to be sorted out before I can re-decorate; apparently they will be coming to do it sometime in August, so all I can do is wait.









need help decorating my living room







See also:

hawaiian decoration ideas

wall paint decorating

luxury home decoration

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help decorating my house

decorating cakes ideas

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BEACH DECORATING IDEAS
beach decorating ideas, decorative wrought iron fences, round decorator tables