The Essence of Becoming a Grown-Up Today…

from Dick Meyer’s “Why We Hate Us” quoting Charles Chaput, The Roman Catholic archbishop of denver:

Much of American culture right now is built on an adolescent fiction. The fiction is that life is all about you as an individual–your ideas, your appetites, and your needs. Believe me: It isn’t…

Adulthood brings power. Power brings responsibility. And the meaning of your life will hinge on a simple, basic choice. Will you engage the world with your heart and brain and faith, and work to make it a better place–not just for yourself and the people you love but also for people you don’t even know whose survival depends on your service to the common good? Or will you wrap yourself in a blanket of noise and toys and consumer junk, and stay a child?

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The Happiest People In Life…

“The happiest people in life don’t necessarily have the best of everything. They just try to make the best of everything.”

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A Dog’s Purpose? (from a 6-year-old).

I just received this wonderful story from an email chain and thought I would share it. 

“Being a veterinarian, I had been called to examine a ten-year-old Irish Wolfhound named Belker. The dog’s owners, Ron, his wife Lisa, and their little boy Shane, were all very attached to Belker, and they were hoping for a miracle. I examined Belker and found he was dying of cancer. I told the family we couldn’t do anything for Belker, and offered to perform the euthanasia procedure for the old dog in their home.

As we made arrangements, Ron and Lisa told me they thought it would be good for six-year-old Shane to observe the procedure. They felt as though Shane might learn something from the experience.

The next day, I felt the familiar catch in my throat as Belker ‘s family surrounded him. Shane seemed so calm, petting the old dog for the last time, that I wondered if he understood what was going on. Within a few minutes, Belker slipped peacefully away.

The little boy seemed to accept Belker’s transition without any difficulty or confusion. We sat together for a while after Belker’s Death, wondering aloud about the sad fact that animal lives are shorter than human lives.�
Shane, who had been listening quietly, piped up, ”I know why.”
Startled, we all turned to him. What came out of his mouth next stunned me. I’d never heard a more comforting explanation. It has changed the way I try and live.

He said,”People are born so that they can learn how to live a good life — like loving everybody all the time and being nice, right?”�
The Six-year-old continued,
”Well, dogs already know how to do that, so they don’t have to stay as long.”

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Gratitude & Attitude: A Formula For A Joyous Life!

PAIN IS INEVITABLE BUT MISERY IS OPTIONAL!!!

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How Strong is Your Character?

I read a great quote from Barbara Johnson’s book; “Splashes of Joy in the Cesspools of Life”.  The words provide a wonderful metaphor to explain the challenges of life.

“The rain falls on the just and also on the unjust, but

chiefly on the just,

Because the unjust steals the just’s umbrella”

There is a purpose behind all the pain we endure throughout our life’s journey.

In the trials we faced, much good has happened. God has fine-tuned us so we are more compassionate, more caring, more loving, more aware of other’s pain.

 With the gifts of Faith & Hope, our character will remain strong and we will find joy in our service for others.

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Some brilliant ideas to ponder

from Rory Sutherland: Advertising guru

1. The interface fundementally determines the behavior

2. Poetry is when you make new things familiar and familiar things new.

3. We are perishing for want of wonder, not for want of wonders.

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What is Wisdom?

According to William James, Wisdom is “the art of knowing what to overlook.”

William James (January 11, 1842 – August 26, 1910) was a pioneering American psychologist trained as a medical doctor. He wrote influential books on the young science of psychology, Educational psychology, psychology of religious experience and mysticism, and the philosophy of  pragmatism.

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We Need Each Other!!

I recently read a brilliant little poem shared by Dr. Charles R. Swindoll from his book “Laugh Again”.  More than ever I find this relevant and want to share it with you.

How Important Are You? 1983 from United Technologies Corp

More than you think.

A rooster minus a hen equals no baby chicks.

Kellogg minus

a farmer equals no corn flakes.

 If the nail factory closes, what good is the hammer factory?

Paderewski’s genius wouldn’t have amounted to much if the piano tuner

hadn’t shown up.

A cracker maker

will do better if there’s a

cheesemaker.

The most skillful

surgeon needs

the ambulance driver

who delivers the

patient.

Just as Rodgers

needed Hammerstein

you need someone

and someone

needs you.

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New Rule: If America Can’t Get It Together, We Lose The Bald Eagle

 

By Bill Maher:  Sept 25, 2009 

New Rule: If America can’t get its act together, it must lose the bald eagle as our symbol and replace it with the YouTube video of the puppy that can’t get up. As long as we’re pathetic, we might as well act like it’s cute. I don’t care about the president’s birth certificate, I do want to know what happened to “Yes we can.” Can we get out of Iraq? No. Afghanistan? No. Fix health care? No. Close Gitmo? No. Cap-and-trade carbon emissions? No. The Obamas have been in Washington for ten months and it seems like the only thing they’ve gotten is a dog.

Well, I hate to be a nudge, but why has America become a nation that can’t make anything bad end, like wars, farm subsidies, our oil addiction, the drug war, useless weapons programs – oh, and there’s still 60,000 troops in Germany – and can’t make anything good start, like health care reform, immigration reform, rebuilding infrastructure. Even when we address something, the plan can never start until years down the road. Congress’s climate change bill mandates a 17% cut in greenhouse gas emissions… by 2020! Fellas, slow down, where’s the fire? Oh yeah, it’s where I live, engulfing the entire western part of the United States!

We might pass new mileage standards, but even if we do, they wouldn’t start until 2016. In that year, our cars of the future will glide along at a breathtaking 35 miles-per-gallon. My goodness, is that even humanly possible? Cars that get 35 miles-per-gallon in just six years? Get your head out of the clouds, you socialist dreamer! “What do we want!? A small improvement! When do we want it!? 2016!”

When it’s something for us personally, like a laxative, it has to start working now. My TV remote has a button on it now called “On Demand”. You get your ass on my TV screen right now, Jon Cryer, and make me laugh. Now! But when it’s something for the survival of the species as a whole, we phase that in slowly.

Folks, we don’t need more efficient cars. We need something to replace cars. That’s what’s wrong with these piddly, too-little-too-late half-measures that pass for “reform” these days. They’re not reform, they’re just putting off actually solving anything to a later day, when we might by some miracle have, a) leaders with balls, and b) a general populace who can think again. Barack Obama has said, “If we were starting from scratch, then a single-payer system would probably make sense.” So let’s start from scratch.

Even if they pass the shitty Max Baucus health care bill, it doesn’t kick in for 4 years, during which time 175,000 people will die because they’re not covered, and about three million will go bankrupt from hospital bills. We have a pretty good idea of the Republican plan for the next three years: Don’t let Obama do anything. What kills me is that that’s the Democrats’ plan, too.

We weren’t always like this. Inert. In 1965, Lyndon Johnson signed Medicare into law and 11 months later seniors were receiving benefits. During World War II, virtually overnight FDR had auto companies making tanks and planes only. In one eight year period, America went from JFK’s ridiculous dream of landing a man on the moon, to actually landing a man on the moon.

This generation has had eight years to build something at Ground Zero. An office building, a museum, an outlet mall, I don’t care anymore. I’m tempted to say that, symbolically, all America can do lately is keep digging a hole, but Ground Zero doesn’t represent a hole. It is a hole. America: Home of the Freedom Pit. Ironically, it’s spitting distance from Wall Street, where they knock down buildings a different way – through foreclosure.

That’s the ultimate sign of our lethargy: millions thrown out of their homes, tossed out of work, lost their life savings, retirements postponed – and they just take it. 30% interest on credit cards? It’s a good thing the Supreme Court legalized sodomy a few years ago.

Why can’t we get off our back? Is it something in the food? Actually, yes. I found out something interesting researching last week’s editorial on how we should be taxing the unhealthy things Americans put into their bodies, like sodas and junk foods and gerbils. Did you know that we eat the same high-fat, high-carb, sugar-laden shit that’s served in prisons and in religious cults to keep the subjects in a zombie-like state of lethargic compliance? Why haven’t Americans arisen en masse to demand a strong public option? Because “The Bachelor” is on. We’re tired and our brain stems hurt from washing down French fries with McDonald’s orange drink.

The research is in: high-fat diets makes you lazy and stupid. Rats on an American diet weren’t motivated to navigate their maze and once in the maze they made more mistakes. And, instead of exercising on their wheel, they just used it to hang clothes on. Of course we can’t ban assault rifles – we’re the first generation too lazy to make its own coffee. We’re the generation that invented the soft chocolate chip cookie: like a cookie, only not so exhausting to chew. I ask you, if the food we’re eating in America isn’t making us stupid, how come the people in Carl’s Jr. ads never think to put a napkin over their pants?

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Why Are We Here?

W. H. Auden-  We are here on earth to help others.  What others are here for I have no idea!

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