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 something to think about...

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sandra67

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RE: something to think about... - 1/16/2009 9:07 AM ( #21 )
How true this is Dear Sparrow .
 
Thank you love,Sandraxxxxx
The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love~and be loved in return♥♥  


 

Imenuff

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RE: something to think about... - 1/20/2009 6:41 AM ( #22 )
A wise owl asked a mouse the weight of a snowflake. “Nothing more than nothing”, was the answer. “In that case I must tell you a marvellous story,” the owl said. “I sat on the branch of a fir tree, close to its trunk when it began to snow. So as I didn’t have anything better to do, I counted the snowflakes settling on the twigs and needles of the branch I was next to. Their number was exactly 3,741,952. When the next snowflake dropped onto the branch, nothing more than nothing, as you say and the branch broke off!” The little mouse scurried off with nothing to say. It may only be a story but it highlights the power of one, the power of something tiny and insignificant, the power of a kind word, a hug, a moment of silence, a moment of prayer. There is no end to the list or to the strength and power of something that may seem tiny and insignificant.
Shalom(May you be at peace in Body, Mind,& Spirit.)
I'menuff
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 1/20/2009 7:03 AM ( #23 )
A wonderful little story Betty,
with a powerful message . . .
You are right of course.
We can, each of us as insignificant as we are,
make a difference in this world.
That seems to be an emerging theme
as our new president is coming into office.
with much love and hope . . .
sparrow
everything counts...
buttington

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RE: something to think about... - 1/20/2009 7:59 AM ( #24 )
Talking of which........this came to me via "thought for today"
 
We've been warned against offering the people of this nation false hope.  But in the unlikely story that is America, there has never been anything false about hope.

     -- Barack Obama






Love is the only way
Hope coach

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RE: something to think about... - 1/22/2009 3:24 PM ( #25 )
America the beautiful! Betsy Ross, Paul Revere, Lincoln and King many forefathers and mothers envisioned the hope of this moment ,as we watched Barack Obama take the oath of office.
As the child of a southerner , witnessing segregation and the daughter of a northerner
who taught me we are all equal Im so grateful Hope and we all witness One candle lit
began to............
Our Glory Is not In Never Falling
Our Glory Is Rising Every Time We Fall
Confuscious
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 1/23/2009 7:02 AM ( #26 )
I too, remember clearly the segregation and racial conflicts.
It was so healing I think,
for both black people and white people
to witness Barak Obama being sworn in as president.
Where there is hope there is possibility.
with love . . .
sparrow
everything counts...
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 2/1/2009 8:15 AM ( #27 )




Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.
Plato
everything counts...
buttington

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RE: something to think about... - 2/1/2009 8:46 AM ( #28 )
Oh! dear Sparrow...synchronicity at work again. I have been thinking a lot about kindness and its importance, and I was explaining it to Chloe as best I could, last night.
 
Lots of Love, Jude
Love is the only way
buttington

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RE: something to think about... - 2/1/2009 8:53 AM ( #29 )
this came via email today as 'thought for today',and there is a lot of truth in it.
 
"Anger is the power of ignorance and peace is the power of knowledge."
 
Love is the only way
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 2/2/2009 5:55 AM ( #30 )
Jude, isn't it odd
how sometimes the truth comes out best
through the simplest words?
with love . . .
sparrow
everything counts...
Imenuff

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RE: something to think about... - 2/3/2009 3:35 PM ( #31 )
Tears are a river that take you somewhere.
Weeping creates a river around the little boat
carrying your soul-life.
Tears can lift that little boat off rocks,
off dry ground, carrying it downriver
to someplace new, someplace better.

Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés
Shalom(May you be at peace in Body, Mind,& Spirit.)
I'menuff
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 2/4/2009 6:52 AM ( #32 )
Indeed Betty . . .
I too think that tears are a river . . .
beautifully put
with love . . .
sparrow
everything counts...
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 2/7/2009 7:52 AM ( #33 )
"If you want to be happy for a day, go shopping.
It feels great, but it doesn't last, and then the credit card bills come . . .
If you want to be happy for a lifetime, then you gotta find a way to make a contribution.
Most people are so concerned with getting to success that they forget significance.
And that is the great journey--
is the journey to significance, not the journey to success."
Matthew Kelly
everything counts...
buttington

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RE: something to think about... - 2/7/2009 8:51 AM ( #34 )
As I have plenty of negative feelings to choose from this morning...I wasn't surprised to receive this!! Jude
 
 
Choose Feelings
If your days seem filled with unwanted negative feelings, there is only one cure. When they come, choose them. Don't ask why, don't wonder how, don't fight them and never put yourself down for having them. But most of all never blame someone else for how you feel. If you do, it means you are still fast asleep and your choice is to be a victim. When the feelings come, even big disturbing emotional feelings say, "I choose this feeling" and know it comes because of something you have thought or done in the past, perhaps a certain belief that you have learned or an attachment that is threatened. Choice does not mean you want the feelings, but it does mean you are taking responsibility for them. And that is the beginning of self mastery. It is the first step to the healing and resolving of your emotions. But only the first step. Try this today and then ask yourself what the next step might be. If you are really interested to know, you will come to know!
Love is the only way
Hildegard

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RE: something to think about... - 2/8/2009 12:42 PM ( #35 )
The other day I came across a challenging prayer by Sir Francis Drake (1540?-1596) which urges us to move beyond our comfort zone. He was the first Englishman to circumnavigate the world (1577-80).
 
Disturb us, God, when we are
too pleased with ourselves,
When our dreams have come true
because we dreamed too little;
When we arrived safely because
we sailed too close to the shore.
 
Disturb us when with the
abundance of things we possess,
We have lost our thirst for the waters of life.
Having fallen in love with life,
we have failed to dream of eternity.
In our efforts to build a new earth
we have allowed
Our vision of the new heaven to dim
 
Disturb us to dare more boldly,
 to venture into wider seas,
Where storms will show your majesty,
Where losing sight of land,
we shall find the stars.
We ask you to push
back the horizons of our hopes,
To push back the future in
strength, courage, hope and love.
 
Edda
Peace and joy!
Imenuff

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RE: something to think about... - 2/8/2009 2:25 PM ( #36 )
Dear Edda, thank you for posting this. I feel like the last part so aptly describes my life this past month. I was told the other day how lucky they were that I had volunteered for the pantry because in me they had gotten a volunteer with previous food pantry management experience who could immediately set up the the training systems for restocking, packing boxes and validating pickups. I almost choked as I listened and then told her it was not me but rather the Holy One who was taking care of their food pantry and quite honestly told her that I had never worked in a food pantry before in my life. She would not believe it and kept telling me I was just being modest. When I went there over a month ago, I had no idea what I was doing but God truly filled in all the gaps and things are running fairly smoothly--even the old body which will be 67 in a couple of months, is cooperating. Truly, I have been pushed into "wider seas" that I knew nothing about but that have been very rewarding.
Shalom(May you be at peace in Body, Mind,& Spirit.)
I'menuff
Hildegard

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RE: something to think about... - 2/8/2009 3:08 PM ( #37 )
Dear Betty,
 
Thank you for sharing this experience! I have to admit that after Leon had his accident I had no experience caring for a disabled elderly person. My medical practice was far removed from geriatrics!
I was "at sea" but day by day I knew what to do and acquired the skills to take care of him!
I suppose we all can learn more than we realize, if we dare to pull up our anchor from the familiar!
 
Much love,
Edda
Peace and joy!
liliwings

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RE: something to think about... - 2/9/2009 7:21 PM ( #38 )
Thank you Edda,
I think this is a very relevent poem for these times.   I have noticed that miracles are always preceeded by great challenge and what appears to be great adversity.  Thank you. I believe we are living the prelude to greater miracles.  liliwings
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 2/10/2009 7:10 AM ( #39 )
Dear Betty . . .
I think that you are the miracle in your story
in that you opened yourself up to the challenge,
and allowed it to empower you.
Too often we curl on in ourselves,
tighten up when confronted with challenge.
Voices in my head, old, tired voices say,
"change is fearful...change is hard . . ."
It is time to listen to new voices--
"change is invigorating...change is enlightening...change is growth!
Change is an opportunity for a miracle to be born . . ."
See Betty, you ventured into 'wider seas' and you not only didn't drown,
you thrived
with love . . .
sparrow
ps. Now that I am 60, 67 doesn't seem old at all anymore.
Funny how our perspective shifts . . .
everything counts...
lilsparrow

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RE: something to think about... - 2/26/2009 8:21 AM ( #40 )

I found this on the front page of this web site this morning . . .
 
Pay It Backwards: An Act Of Coffee Kindness
Just before Christmas of 2007, almost exactly a year ago, I steered into a Starbucks drive-thru line for a cup of tea on my way to teach a morning tai chi lesson. There were a few cars in line, and I got in behind them. When my turn came I gave my order at the billboard menu and moved up as far as I could while waiting patiently for the cars in front of me to get through the cashier line. While the South Florida weather would probably would have felt tropical to much of the rest of the country, I was a bit chilled and was looking forward to my hot drink.
The fellow in the SUV behind me reached the menu. Dissatisfied with the alignment between his mouth and the microphone, he laid on his horn, leaned out his window, yelled an insult and exhorted me to move up. There was nowhere to go. I was in a line, and mere inches separated my car from the one in front of me. Indignant at rudeness, I felt my temper come up, and because I am a pure and enlightened being who entertains nothing but positive thoughts, I reached for the door handle with the intention popping out of the car, taking a few steps, reaching into his open window, and sending him to the dentist for a holiday visit.
I'll show you what happens to rude and impatient people, I thought. I'll teach you that a martial artist is waiting in every car around you with the express mission of settling the world down into just the fair, quiet, and patient place they think it should be. Running that tape in my head, my ire grew even further. Testosterone and adrenaline flooded my body and in a few seconds I had transformed from the peaceful, content, slightly thirsty writer/teacher to a raving lunatic. My heartbeat was up, my hands were clammy, my muscles were tense, and the whole world had constricted down to the tiny business of completing my hostile mission.
Then I glanced in the mirror. The face of the impatient driver behind me was florid and twisted with anger and hate. I refocused my eyes and noticed that my own face didn't look much different. Whatever plague had taken him had penetrated the steel and glass of my car to infect me too, robbing me of my much-vaunted equilibrium, my peace, my balance, my equanimity--precisely that thing that my beloved tai chi training, and the Chinese philosophy behind it prizes most highly.
I teach my students that it is best not to lose that balance--wuji in Chinese--through meditation, breathing, and tai chi training, but when you do, you can use any of three "doors" to get it back. Door number one is meeting force with force: I could go ahead and start a fight. Door number two is yielding: I could kowtow on the concrete, admit to being an idiot, and beg the other driver's forgiveness. The best option, however, is door number three. That door is different every time. The trick is to figure out what that is.
The car in front of me moved off and I pulled up to pay. "I'd like to buy the coffee for the guy behind me," I said.
The barista looked at me in surprise. "But he's a jerk!"
"Just having a bad day, " I said. "Happens to the best of us."
"A random act of kindness, eh?"
I shook my head, thinking how I could explain door number three to her before the guy rammed my bumper with his. "Not really. I'm not doing it for him; I'm doing it for me. I was mad right back at him, but now that I'm doing this I feel much better."
I had only a $10 bill in my wallet, and I handed it over. She checked her order screen. "He has ordered breakfast for five people. It's a lot more than ten dollars."
That gave me pause. I'd already regain my wuji. Did I really need to go through with more? I took out my credit card and handed it over.
She searched my face. "You're sure?"
"Do it," I said.
After I'd signed the charge slip, I drove away without a backward glance. I had found my door number three, was finished with the act, and indeed was already forgetting about it. I didn't want to meet the guy on the road, either to hear thanks or more yelling, so I took a circuitous root to my lesson, avoiding the main highway.
Six hours later, I returned home to find my answering machine full of messages from the Starbucks manager, and from a reporter for NBC news. They had me using my credit card information. Apparently the guy behind me had continued my act of giving and the person behind him had done the same, and on and on. No doubt encouraged by the store manager, the chain was intact well into the afternoon. NBC covered the story. You can see view it here:
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtTnG15fq78&eurl=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arthur-rosenfeld/pay-it-backwards-an-act-o_b_151793.html
 

Consciousness
The news spread around the world. Within 24 hours I had received calls and e-mails from as far away as Australia. The key point, of course, is that I had performed a random act of consciousness rather than a random act of kindness. I'd nearly lost my cool, had retrieved it, and done something good for myself and someone else in the process.
In a sense, you can think of this as self-centered, but in a good way. Keeping your cool, maintaining your wuji is just like putting your own oxygen mask on in a damaged airplane before helping those around you. If you pass out, you can't help anyone. If you lose your temper, you are of no good to the world. Cool, calm and collected you are ready and willing to participate in the world.
Violent crimes and burglaries are up this holiday season. The financial crisis is creating anxiety, depression, desperation and anger. Spread the word about wuji. Do your best to control your own feelings before acting rashly. Think twice before doing or saying something you'll regret. Random acts of consciousness are perhaps even more contagious than random acts of kindness. Raise your level of view, dig deep for perspective, and help make this a more peaceful holiday season for everyone.
 
Have a good day
with much love and consciousness . . .
sparrow

 
everything counts...
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