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Saturday, 22 September 2012

The Terribly Sad Man


The Terribly Sad Man

Once there was a boy who lived in a big house on a hill. He loved dogs and horses, sports cars and music. He climbed trees and went swimming, played football and admired pretty girls. Except for having to pick up after himself, he had a nice life.

One day the boy said to God, "I’ve been thinking, and I know what I want when I become a man."

"What?" asked God.

"I want to live in a big house with a porch across the front and two Saint Bernards and a garden out back. I want to marry a woman who is tall and very beautiful and kind, who has long, black hair and blue eyes, and who plays the guitar and sings in a clear, high voice.

"I want three strong sons to play football with. When they grow up, one will be a great scientist, one will be a senator and the youngest will quarterback for the 49ers.

"I want to be an adventurer who sails vast oceans and climbs tall mountains and rescues people. And I want to drive a red Ferrari and never have to pick up after myself."

"That sounds like a nice dream," said God. "I want you to be happy."

One day, playing football, the boy hurt his knee. After that he couldn’t climb tall mountains or even tall trees, much less sail vast oceans. So he studied marketing and started a medical-supplies business.

He married a girl who was very beautiful and very kind and who had long, black hair. But she was short, not tall, and had brown eyes, not blue. She couldn’t play the guitar, or even sing. But she prepared wonderful meals seasoned with rare Chinese spices and painted magnificent pictures of birds.

Because of his business, he lived in a city near the top of a tall apartment building that overlooked the blue ocean and the city’s twinkling lights. He didn’t have room for two Saint Bernards, but he had a fluffy cat.

He had three daughters, all very beautiful. The youngest, who was in a wheelchair, was the loveliest. The three daughters loved their father very much. They didn’t play football with him, but sometimes they went to the park and tossed a Fris-bee ---except for the youngest, who sat under a tree strumming her guitar and singing lovely, haunting songs.

He made enough money to live comfortably, but he didn’t drive a red Ferrari. Sometimes he had to pick up things and put them away -even things that didn’t belong to him. After all, he had three daughters.

Then one morning the man awoke and remembered his dream. "I am very sad," he said to his best friend.

"Why?" asked his friend.

"Because I once dreamed of marrying a tall women with black hair and blue eyes who would play the guitar and sing. My wife can’t play the guitar or sing.

She has brown eyes, and she’s not tall."

"Your wife is beautiful and very kind," said his friend. "She creates splendid pictures and delectable food."

But the man wasn’t listening.

"I am very sad," the man confessed to his wife one day.

"Why?" asked his wife.

"Because I once dreamed of living in a big house with a porch, and of having two Saint Bernards and a garden out back. Instead, I live in an apartment on the 47th floor."

"Our apartment is comfortable, and we can see the ocean from our couch," replied his wife. "We have love laughter and paintings of birds and a fluffy cat -not to mention three beautiful children."

But the man wasn’t listening.

"I am very sad," the man said to his therapist.

"Why?" asked the therapist.

"Because I once dreamed that I would grow up to be a great adventurer. Instead, I’m a bald businessman with a bad knee."

"The medical supplies you sell have saved many lives," said the therapist.

But the man wasn’t listening. So his therapist charged him $110 and sent him home.

"I am very sad," the man said to his accountant.

"Why?" asked the accountant.

"Because I once dreamed of driving a red Ferrari and of never having to pick up after myself. Instead, I take public transportation, and sometimes I still have to clean up."

"You wear good suits. You eat at fine restaurants, and you’ve toured Europe," said his accountant.

But the man wasn’t listening. His accountant charged him $100 anyway. He was dreaming of a red Ferrari himself.

"I am very sad," the man said to his minister.

"Why?" asked the minister.

"Because I once dreamed of having three sons; a great scientist, a politician and a quarterback. Instead, I have three daughters, and the youngest can’t even walk."

"But your daughters are beautiful and intelligent," said the minister. "They love you very much, and they’ve all done well. One is a nurse, another is an artist and the youngest teaches music to children."

But the man wasn’t listening. He was so sad that he became very sick. He lay in a white hospital room surrounded by nurses in white uniforms. Tubes and wires connected his body to blinking machines that he had once sold to the hospital.

He was terribly, tragically sad. His family, friends and minister gathered around his bed. They were all deeply sad too. Only his therapist and his accountant remained happy.

Then one night, when everyone except the nurses had gone home, the man said to God, "Remember when I was a boy and I told you all the things I wanted?"

"It was a lovely dream," said God.

"Why didn’t you give me those things?" asked the man.

"I could have," said God. "But I wanted to surprise you with things you didn’t dream of.

"I suppose you’ve noticed what I’ve given you: a kind, beautiful wife; a good business; a nice place to live; three lovely daughters -one of the best packages I’ve put together-"

"Yes," interrupted the man. "But I thought you were going to give me what I really wanted."

"And I thought you were going to give me what I really wanted," said God.

"What did you want?" asked the man. It had never occurred to him that God was in want of anything.

"I wanted to make you happy with what I’d given you," said God.

The man lay in the dark all night, thinking. Finally he decided to dream a new dream, one he wished he’d dreamed years before. He decided to dream that what he wanted most were the very things he already had.

And the man got well and lived happily on the 47th floor, enjoying his children’s beautiful voices, his wife’s deep brown eyes and her glorious paintings of birds. And at night he gazed at the ocean and contentedly watched the lights of the city twinkling on, one by one.

"You are what you think about. All you are arises from your thoughts. With your thoughts, you make your world." The Buddha.

God's Cup of Coffee


God's Cup of Coffee

A group of alumni, highly established in their careers, got together to visit their old university professor. Conversation soon turned into complaints about stress in work and life.

Offering his guests coffee, the professor went to the kitchen and returned with a large pot of coffee and an assortment of cups - porcelain, plastic, glass, crystal, some plain looking, some expensive, some exquisite - telling them to help themselves to the coffee.

When all the students had a cup of coffee in hand, the professor said:

"If you noticed, all the nice looking expensive cups were taken up, leaving behind the plain and cheap ones. While it is normal for you to want only the best for yourselves, that is the source of your problems and stress."

"Be assured that the cup itself adds no quality to the coffee. In most cases it is just more expensive and in some cases even hides what we drink."

"What all of you really wanted was coffee, not the cup, but you consciously went for the best cups... And then you began eyeing each other's cups."

"Now consider this: Life is the coffee; the jobs, money and position in society are the cups. They are just tools to hold and contain Life, and the type of cup we have does not define, nor change the quality of Life we live.
Sometimes, by concentrating only on the cup, we fail to enjoy the coffee God has provided us."

God brews the coffee, not the cups... Enjoy your coffee!

"The happiest people don't have the best of everything. They just make the best of everything."

Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly. Leave the rest to God.

The Precious Gift of Friendship


The Precious Gift of Friendship

Mark was walking home from school one day when he noticed the boy ahead of him had tripped and dropped all of the books he was carrying, along with two sweaters, a baseball bat, a glove and a small tape recorder. Mark knelt down and helped the boy pick up the scattered articles. Since they were going the same way, he helped to carry part of the burden.

As they walked Mark discovered the boy's name was Bill, that he loved video games, baseball and history, and that he was having lots of trouble with his other subjects and that he had just broken up with his girlfriend.

They arrived at Bill's home first and Mark was invited in for a Coke and to watch some television. The afternoon passed pleasantly with a few laughs and some shared small talk, then Mark went home. They continued to see each other around school, had lunch together once or twice, then both graduated from junior high school. They ended up in the same high school where they had brief contacts over the years.

Finally the long-awaited senior year came and three weeks before graduation, Bill asked Mark if they could talk.

Bill reminded him of the day years ago when they had first met. "Did you ever wonder why I was carrying so many things home that day?" asked Bill. "You see, I cleaned out my locker because I didn't want to leave a mess for anyone else. I had stored away some of my mothers sleeping pills and I was going home to commit suicide. But after we spent some time together talking and laughing, I realized that if I had killed myself, I would have missed that time and so many others that might follow. So you see, Mark, when you picked up those books that day, you did a lot more, you saved my life."

Every little hello, every little smile, every helping hand saves a hurting heart. Pass it on. With this letter also comes the token that says that YOU are special. There's a miracle called Friendship that dwells in the heart. You don't know how it happens or when it gets started, but you know the special lift it always brings and you realize that Friendship is God's most precious gift!

The Trouble Tree


The Trouble Tree

A man hired a carpenter to help him restore an old farmhouse. The carpenter had a rough first day on the job. First, a flat tire made him lose an hour of work, then his electric saw quit. At the end of the day, his ancient pickup truck refused to start.

While the man who hired him drove him home, the carpenter sat in stony silence. On arriving, the carpenter invited the man to come in and meet his family. As they walked toward the front door, he paused briefly at a small tree, touching the tips of the branches with both hands. Upon opening the door, he underwent an amazing transformation. His tanned face was wreathed in smiles as he hugged his two small children and gave his wife a kiss.

After introducing the man to his family, the carpenter walked the man to the car. They passed the tree and the man’s curiosity got the better of him. He asked the carpenter about what he had seen him do earlier.

"Oh, that's my ‘Trouble Tree’," the carpenter replied. "I know I can't help having troubles on the job, but one thing's for sure, my troubles don't belong in the house with my wife and the children. So I just hang them up on the tree every night when I come home. Then in the morning I pick them up again."

Funny thing is," he smiled, "when I come out in the morning to pick them up, there aren't nearly as many as I remember hanging up the night before."

"The prizes of life we fail to win because we doubt the power within." Wow! That sentence really says it all. When we finally eliminate all of those self defeating doubts that have haunted us for oh so long, we clear the path to having, doing or being anything and everything we have ever dreamed about. This poem reminds us to live our lives the way we were born to live them... confidently, courageously and without a doubt.

Just for a moment, imagine yourself living without worry and doubt, totally free to believe and achieve. What a way to go... and grow! We need to stop doubting ourselves and start believing in ourselves, our plans and our dreams. Let's stop saying we can’t and start saying we can, we can... we can.

You and I have always had what it takes to be counted among the best of the very best.

We can choose to live a life completely devoid of worry and fear when we choose to live without a doubt. The moment we start believing deep down in our hearts and our souls that we can do it, we will start living life on our terms... without a doubt!

I Want To Relive


I Want To Relive

I wanna relive those moments when my heart melted,
When I lived my entire life in one beautiful moment,
Those moments that enlivened my life & made it scented,
And made my living spectacularly different.
I wanna relive those magical moments once more...

The moment when I first opened my eye,
My Mom’s exhilarated eyes glanced through my heart,
There was an unconditional adoration in that novel tie,
And yes, what wonderful was that start.
I wanna relive that affectionate moment once more...

The moment when I walked my first step,
And looked into that anxious eye,
There was an unbelievable motivation for my tiny footstep,
And hands waiting to hold me, on whom I could easily rely,
I wanna relive that reliable moment once more...

The moment when I gave my first exam,
My Dad’s confident eyes assured me of success,
There was an unsaid belief that told me that capable I am,
And then I had to succeed for I had my dear ones for me to bless.
I wanna relive that blessed moment once more...

The moment when I met my first friend,
Those gracious eyes told me that we will be friends forever,
There was an unconditional promise, on which I could depend,
And I had a loyal comrade for every endeavor.
I wanna relive that trustworthy moment once more...

The moment when I fell in love with my sweet heart,
Those wonderful striking eyes arrested my glance,
There was an unbreakable commitment saying never would we depart,
And it was the beginning of a blissful romance.
I wanna relive that heart-spinning moment once more...

The moment when I first met my dearest God,
Those serene and celestial eyes gazed at me,
There was an unseen divine light that into my heart trod,
And my deity was the only one my heart could see.
I wanna relive that ecstatic moment once more...

The moments when I somehow went wrong,
Those sorry eyes of mine reveal my feelings of guilt,
Is there a chance to correct those mistakes that I made all along?
And allow me to relive my life the way I want it to be built,
I wanna relive every moment which I have missed to notice..... I wanna relive.

Wandering.......


Though the day is still in its nascent phase, the collective heaviness in our breath is felt as the muggy sky frowns down upon the world today. A week of rains and murky atmospheres both in daily and nightly lives has dripped this city in a sluggish glaze that leaves me wondering whether we really did avoid the end of days. The sky slivers in and out of a brown-hazy half-smile - one where you can't help but focus on the side that isn't smiling.  I can't help but focus on the grimace formed by hardened eyes whose colorless abyss sucks me into place I haven't been for a long time and don't care to return to. I can't help but wonder why I long for a velvety embrace from tentacles writhing around my wrists, my knees, cracking my joints.

This mood has been permeating steadily through my subconscious and I feel the fragmentation from last week growing steadily more apparent. Some mornings, I awake to find a new face in the mirror - one that has returned form a night of fighting demons, one whose eyes are blazing with fear, exhausted from the effort of just staying open. I can feel the pulsating energy in my arms ripping through my muscles, making me aware of places that I never knew could be sore. I have accessed, tapped into, used the dark side of healing energy, and I am consumed with the repercussions, obsessed with having this shadow side stifled -  this darkness extinguished by blazing light energy.

No light, nor food, nor breath, nor calming wind has penetrated the fear of taming a growling monster. One wonders, often, when one is sick, "why have I been put through this test?" "What is my body trying to tell me?" I feel that mine has been begging for a way in which to get rid of negativity, to sift through remnants of hurt and fear...and be left with simple, silent serenity.

Calm?

The concept seems so far away to me right now. I was told, recently, that if things feel up in the air, and if I find myself constantly trying to remain on kilter  - that I should be satiated with the knowledge that I am on the right track. Perhaps it means that I should become comfortable with umbrellas and shield myself from the continuous spew of flashback memories and repeating situations. Certainly, it is case for pause when a malignant energy returns - in a different from - a true creature with ill-fitting skin.

Certainly, certainly...yes, of course. All I can do is let the moments pass, let the thoughts linger until they effervesce from my consciousness - and let the images go. Screaming violins and bursting veins will soon flow away with the tides...as they do...

My dearest shadow,
I know that you are
bubbling from deeper down
I know that you are
struggling from the bites
that you set on yourself

My dearest shadow,
storms have ravaged your
borders and you have leaked
onto the decorated boardwalks
painted flowers have bled
their colors from your face.

My dearest shadow,
Your tears have stained
my pillow - inebriated in your
burgundy woes - yet you
still manage to crack that
smile over my broken face.

My dearest shadow,
a taste of your power has
left me ill - sick of myself.
A taste of your evil has
brought fear into my body
-congealed in my muscles
as excruciating pain.

My dearest shadow,
I see your footsteps on my skin,
bruises leading
through where you have
left breadcrumbs.
And I follow.

My dearest shadow,
Opposing wings cannot fly.
We learn...we must... to work
as one. The balance between us
is the only thing that
will let me
let us
let you
let me
let you
let me
let me
let me

let me survive.

11 Lessons For Life from Noah's Ark


11 Lessons For Life from Noah's Ark

Everything I need to know, I learned from Noah's Ark.

1. Don't miss the boat.

2. Remember that we are all in the same boat.

3. Plan ahead. It wasn't raining when Noah built the Ark.

4. Stay fit. When you're 60 years old, someone may ask you to do something really big.

5. Don't listen to critics; just get on with the job that needs to be done.

6. Build your future on high ground.

7. For safety's sake, travel in pairs.

8. Speed isn't always an advantage. The snails were on board with the cheetahs.

9. When you're stressed, float awhile.

10. Remember, the Ark was built by amateurs; the Titanic by professionals.

11. No matter the storm, when you are with God, there's always a rainbow waiting.

Friday, 21 September 2012

Image in my mind


The image that I have in my mind right now is of a hand reaching from deep down inside of me, from somewhere inside my core, beyond my sternum, beyond even the physical limits of my body and coming upwards and outwards through my throat, outwards and upwards from my face and reaching......just reaching. It seems to want to stretch out from the sinewy nodule that it has been living in and turn my entire being inside out.

I couldn't find picture to portray this through a Google image search.



I have a very raw layer of emotion misting up on my skin - it is unsure whether it wants to be sweated out, or cried out, or just examined and held. The palpitations in my heart haven't stopped since I noticed them yesterday, within about an hour of getting to work. True to form, I decided they had nothing to do with me. The pounding on my ribcage, the thrusting upwards on my lungs, the twitching underneath my collarbone...no, not mine. Today, I laid a painted circle, a bit of wearable art, upon the point where my heart drills its way outward. It's a heavier necklace than I like to wear, but the pressure on my skin is soothing - I feel as though I can start to contain the twitching.

My eye -- all week, I have felt as though it has been trying to jump out of its socket. It has grown tired from seeing beyond what is seen, and it has grown tired of supporting the weight of my soul. The eyes are the window to the soul, yes they are, but my right eye has begged me to turn the blinds down - has rolled on its knees for the opportunity to turn inward, to see my inner realm rather than the outer whats and whatnots of reality.

My skin cannot hold me anymore.

As nails arming,
hammering,
drilling,
cutting,
sharpening.

a hole through my chest...

the hand inside of me, the hand of my soul is begging to come out. It takes gasps on to my ankles and takes them along -- pushing, pulling, thrusting outwards. A celestial body is spinning and churning and stewing inside of me, waiting for  my to open wide enough to let it out.

I f..e..e...l...t...ired

I feel.....vulnerable

I
f  E
e
L   Fra...g

m Ented....


My legs are ready to take that epic walk on their own - they are pushing me out of my chair, into the illustrious isolation of The City. I want to get lost, I want to restore my thoughts with the energy of my footsteps - I need that time for the characters in the stories that live in my head to come alive again, to be tangible enough to grasp through a pen, to bleed onto a page. I want to be able to take the energy that seeps from the palms of my hands and roll it around, stretch it, condense it, caress it, hold it, hug it, run with it...My creative spirit is beating so fast, so hard, so sad, so strong, so weak, so vulnerable, so fragile, so delicious...It wants

.....outwards and upwards...

Let me, jut let me tend to it. Oh...it has so much to bring forth.

Yeah...

What a wonderful opportunity for you to be with someone who has so much healing to give to the world, so much good to spread and share and write about. So, why won't you take it? So, why do you scream at me? Why do you spew your anger from the day into my open face? Why do I regret my vulnerability when I am with you? Why do I feel guilty for...feeling...when you get so closed? Why do you make me swallow my tears...?

Why...do I have so many "why?"s

Really, it's not your fault.
Really, it's not my fault
Really, it's not anyone's fault.

But, let's talk about it, okay?

Thump thump thump badump thump..


I am masking a dull throb in my core with the smile on my face. There is either a tiny creature digging through my organ tissue - burrowing tunnels to connect parts of my body that don't naturally connect.  I'm not sure whether I want to reach in and rip this little creature out or drown it in an acerbic mixture of tea, coffee, and SmartWater. I'm not sure, but I believe that she has invited a few friends to tap dance on my duodenum. She has taken her drumsticks and is playing beat out on my chest cavity.

Thump thump thump badump thump...

Is there any way to evict a sensation?

I wish I could close my eyes right now and sleep them away. I wish that I could spread a layer of material with frosting-like qualities inside of me and drown them into a stupor of silence.

Thump thump thump badump thump...

I wonder if all of this has to do with how I felt yesterday? I wonder if my nerves need more serious rewiring? I wonder if cold will ever feel cold or just painful?

I wonder where I went yesterday when I left my mind for an hour. I wonder why my legs hurt afterward, and I couldn't feel my knees.

I also, really, wonder, why these creatures have insisted on the tapdancing inside of me.

Thump thump thump badump thump...

I feel like I've just mixed vodka and wine again - my throat is dry and pulls at my feet - telling them that they are about to be turned inside out.

Maybe, it was the bread this morning.

Maybe, the answer is to accept and hold the fact that my body is sad right now, that maybe I've swalloed too much shame, too much guilt this week.

Maybe, it's time to shut my mind off for two days.

Lucky, it's the weekend.
Lucky, sleep is not an illusion.
Lucky, it also won't be an elusion.
Lucky, th'elephant....that's an elision.

Yes, please connect my hip flexor with my shoulder blade -
I really would like them to function unilaterally.

Oh, thank you, yes, I didn't realize that my small intestine could be part of my auditory system.

Rest is upon us
Perhaps, it will be
For now -
I remain...
as is,
The middle of the day.

Care For Everyone

Care For Everyone

A story is told about a soldier who was finally coming home after having fought in Vietnam. He called his parents from San Francisco.

"Mom and Dad, I'm coming home, but I've got a favor to ask. I have a friend I'd like to bring with me."

"Sure," they replied, "we'd love to meet him."

"There's something you should know," the son continued, "he was hurt pretty badly in the fighting. He stepped on a land mine and lost an arm and a leg. He has nowhere else to go, and I want him to come live with us."

"I'm sorry to hear that, son. Maybe we can help him find somewhere to live."

"No, Mom and Dad, I want him to live with us."

"Son," said the father, "you don't know what you're asking. Someone with such a handicap would be a terrible burden on us. We have our own lives to live, and we can't let something like this interfere with our lives. I think you should just come home and forget about this guy. He'll find a way to live on his own."

At that point, the son hung up the phone. The parents heard nothing more from him. A few days later, however, they received a call from the San Francisco police. Their son had died after falling from a building, they were told. The police believed it was suicide. The grief-stricken parents flew to San Francisco and were taken to the city morgue to identify the body of their son. They recognized him, but to their horror they also discovered something they didn't know.

Their son had only one arm and one leg.

The parents in this story are like many of us. We find it easy to love those who are good-looking or fun to have around, but we don't like people who inconvenience us or make us feel uncomfortable. We would rather stay away from people who aren't as healthy, beautiful, or smart as we are. Thankfully, there's someone who won't treat us that way. Someone who loves us with an unconditional love that welcomes us into the forever family, regardless of how messed up we are.

Tonight, before you tuck yourself in for the night, say a little prayer that God will give you the strength you need to accept people as they are, and to help us all be more understanding of those who are different from us!!! There's a miracle called * Friendship- that dwells in the heart. You don't know how it happens or when it gets started.

But you now the special lift It always brings and you realize that Friendship is one of God's most precious gifts! Friends are a very rare jewel, indeed. They make you smile and encourage you to succeed. They lend an ear, they share a word of praise, and they always want to open their hearts to us. Show your friends how much you care.

If We Would Have Hurried


If We Would Have Hurried

There once was a fellow who, with his dad, farmed a little piece of land in Japan. Several times a year they would load up the old ox-drawn cart with vegetables and go into the nearest city to sell their produce. Except for their name and patch of ground, father and son had little in common. The old man believed in taking it easy. The boy was usually in a hurry - the go-getter type.

One morning, bright and early, they hitched up the ox to the loaded cart and started on the long journey. The son figured that if they walked faster, kept going all day and night, they'd make the market by early the next morning. So he kept prodding the ox with a stick, urging the beast to get a move on.

"Take it easy, Son," said the old man. "You'll last longer."

"But if we get to the market ahead of the others, we'll have a better chance of getting good prices," argued the son.

No reply. Dad just pulled his hat down over his eyes and fell asleep on the seat. Itchy and irritated, the young man kept goading the ox to walk faster. His stubborn pace refused to change.

Four hours and four miles down the road, they came to a little house. The father woke up, smiled and said, "Here's your uncle's place. Let's stop in and say 'hello.'"

"But we've lost an hour already," complained the hotshot. "Then a few more minutes won't matter. My brother and I live so close, yet we see each other so seldom," the father answered slowly.

The boy fidgeted and fumed while the two old men laughed and talked away almost an hour. On the move again, the man took his turn leading the ox. As they approached a fork in the road, the father led the ox to the right.

"The left is the shorter way," said the son.

"I know it," replied the old man, "but this way is so much prettier."

"Have you no respect for time?" the young man asked impatiently.

"Oh, I respect it very much! That's why I like to look at beauty and enjoy each moment to the fullest."

The winding path led through graceful meadows, wildflowers and along a rippling stream - all of which the young man missed as he churned within, preoccupied and boiling with anxiety. He didn't even notice how lovely the sunset was that day. Twilight found them in what looked like a huge, colorful garden. The old man breathed in the aroma, listened to the bubbling brook, and pulled the ox to a halt. "Let's sleep here," he sighed.

"This is the last trip I'm taking with you," snapped his son. "You're more interested in watching sunsets and smelling flowers, than in making money!"

"Why, that's the nicest thing you've said in a long time," smiled the dad. A couple of minutes later he was snoring - as his boy glared back at the stars. The night dragged slowly, the son was restless.

Before sunrise the young man hurriedly shook the father awake. They hitched up and went on. About a mile down the road they happened upon another farmer - a total stranger - trying to pull his cart out of a ditch.

"Let's give him a hand," whispered the old man.

"And lose more time?" the boy exploded.

"Relax, son... you might be in a ditch yourself. We need to help others in need - don't forget that." The boy looked away in anger.

It was almost eight o'clock that morning by the time the other cart was back on the road. Suddenly, a great flash split the sky. What sounded like thunder followed. Beyond the hills, the sky grew dark.

"Looks like big rain in the city," said the old man.

"If we had hurried, we'd be almost sold out by now," grumbled his son.

"Take it easy... you'll last longer. And you'll enjoy life so much more," counseled the kind old gentlemen.

It was late in the afternoon by the time they got to the hill overlooking the city. They stopped and stared down at it for a long time. Neither of them said a word.

Finally, the young man put his hand on his father's shoulder and said, "I see what you mean, Dad."

They turned their cart around and began to roll slowly away from what had once been the city of Hiroshima.

A Very Good Management Lesson...

A Very Good Management Lesson...

The Pig And The Horse!!!

There was a farmer who had a horse and a pig…..
 One day, the horse became ill and he called the veterinarian,

who said:
 - Well, your horse has a virus.
 He must take this medicine for three days.
 I'll come back on the 3rd day and if he's not better,
 we're going to have to put him down.

-
Nearby, the pig listened closely to their conversation.
 The next day, they gave him the medicine and left. -
The pig approached the horse and said:
 - Be strong, my friend.
 Get up or else they're going to put you to sleep!

-
On the second day, they gave him the medicine and left.
 The pig came back and said:
 - Come on buddy, get up or else you're going to die!
 Come on, I'll help you get up.
 Let's go! One, two, three...


-
On the third day, they came to give him the medicine
 and the vet said:
 - Unfortunately, we're going to have to put him down tomorrow.
 Otherwise, the virus might spread and infect the other horses.
 After they left, the pig approached the horse and said:
 - Listen pal, it's now or never!
 Get up, come on! Have courage!
 Come on! Get up! Get up!
 That's it, slowly! Great!
 Come on, one, two, three... Good, good.
 Now faster, come on...-... Fantastic! Run, run more!
 Yes! Yes! Yes! You did it, you're a champion!!!

All of a sudden, the owner came back,
 saw the horse running in the
 field and began shouting:
 - It's a miracle! My horse is cured.
 We must have a grand party. Let's kill the pig!!!!-

-
The Lesson: this often happens in the workplace.
 Nobody truly knows which employee actually deserves
 the merit of success,
 or who's actually contributing the necessary support
 to make things happen.

Remember………

LEARNING TO LIVE WITHOUT RECOGNITION IS A SKILL!!!!
 If anyone ever tells you that your work
 is unprofessional, remember:
 Amateurs built the Ark [which saved all the species]


and professionals built the Titanic [all died tragically]

DON'T LOOK TO BECOME A PERSON OF SUCCESS,
 LOOK INSTEAD
 TO BECOME
 A PERSON OF VALUES!

The Bus Passenger


The Bus Passenger

The passengers on the bus watched sympathetically as the attractive young woman with the white cane made her way carefully up the steps. She paid the driver and, using her hands to feel the location of the seats, walked down the aisle and found the seat he'd told her was empty. Then she settled in, placed her briefcase on her lap and rested her cane against her leg.

It had been a year since Susan, thirty-four, became blind. Due to a medical misdiagnosis she had been rendered sightless, and she was suddenly thrown into a world of darkness, anger, frustration and self-pity. Once a fiercely independent woman, Susan now felt condemned by this terrible twist of fate to become a powerless, helpless burden on everyone around her. "How could this have happened to me?" she would plead, her heart knotted with anger.

But no matter how much she cried or ranted or prayed, she knew the painful truth her sight was never going to return. A cloud of depression hung over Susan's once optimistic spirit. Just getting through each day was an exercise in frustration and exhaustion. And all she had to cling to was her husband Mark.

Mark was an Air Force officer and he loved Susan with all of his heart. When she first lost her sight, he watched her sink into despair and was determined to help his wife gain the strength and confidence she needed to become independent again. Mark's military background had trained him well to deal with sensitive situations, and yet he knew this was the most difficult battle he would ever face.

Finally, Susan felt ready to return to her job, but how would she get there? She used to take the bus, but was now too frightened to get around the city by herself. Mark volunteered to drive her to work each day, even though they worked at opposite ends of the city.

At first, this comforted Susan and fulfilled Mark's need to protect his sightless wife who was so insecure about performing the slightest task. Soon, however, Mark realized that this arrangement wasn't working - it was hectic, and costly. Susan is going to have to start taking the bus again, he admitted to himself. But just the thought of mentioning it to her made him cringe. She was still so fragile, so angry. How would she react?

Just as Mark predicted, Susan was horrified at the idea of taking the bus again. "I'm blind!" she responded bitterly. "How am I supposed to know where I'm going? I feel like you're abandoning me."

Mark's heart broke to hear these words, but he knew what had to be done. He promised Susan that each morning and evening he would ride the bus with her, for as long as it took, until she got the hang of it. And that is exactly what happened.

For two solid weeks, Mark, military uniform and all, accompanied Susan to and from work each day. He taught her how to rely on her other senses, specifically her hearing, to determine where she was and how to adapt to her new environment. He helped her befriend the bus drivers who could watch out for her, and save her a seat. He made her laugh, even on those not-so-good days when she would trip exiting the bus, or drop her briefcase.

Each morning they made the journey together, and Mark would take a cab back to his office. Although this routine was even more costly and exhausting than the previous one, Mark knew it was only a matter of time before Susan would be able to ride the bus on her own. He believed in her, in the Susan he used to know before she'd lost her sight, who wasn't afraid of any challenge and who would never, ever quit.

Finally, Susan decided that she was ready to try the trip on her own. Monday morning arrived, and before she left, she threw her arms around Mark, her temporary bus riding companion, her husband, and her best friend.

Her eyes filled with tears of gratitude for his loyalty, his patience, his love. She said good-bye, and for the first time, they went their separate ways. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday... Each day on her own went perfectly, and Susan had never felt better. She was doing it! She was going to work all by herself!

On Friday morning, Susan took the bus to work as usual. As she was paying for her fare to exit the bus, the driver said, "Boy, I sure envy you." Susan wasn't sure if the driver was speaking to her or not. After all, who on earth would ever envy a blind woman who had struggled just to find the courage to live for the past year?

Curious, she asked the driver, "Why do you say that you envy me?" The driver responded, "It must feel so good to be taken care of and protected like you are." Susan had no idea what the driver was talking about, and asked again, "What do you mean?"

The driver answered, "You know, every morning for the past week, a fine looking gentleman in a military uniform has been standing across the corner watching you when you get off the bus. He makes sure you cross the street safely and he watches you until you enter your office building. Then he blows you a kiss, gives you a little salute and walks away. You are one lucky lady."

Tears of happiness poured down Susan's cheeks. For although she couldn't physically see him, she had always felt Mark's presence. She was lucky, so lucky, for he had given her a gift more powerful than sight, a gift she didn't need to see to believe - the gift of love that can bring light where there had been darkness.

The Perfect Boss


The Perfect Boss

There were about 70 scientists working on a very hectic project. All of them were really frustrated due to the pressure of work and the demands of their boss but everyone was loyal to him and did not think of quitting their job.

One day, one scientist came to his boss and told him, "Sir, I have promised my children that I will take them to the exhibition going on in our township so I want to leave the office at 5:30 pm."

His boss replied, "OK, You're permitted to leave the office early today."

The Scientist started working. He continued his work after lunch. As usual, he got involved to such an extent that he looked at his watch only when he felt he was close to completion. The time was 8.30 PM.

Suddenly he remembered the promise he had made to his children.

He looked for his boss but he was not there. Having told him in the morning himself, he closed everything and left for home. Deep within himself, he was feeling guilty for having disappointed his children. He reached home. The children were not there.

His wife alone was sitting in the hall and reading magazines. The situation was explosive; any talk would boomerang on him. His wife asked him, "Would you like to have coffee or shall I straight away serve dinner if you are hungry?"

The man replied, "If you would like to have coffee, I too will have but what about the children?"

Hi wife replied, "You don't know? Your boss came here at 5.15 PM and has taken the children to the exhibition."

What had really happened was ... The boss who granted him permission was observing him working seriously at 5.00 PM. He thought to himself, this person will not leave the work, but if he has promised his children they should enjoy the visit to exhibition. So he took the lead in taking them to exhibition.

The boss does not have to do it every time. But once it is done, loyalty is established. That is why all the scientists at Thumba continued to work under their boss even though the stress was tremendous.

By the way, can you hazard a guess as to who the boss was?

He was none other than the mastermind behind India 's successful nuclear weapons and missiles program - Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam, Former President of India.

Goodness Find Its Way Back


Goodness Find Its Way Back

Whether it is our thoughts, actions or behavior, sooner or later they return and with great accuracy. Treat people with respect on your way up because you will be meeting them on your way down. The following story is taken from The Best of Bits & Pieces.

Many years ago two boys were working their way through Stanford University. Their funds got desperately low, and the idea came to them to engage Ignacy Paderewski for a piano recital. They would use the funds to help pay their board and tuition.
The great pianist's manager asked for a guarantee of $2,000.

The guarantee was a lot of money in those days, but the boys agreed and proceeded to promote the concert. They worked hard, only to find that they had grossed only $1,600. After the concert the two boys told the great artist the bad news. They gave him the entire $1,600, along with a promissory note for $400, explaining that they would earn the amount at the earliest possible moment and send the money to him.

It looked like the end of their college careers. "No, boys," replied Paderewski, "that won't do." Then, tearing the note in two, he returned the money to them as well. "Now," he told them, "take out of this $1,600 all of your expenses and keep for each of you 10 percent of the balance for your work. Let me have the rest."

The years rolled by. World War I came and went. Paderewski, now premier of Poland, was striving to feed thousands of starving people in his native land. The only person in the world who could help him was Herbert Hoover, who was in charge of the US Food and Relief Bureau.

Hoover responded and soon thousands of tons of food were sent to Poland. After the starving people were fed, Paderewski journeyed to Paris to thank Hoover for the relief sent him. "That's all right, Mr. Paderewski ," was Hoover's reply. "Besides, you don't remember it, but you helped me once when I was a student at college, and I was in trouble." It is one of the most beautiful compensations of life that no man can sincerely try to help another without helping himself.

Goodness has a way of coming back; that is the nature of the beast. One doesn't have to do good with a desire to get back. It just happens automatically.

Every Success Has Many Failures


Every Success Has Many Failures

Failure is the highway to success. Tom Watson Sr. said, "If you want to succeed, double your failure rate." If you study history, you will find that all stories of success are also stories of great failures. But people don't see the failures. They only see one side of the picture and they say that person got lucky: "He must have been at the right place at the right time."

Let me share someone's life history with you. This was a man who failed in business at the age of 21 ; was defeated in a legislative race at age 22; failed again in business at age 24; overcame the death of his sweetheart at age 26; had a nervous breakdown at age 27; lost a congressional race at age 34; lost a senatorial race at age 45; failed in an effort to become vice-president at age 47; lost a senatorial race at age 49; and was elected president of the United States at age 52.

This man was Abraham Lincoln. Would you call him a failure? He could have quit. But to Lincoln, defeat was a detour and not a dead end.


In 1913, Lee De Forest, inventor of the triodes tube, was charged by the district attorney for using fraudulent means to mislead the public into buying stocks of his company by claiming that he could transmit the human voice across the Atlantic. He was publicly humiliated. Can you imagine where we would be without his invention?


A New York Times editorial on December 10, 1903, questioned the wisdom of the Wright Brothers who were trying to invent a machine, heavier than air, that would fly. One week later, at Kitty Hawk, the Wright Brothers took their famous flight.


Colonel Sanders, at age 65, with a beat-up car and a $100 check from Social Security, realized he had to do something. He remembered his mother's recipe and went out selling. How many doors did he have to knock on before he got his first order? It is estimated that he had knocked on more than a thousand doors before he got his first order. How many of us quit after three tries, ten tries, a hundred tries, and then we say we tried as hard as we could?


As a young cartoonist, Walt Disney faced many rejections from newspaper editors, who said he had no talent. One day a minister at a church hired him to draw some cartoons. Disney was working out of a small mouse infested shed near the church. After seeing a small mouse, he was inspired. That was the start of Mickey Mouse.

Successful people don't do great things, they only do small things in a great way.


One day a partially deaf four year old kid came home with a note in his pocket from his teacher, "Your Tommy is too stupid to learn, get him out of the school." His mother read the note and answered, "My Tommy is not stupid to learn, I will teach him myself." And that Tommy grew up to be the great Thomas Edison. Thomas Edison had only three months of formal schooling and he was partially deaf.


Henry Ford forgot to put the reverse gear in the first car he made. Do you consider these people failures? They succeeded in spite of problems, not in the absence of them. But to the outside world, it appears as though they just got lucky.

All success stories are stories of great failures. The only difference is that every time they failed, they bounced back. This is called failing forward, rather than backward. You learn and move forward. Learn from your failure and keep moving.


Below are more examples of the failures of successful people:

1. Thomas Edison failed approximately 10,000 times while he was working on the light bulb.

2. Henry Ford was broke at the age of 40.

3. Lee Iacocca was fired by Henry Ford II at the age of 54.

4. Young Beethoven was told that he had no talent for music, but he gave some of the best music to the world

The Way We Are


The Way We Are

There is a legend about a wise man who was sitting outside his village.

A traveler came up and asked him, "What kind of people live in this village, because I am looking to move from my present one?"

The wise man asked, "What kind of people live where you want to move from?" The man said, "They are mean, cruel, rude." The wise man replied, "The same kind of people live in this village too."

After some time another traveler came by and asked the same question and the wise man asked him, "What kind of people live where you want to move from?" And the traveler replied, "The people are very kind, courteous, polite and good." The wise man said, "You will find the same kind of people here too."


What is the moral of the story?

Generally we see the world not the way it is but the way we are. Most of the time, other people's behavior is a reaction to our own.

Go Beyond Your Limitations


Go Beyond Your Limitations

Henry Ford gave this world the V8 engine. He did not have much formal education. In fact, he did not go to school beyond the age of 14.

He was intelligent enough to know there had to be a V8 engine but he was ignorant and didn't know how to build it. So he asked all his highly qualified, educated people to build one. But they told him what could be done and what couldn't. According to them, a V8 was an impossibility. But Henry Ford insisted on having his V8.

A few months later he asked his people if they had the V8 and they replied, "We know what can be done and we also know what cannot be done and V8 is an impossibility."
This went on for many months and still Henry Ford said, "I want my V8." And shortly thereafter the same people produced his V8 engine. How come? They let their imagination run beyond academic limitation.

Education teaches us what can be done and sometimes also teaches us false limitations.It teaches us what we can do and also teaches us what we cannot do.


The Bumblebee

According to scientists, the bumblebee's body is too heavy and its wing span too small. Aerodynamically, the bumblebee cannot fly. But the bumblebee doesn't know that and it keeps flying.

When you don't know your limitations, you go out and surprise yourself. In hindsight, you wonder if you had any limitations. The only limitations a person has are those that are self-imposed. Don't let education put limitations on you.

Shifts


Shifts


you want me to see
through this murky blackness
and use my eyes
when they are caked with mud. 

I can't even breathe, 
through this foamy fog,
and you want me to scream
and wave my fighter's flag. 

How can you even
know what I go through
scraping my knees
on jagged tiled grounds. 

Scratching at skin 
that is too raw to start healing. 
I can't even see
what you want from me. 

Bring me your blame
Your guilt, your anger
Leave me with pain 
that I cannot see. 

Ice melts in my hand
too hot from stuffed embers
Your ashes live silently
as cancerous cells. 

My lungs pushing out
what you try to shove deeper
Get out of me, 
I beg you just leave.

God, just get out of me. 
It's almost a decade. 
Don't you think its enough?
You sit on my head. 

I just have had enough. 
Just let me deal
with what it is that I have to
and leave me alone, just go - 

find someone else. 

Hey, you in there! wake up! Time to make a change!


A smokey swirl forms on the surface of my coffee this morning.  It embraces the meniscus lapping at the sides of the cup and coils upon itself. I watch as the vibrations from the room, or the souls in it, urge it inwards, until it pierces through and dissipates. My coffee grows cold and the once sweet promise of robust aroma evaporates into a bitter porcelain brew. The swirl seeps further into the murk - drowning in uncertain shadows.

It baffles me to be staring at my coffee this morning, lying still in its simplicity - as if the last week never happened, as if it has accepted its natural death as a foggy memory of the velvety bean that it was born as. It lies there, stupid and still, and I wonder if it was consciously aware of the way in which it was picked, prodded, perpetrated, peeled, and perjured until it burst through its pod of life into a death of ground molasses swills. Was it even given a choice when the khefir came down and severed its life-force, herded into the welcoming jaws of the grinder?

I have been thinking a lot about the choices I have made in my life recently. Our lives are so fleeting - a series of moments that connect in a chain; a path that we walk on. Each step that we take is a link in the direction of our ultimate accomplishment - what we leave behind us. What would you be leaving behind you now if you were to close your eyes forever? This question is burning in my mind - what is a legacy when you have not completed your life's purpose?

We are all here for a reason, whether we are aware of it or not. Our soul has been put into this body, and has been made related to the souls of our families - thrust into the paths of the souls of our friends and less than friends so that it may cross the gates of growth, so that it may mature fully and achieve its full strength. Many of us idle through our lives with limited consciousness - oblivious to when the Universe screams at us to slow down or change direction. This is when we stumble, trip and fall ill. Or die.

The Universe will speak to us through the experiences and people we encounter, through signs and symbols along the way, and through our bodies. Our bodies, which flow with the cadence of the moon and the stars are our best indicators of whether we are on our paths. When our bodies slow or shut down -when we are ill, extremely fatigued, or...we end up in situations beyond our control, it is a sign - a clear statement of:

Hey, you in there! wake up! Time to make a change!

10 Rules For A Good Day


10 Rules For A Good Day

Today I Will Not Strike Back:
If someone is rude, if someone is impatient, if someone is unkind...I will not respond in a like manner.

Today I Will Ask God To Bless My "Enemy":
If I come across someone who treats me harshly or unfairly, I will quietly ask God to bless that individual. I understand the "enemy" could be a family member, neighbor, co-worker, or a stranger.

Today I Will Be Careful About What I Say:
I will carefully choose and guard my words being certain that I do not spread gossip.

Today I Will Go The Extra Mile:
I will find ways to help share the burden of another person.

Today I Will Forgive:
I will forgive any hurts or injuries that come my way.

Today I Will Do Something Nice For Someone, But I Will Do It Secretly:
I will reach out anonymously and bless the life of another.

Today I Will Treat Others The Way I Wish To Be Treated:
I will practice the golden rule - "Do unto others as I would have them do unto me" - with everyone I encounter.

Today I Will Raise The Spirits Of Someone I Discouraged:
My smile, my words, my expression of support, can make the difference to someone who is wrestling life.

Today I Will Nurture My Body:
I will eat less; I will eat only healthy foods. I will thank God for my body.

Today I Will Grow Spiritually:
I will spend a little more time in prayer today: I will begin reading something spiritual or inspirational today; I will find a quiet place and listen to God's voice!

Thursday, 20 September 2012

Education Does Not Mean Good Judgement


Education Does Not Mean Good Judgement

There is a story about a man who sold hot dogs by the roadside. He was illiterate, so he never read newspapers. He was hard of hearing, so he never listened to the radio. His eyes were weak, so he never watched television.

But enthusiastically, he sold lots of hot dogs. His sales and profit went up. He ordered more meat and got himself a bigger and a better stove.

As his business was growing, the son, who had recently graduated from college, joined his father. Then something strange happened. The son asked, "Dad, aren't you aware of the great recession that is coming our way?"

The father replied, "No, but tell me about it." The son said, "The international situation is terrible. The domestic is even worse. We should be prepared for the coming bad time."

The man thought that since his son had been to college, read the papers, and listened to the radio, he ought to know and his advice should not be taken lightly. So the next day, the father cut down his order for the meat and buns, took down the sign and was no longer enthusiastic.

Very soon, fewer and fewer people bothered to stop at his hot dog stand. And his sales started coming down rapidly. The father said to his son, "Son, you were right. We are in the middle of a recession. I am glad you warned me ahead of time."


What is the moral of the story?

1. Many times we confuse intelligence with good judgment.

2. A person may have high intelligence but poor judgment.

3. Choose your advisers carefully and use your judgment.

4. A person can and will be successful with or without formal education if they have the 5 Cs: Character, Commitment, Conviction, Courtesy, Courage

5. The tragedy is that there are many walking encyclopedias who are living failures.

Negative People Think Negative


Negative People Think Negative

There was a hunter who bought a bird dog, the only one of its kind in the world. That could walk on water. He couldn't believe his eyes when he saw this miracle.

At the same time, he was very pleased that he could show off his new acquisition to his friends. He invited a friend to go duck hunting.

After some time, they shot a few ducks and the man ordered his dog to run and fetch the birds. All day-long, the dog ran on water and kept fetching the birds. The owner was expecting a comment or a compliment about his amazing dog, but never got one.

As they were returning home, he asked his friend if he had noticed anything unusual about his dog.

The friend replied, "Yes, in fact, I did notice something unusual. Your dog can't swim."

Some people always look at negative side.

You - know who you are


You - know who you are. 

You - the one who thinks I'm no good.
You - the one who holds my tears back.

You - the one who criticizes me.
You - the one who fuels my anger.

You - the one who doesn't comfort me.
You - the one who hurts me.

You - the one who hits me.
You  -the one who cuts me.

You - the one who makes me sick.
You - the one who copes with pain.

You - whose red ink is her own blood.
You - whose penmanship stores my life.

You - who can't tell me you love me.
You - the one who can't hold me.

You - who acts like she doesn't care.
You - who sees my scars.

You - who looks away.
You - who is ashamed.

You - who hides in the cold.
You - who runs from it.

You - who denies it.
You - who is, of course, okay.

You - who pushes up against my skin.
You - who craves family.

You - who holds her mother.
You - who feels for her sister.
You - who misses her father.

You - who wanted to be seen.
You - who needs to be held.

You - who can't ask for help.
You - even when she needs it.

You - who looks for yourself outside.
You -who hides from within...

You - you....you....


ME

I am here....
                             Breathing.....

Triple Filter Test for Truth


Triple Filter Test for Truth

In ancient Greece, Socrates was reputed to hold knowledge in high esteem. One day an acquaintance met the great philosopher and said, “Do you know what I just heard about your friend?”

“Hold on a minute,” Socrates replied. “Before telling me anything I’d like you to pass a little test. It’s called the Triple Filter Test.”

“Triple filter?”

“That’s right,” Socrates continued. “Before you talk to me about my friend, it might be a good idea to take a moment and filter what you’re going to say. That’s why I call it the triple filter test. The first filter is Truth. Have you made absolutely sure that what you are about to tell me is true?”

“No,” the man said, “Actually I just heard about it and...”

“All right,” said Socrates. “So you don’t really know if it’s true or not. Now let’s try the second filter, the filter of Goodness. Is what you are about to tell me about my friend something good?”

“No, on the contrary...”

“So,” Socrates continued, “You want to tell me something bad about him, but you’re not certain it’s true. You may still pass the test though, because there’s one filter left: the filter of Usefulness. Is what you want to tell me about my friend going to be useful to me?”

“No, not really...”

“Well,” concluded Socrates, “If what you want to tell me is neither true nor good nor even useful, why tell it to me at all?”

Playing the Game of Life


Playing the Game of Life

Life is a game with a glorious prize,
If we can only play it right.
It is give and take, build and break,
And often it ends in a fight;
But he surely wins who honestly tries
(Regardless of wealth or fame),
He can never despair who plays it fair
How are you playing the game?

Do you wilt and whine, if you fail to win
In the manner you think your due?
Do you sneer at the man in case that he can
And does, do better than you?
Do you take your rebuffs with a knowing grin?
Do you laugh tho' you pull up lame?
Does your faith hold true when the whole world's blue?
How are you playing the game?

Get into the thick of it - wade in, boys!
Whatever your cherished goal;
Brace up your will till your pulses thrill,
And you dare to your very soul!
Do something more than make a noise;
Let your purpose leap into flame
As you plunge with a cry, "I shall do or die,"
Then you will be playing the game.

The Flow Of Life


The Flow Of Life

If the sky above seems cloudy,
And you are left out in the rain,
If you are searching for a rainbow,
But the colors bring you pain,
If your world is not revolving,
And there is no end in sight,
If you are looking for the sunshine,
But all you see is night,
If all around are smiling,
But all you can do is frown,
If you are tired of all this living,
When life just brings you down, 

Then look beyond your teardrops,
At the wonders of this land,
The beauty of a flower,
Like velvet in your hand.
Feel the air around you,
The smell of new mown hay,
Laughing children in the park,
The innocence there at play, 

Imagine floating with a butterfly,
As she flutters between the trees,
Or the whispers of the ocean,
On warm hot summer's breeze,
Think of the taste of candy floss,
As it melts upon your tongue,
Or the melody of morning birds,
As they greet each day with song,
Remember words of beauty,
Told in your mother's embrace,
Feel the gentleness of her touch,
As she softly kissed your face, 

Seek the good within you,
Cast the clouds from your sky,
Don't look toward the pavement,
But hold your head up high,
Think not what life owes you,
But of all you have to give,
Forget about tomorrow,
Then you can start to live. 

So Bless this age your are living in,
With the gifts you can bestow,
Don't disregard the stream of life,
Go gently with the flow.

The World Is Against Me


The World Is Against Me

The world is against me, he said with a sigh. 
Somebody stops every scheme that I try. 
The world has me down and it's keeping me there; 
I don't get a chance. Oh, the world is unfair! 
When a fellow is poor then he can't get a show; 
The world is determined to keep him down low. 

What of Abe Lincoln I asked. Would you say 
That he was much richer than you are to-day 
He hadn't your chance of making his mark, 
And his outlook was often exceedingly dark; 
Yet he clung to his purpose with courage most grim 
And he got to the top. Was the world against him 

What of Ben Franklin I've oft heard it said 
That many a time he went hungry to bed. 
He started with nothing but courage to climb, 
But patiently struggled and waited his time. 
He dangled awhile from real poverty's limb, 
Yet he got to the top. Was the world against him 

I could name you a dozen, yes, hundreds, I guess, 
Of poor boys who've patiently climbed to success; 
All boys who were down and who struggled alone, 
Who'd have thought themselves rich if your fortune they'd known; 
Yet they rose in the world you're so quick to condemn, 
And I'm asking you now, was the world against them

Your heart is born new every day


Your heart is born new every day. The greeting of each day is another breath of light for your heart to take in. this makes it vulnerable, sensitive, and open...as a baby is...every time it is awakened. A heart, much like an infant, will continue to reach towards the love of acceptance and understanding, even if it meets the reality of pain and continuous wounding. It is why, although we physically carry upon our hearts the wounds of times we have opened towards another...although we feel the stretched pins of healing in those wounds within us, we continue to open, and continue to reach towards the unity of knowing the rhythm of a lover's beating heart within us.

Our souls, however, are reborn each day with the loves it has known in other cycles and the lives it has been with in other times. Our soul searches, continuously, for the loves it has known in previous lives, while present in this life. The soul that is able to find a love it has known before...or many times before, enters another level of being, of openness, and steps closer to its unity with the natural spirits of earth and light...the spirits that breathe life upon our bodies.

Our souls however may recognize the love of another in a body or life that is distant..in time, in land, or in reality. Nevertheless, it will continue to seek that presence and connection, and it will push all boundaries to manifest love it has known before.

When both are present, our love is whole and sure and erased of doubt or question. When the soul pushes our hearts to break from yearning the presence of its soul love, one we may not be able to be with...it may sometimes push our hearts to shatter in rain of bleeding sand. We tread on the fragile boundary between fulfilling our soul's yearning for its love and maintaining the wholeness and purity of our heart.

Every morning, my body is dismantled


Every morning, my body is dismantled

In this blog words Teacher and Mentor is referred to "Dada"
Dada is the one to have changed my perspective in all aspects of life

I awaken to find that I have traveled far within my dreamworld and that I have returned to my body with new lessons to learn, and new parts to put together. When I sleep, I face some of my most feared monsters, many of which, upon reflection, wear my very own face. I awaken to find that I am looking beyond the depth of my own eyes - beyond the reflected pools of light that show me the world beyond my touch.

The world within me rages within caverns of unexplored crystals - where deep pockets of strength lay hidden beneath deceptively protective membranes of anger and fear. Every morning, when I awaken, I am struck by the innocence that lives within me - I am humbled by the miracle of having woken up for another morning.

There was a time where I dreaded the moment that my body would awaken, that my being would have to function in a world that I didn't understand. My footsteps tracked along city streets and hallways that were filled with people with voids as faces, my hands held pens that sputtered words I could never own as mine. I lived in a world of niceties, in a universe where I had no purpose other than the one written on the piece of paper at the end of my quest. I have no use for paper that I cannot write on.

There was a time where I trolled the aisles of medicine halls to find a substance that would allow me to close my eyes in peace. This was a time where I wavered between the fear of being awake and the fear of being asleep. Now, I am afraid when I awaken to find how much I've learned during my night away - during a trip I may have taken into another world, or deeper into my own.

When I wake up, I am open. I am open to gratefully accepting the start of a new day and the blessings it will bring - the road I will continue paving. I am open to accepting the nature of my strength, and harnessing the beautiful gifts that nature offers us each day - within ourselves, and from our planet. When I wake up, I know that I have awakened as a healthy, whole being - that each new day is another canvas on which I can evoke the landscape of my life, each day begins with a fresh palette.

When I wake up, I am afraid.

I am afraid for the sensitive nature of my being is once again subject to the judgement of my own inner voice. I am afraid, for the nurturing way in which I hold my loved ones is rarely open to myself. I am afraid, for I know that only I can access the strength within me to uphold my gentleness, my love, and my own care. In truth, I strive to live - to take each step on my journey with the careful harmony between life and death, between shadow and light, and between warmth and darkness.

In my path, I have struggled. In ways innumerable and yet minute. In ways quotidian and yet enormous. I have taken some of the steps in my path with shaky legs. My body has ached to depths deeper than the life force within my bones. I have upheld facades of strength when my body has been weak, and when my spirit has been broken. I have forced myself onto healing, I have convinced myself that by struggling, I would recover.

I never thought, perhaps, I could love myself.

That to love myself would mean holding my healing with a gentle hand. That I could still, see myself in strength even though I am afraid. I never thought, perhaps, that I could still admit that I don't have the answers to all of my questions, and that - well, that it's okay. I never thought that - perhaps, I would want to take care of myself when I am sick. That, perhaps, I don't need to force myself to go through a day with a throbbing headache. That, perhaps, It's okay for me to say ...no.

In truth, I am always learning.

The greatest admission of strength - the only admission of my own strength that I have allowed myself to hold recently has been that, actually, I don't know anything. Every morning, I am a neophyte. I open my heart to lessons that the world I work and live in has to teach me today. I readily drink in the teachings of those around me - of my teachers, of my students, of my peers, and of strangers around me. In every tear, in every smile that I encounter, I learn - and yearn to know more - about the nature of the beings we are, and how we are all connected.

Although I own my being as it is present in this plane, I am no less put together than any one of us ever is. I willfully admit that yes, I am still struggling - and that yes, my spirit craves to know that within my body it is safe. The only thing I am ever sure of is that I am actually sure of nothing at all - that I am learning every minute on how to accept and be in the next one. In healing communities there is a mantra that encourages members to live each day at a time  - I only know how to live each moment. And some are very difficult. I only know my stillness when I have it, and I only know troubled waters when I am in them.

In truth, I cannot wear the masks of lives I have not lived.

When I go to wash my face each new morning, it is only mine that I can wash. Though I encounter hundreds, maybe thousands, upon my path each day, it is only my scars that I wear. I cannot own the wounds that I have not suffered, and I cannot wear the medals that I have not earned.

I can only accept, with great grace, the blessings of a life in which I am always learning. I can only teach the lessons that I, myself, have learned. I can only learn when I am open.

Gratefully, in my path I have been blessed.

I have been blessed to be given my life, when I acted in manners that suggested I no longer wanted it. I have been blessed with the words that pour as waterfalls from the upside down reaches of my consciousness to paint the world within me. I have been blessed with hands that hold my energy, that allow me to try and understand - to grow when I don't. I have been blessed with teachers - with immense wells of patience and nurturing, with depth and understanding beyond what I can even now understand. With the ability to see the strength within my weakness in ways that baffle me, and yet encourage me to strive and see the same. I have been blessed by those that have shown great care - for me - for a being so razed - that I never thought I could ever love.

And yet, in truth - I am most grateful for the pain that fuels my words, and the anguish that coaxes the flames within me.

I have been blessed
each morning, on which
I open my eyes,
and persist
 - into the world -
arise.

The Train of Life


Some folks ride the train of life
Looking out the rear,
Watching miles of life roll by,
And marking every year.

They sit in sad remembrance,
Of wasted days gone by,
And curse their life for what it was,
And hang their head and cry.

But I don't concern myself with that,
I took a different vent,
I look forward to what life holds,
And not what has been spent.

So strap me to the engine,
As securely as I can be,
I want to be out on the front,
To see what I can see.

I want to feel the winds of change,
Blowing in my face,
I want to see what life unfolds,
As I move from place to place.

I want to see what's coming up,
Not looking at the past,
Life's too short for yesterdays,
It moves along too fast.

So if the ride gets bumpy,
While you are looking back,
Go up front, and you may find,
Your life has jumped the track.

It's all right to remember,
That's part of history,
But up front's where it's happening,
There's so much mystery.

The enjoyment of living,
Is not where we have been,
It's looking ever forward,
To another year and ten.

It's searching all the byways,
Never should you refrain,
For if you want to live your life,
You gotta drive the train.

Wednesday, 19 September 2012

The road is crowded - 19-Sept-2012


The road is crowded and the air is littered with the insistent shrillness of a horn being leaned on for far longer than is acceptable. Whistles shriek as traffic controllers are desperate to let cars pass without causing a traffic jam, and without letting themselves become part of the pavement. Sweat drips off their tired brows as they pointlessly gesticulate at the crowding busses and unyielding anxious drivers, racing to get their kids, to the destination  to whatever the next stop of their day is.

On the sidewalk, panhandlers crowd around in ephemeral shapeless forms that seem to hover on the outskirts of personal space. Panhandlers desperate to get rid of their ill gotten goods fill my retinas with stolen bags, fake watches, and cheap cheap t-shirts that declare how much I love Noida.

Impatient music blares in my ears from the tiny white buds that somehow, by connecting to the slim black contraption in my pocket, smoothly absorb music like a perfectly blended milkshake through a bendy straw. But this milkshake is full of air pockets, as with each gulp, I’m skipping to the beginning of the next song. Michael Jackson competes with The Red Hot Chilli Peppers and Subliminal to have their full works listened to by my anxious ears.

My visual field is a wall of tightly clutched purses and back pockets, suit jackets and store uniforms, a sea of Blackberries and touch phones undulates in front of me as I try to zig zag through to wherever my next destination is. DMRC space is limited, buses run early and I run earlier, trains rattle and roll and my brain swims back and forth in its pool of cerebrospinal fluid, swaying dangerously close to the cranial walls. The glare of the sun and the sting of raindrops filters through my cracking eyes, and the unified buzzing, ringing of the street follows through. The noise in the street is mimicked in my mind, and I could not even find a moment of silence to honor the spirits as I pass through the graveyards.

My brain is splitting, I am living the exaggerated lightning strikes shown in advertisements for Migraine medicine, I am out of balance, and my field of vision comes in and out of focus. Glasses on, glasses off. Nothing helps, I am dizzy and tired, and NCR races indifferently around me. I want to sit on the sidewalk and cradle my ears in my tired hands, but they are way too dirty. I want to lay my legs on the ground and give them a moment of stillness. I long for the tree pose, the lotus, I lust after stillness, silence, and space.

I’m starving for silence, I crave minutes of frozen time and deaf ears. I beg for indifference and for one second of breathing space. I want to read, and so sue me, I want to have a good night’s sleep. The deceiving couch cushions eat away at my back, and my swollen joints take shots. I feel perpetually hung over, even though I don’t drink. Enjoyable outings, conversations, phone vibrations are a hammer hitting the nail that has gone crookedly into the wood.

The city is overwhelmingly exciting, and overwhelmingly tiring. Stray items fall into my possession without intention, without compensation. I’m a chrono-kleptomaniac, I’m steal seconds instead of silverware. In breaks form work I find the dimly lit sitting areas of delis, I hide in my book and dive into someone else’s world for a few minutes of the day. I’m gone for an hour but only 10 minutes have faltered through the noise.

I’m imagining a shaved head, a Buddhist monastery where I am the solitary Monk. I’m jittery from coffee that I haven’t even yet consumed. I greet MOD cashiers like they’re my family. My life is disoriented. I imagine myself in a bubble of smoke, or plastic, or plexiglass. I imagine a great big black hole consuming me, just me into a dimension of syrupy blackness that snakes into my eyes, and throat, silently deadly.

I reach out from the quicksand, but the quicksand is painfully slow; enveloping me up to the knee on one side and dissolving my arm on the other. Sway. Slip. Stuck. Crawling painfully, slowly, determinately are tiny red fire ants, forming in a necklace of toxicity. They feed on my tears and build their nests in my bloodstream. I wake up from sleep more tired than when I went to bed. My eyes are no longer blue, they are nauseatingly purple, they are maroon with determine niceness and conviviality, they are ice cold grey from exhaustion. They are rimmed with unrested capillaries, and surrounded by an army of speckled dust.

I’m facing a situation that my entire life has been the most successful at making me completely and totally uncomfortable, the only one that truly exhausts me: I have no place of silence. Not even a corner, a closet, a bathroom where I can sit and think. Where I can write. I am rushing these words out at the end of the workday, I can no longer think straight. I go from morning to office to outings to nighttime. And again the next day. I don’t know what it is to unwind. Someone is perpetually pulling the string in my back that makes me spit out preprogrammed phrases. Transaction. Evaluation. Good morning. Good night. How are you? How was your day.

Please, sometimes, I don’t care. My phone rings and I answer, and I wish it could teleport me to where the dialer’s fingers are CP, GK, Nehru Place, Rohini,  Somewhere, Anywhere. I just want some silence.

If I pour out my coins, can I buy some space? Can I eviscerate myself for some silence? I’ll trade a kidney for a chance to write my stories. A lung, perhaps, for a good night’s sleep.

Time is money, but Silence is priceless.

-------------------------------------------------------
“Do not speak unless you can improve the Silence”

Some Moments In Life


Some Moments In Life

In every human life,
there are some moments when one is sad and depressed 
Frustrated from every zone of life,
And feel like leaving everything & going away
And Life Goes on...

Some moments in which 
one is wrapped with tensions
one wants to get out of them 
and fly high in the sky
But cant run away, and life goes on...

Some moments in which,
one who adores hurts sentiments,
one needs a support, a shoulder to dry on,
But doesnt find one, and life goes on...

Some moments in which one gets tired of life 
or so intensely hurt that one wants to die 
one wishes to end up with
life at that very moment, and life goes on...

And in every human life on day arrives
When there is a big halt to one's life.
And then the people cry
and show that they were concerned

Then the question arises
Do they wait for one's death,
To care, To understand the one
If so, then wait till death and untill then
LIFE GOES ON...