Go down, ahh… Go up, ugh… Hearing my husband’s whisper in my head, from miles away out at sea, I stepped up on the elliptical trainer, put Donna Summer radio on my Pandora App, and let my feet follow the beat. Once home, I wrestled with the choice to either burrow under my covers in my cozy bed or get my butt on the elliptical trainer machine. I drove home (a blessed 10 minutes) to replenish my supply. Today I realized that I was out of contact lenses. I’ve been sleeping on the couch at my Dad’s apartment, hanging out with my sisters as we watch and wait for this beloved, elegant and generous man to transition from this world. “I don’t think that’s enough,” he lovingly suggested. “Yeah, well, I’m using Insight Timer and doing a meditation for going to sleep every night,” I replied. I really think you should try to exercise and do some good meditations.” The registration was later queried on the grounds that the words are too widely used for anyone to own exclusive rights, but the request for cancellation was rejected.“Honey, are you keeping up your meditation practice?” my husband gently inquired. In August 2011 a British-based company registered the slogan as a trademark in Europe and the United States, after failing to obtain registration of the slogan as a trademark in the United Kingdom. The typeface is close to Gill Sans but it is suspected the lettering was actually hand drawn. They were to be ready to send out within 24 hours of the declaration of war. The posters were dispatched across the country, to mixed results: Mass Observation reports from the time suggest the tone of even this milder slogan was regarded as patronising.ĭraft versions of the three posters were completed on 6 July 1939, and were agreed by the home secretary of the day, Samuel Hoare, in August. The key words “Your Courage”, suggested by a civil servant named AP Waterfield, were regarded as potentially the most effective as “a rallying war cry that will bring out the best in every one of us and put us in an offensive mood at once”. The others read “Your Courage, Your Cheerfulness, Your Resolution Will Bring Us Victory” and “Freedom Is in Peril. The Keep Calm design was the least popular of a series of three Home Publicity posters, each headed with a representation of the Tudor crown as a symbol of the head of state. The first ministry print run produced almost 2,500,000 copies of Keep Calm and Carry On, but until 2012 – when 20 copies turned up on an episode of the BBC’s Antiques Roadshow – it was believed that only two copies had escaped pulping. Since then the poster has become internationally recognised and is widely associated with a belief in British stoicism and the “stiff upper lip”. After interest from customers, a few reproductions were made and sold. Manley and his wife, Mary, framed it and hung it on the wall behind the cash register. It was discovered 16 years ago at the bottom of a box of old books by Stuart Manley, the owner of Barter Books in Alnwick, Northumberland. The surviving Keep Calm print will go on sale at the fair in Olympia with a price tag of £21,250 at the Manning Fine Art stand. A year later, once Britain had weathered the onslaught of the Blitz, all the printed posters were sent back for pulping and recycling as part of the wider paper salvage drive, due to the shortage of raw materials. The poster was designed by the Ministry of Information in the summer of 1939 to represent a message from the King to his subjects, and it was hoped it would reassure the public and prevent widespread panic.
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