1 December 2025         

   

December is here, and it's time for the first issue of the month of our e-zine!
We thank you much for dropping by, and we hope that you enjoy this issue.
Take good care of yourself this month, and please make it a month to remember!

   
   

   

Important Places
Robert Fulghum

Looking through Love's Eyes
Zig Ziglar

Strategies for Developing a Positive Attitude
tom walsh

   
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Simple and Profound Thoughts
(from Simple and Profound)

Let no one who loves be called unhappy.  Even love unreturned has its rainbow.    -J.M. Barrie

Spring, summer, and fall fill us with hope; winter alone reminds us of the human condition.    - Mignon McLaughlin

The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing which stands in their way.    - William Blake

We teach children how to measure and how to weigh.  We fail to teach them how to revere, how to sense wonder and awe.    - Harold Kushner

   

  

Important Places
Robert Fulghum

Hair grows at the rate of about half an inch a month.  I don't know where he got his facts, but Mr. Washington came up with that one when we were comparing barbers.  That means that about eight feet of hair had been cut off my head and face in the last sixteen years by my barber.

I hadn't thought much about it until I called to make my usual appointment and found that my barber had left to go into building maintenance.  What?  How could he do this?  My barber.  It felt like a death in the family.  There was so much more to our relationship than sartorial statistics.

We started out as categories to each other:  "barber" and "customer."  Then we became "redneck ignorant barber" and "pinko egghead minister."  Once a month we reviewed the world and our lives and explored our positions.  We sparred over civil rights and Vietnam and lots of elections.  We became mirrors, confidants, confessors, therapists, and companions in an odd sort of way.  We went through being thirty years old and then forty.  We discussed and argued and joked, but always with a certain thoughtful deference.  After all, I was his customer.  And he was standing there with his razor in his hand.

I found out that his dad was a country policeman, that he grew up poor in a tiny town and had prejudices about Indians.  He found out that I had the same small-town roots and grew up with prejudices about Blacks.  Our kids were the same ages, and we suffered through the same stages of parenthood together.  We shared wife stories and children stories and car troubles and lawn problems.  I found out he gave his day off to giving free haircuts to old men in nursing homes.  He found out a few good things about me, too, I suppose.

I never saw him outside the barber shop, never met his wife or children, never sat in his home or ate a meal with him.  Yet he became a terribly important fixture in my life.  Perhaps a lot more important than if we had been next-door neighbors.  The quality of our relationship was partly created by a peculiar distance.  There's a real sense of loss in his leaving.  I feel like not having my hair cut anymore, though eight feet of hair may seem strange.

Without realizing it, we fill important places in each other's lives.  It's that way with a minister and congregation.  Or with the guy at the corner grocery, the mechanic at the local garage, the family doctor, teachers, neighbors, co-workers.  Good people, who are always "there," who can be relied upon in small, important ways.  People who teach us, bless us, encourage us, support us, uplift us in the dailiness of life.  We never tell them.  I don't know why, but we don't.

And, of course, we fill that role ourselves.  There are those who depend on us, watch us, learn from us, take from us.  And we never know.  Don't sell yourself short.  You may never have proof of your importance, but you are more important than you think.

It reminds me of an old Sufi story of a good man who was granted one wish by God.  The man said he would like to go about doing good without knowing about it.  God granted his wish.  And then God decided that it was such a good idea, he would grant that wish to all human beings.  And so it has been to this day.

more thoughts and ideas on community

   


   
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Looking through Love's Eyes
Zig Ziglar

Goethe made a rather profound statement when he said, "If I treat you as you are, you will remain as you are.  If I treat you as if you were what you could be, that is what you will become."  Those words of long ago express in a unique way what love is about.  As I reread them for the umpteenth time, I think of the love in a family and the way we see each other.  Looking at your mate as alive, well, and alert rather than nosy, or seeing him or her as exercising good judgment and thrift instead of being shallow and stingy, will have a profound impact on your relationship.  If you think of your mate as being expressive instead of talkative, and if you consider him or her sensitive and caring rather than touchy, your respect and admiration for your mate will grow, and you will develop a deeper love, appreciation, and understanding of him or her.

When you take that approach, you will have mastered one of the great lessons of life--namely, that when you love someone, you do not react to the symptoms of behavior, but you respond to the need that your mate might have.  In this process you will learn that love will always give you the benefit of the doubt.  Over a period of time you will realize that you do that not because you want to do what is right, but because you have become that kind of person.

The underlying message behind all of this is that you can change, and in the process you will have a substantial influence on the life of the other person.  Each of you will win, and as a couple, you will win.  That's the way to beat the daily grind.

If He Can, You Can

Kacey McCallister lives in Keizer, a suburb of Salen, Oregon.  He plays basketball, and in baseball he has been catcher and covered positions at first base and in the outfield.  His play was so spectacular that a Little League team in North Carolina dedicated its season to him, and disabled Boy Scouts in Georgia were inspired by him.  People all over America have been inspired by Kacey, who lost both legs at the hip when he was run over by a truck a few years ago.

He does all of those things by propelling himself with his arms.  He has a tremendous attitude and a determination to live as any other youngster wants to live, and the nation is applauding him.  CNN sent a crew to the family's home to do a story on him.  Kacey said he was more motivated than ever:  "I want to show them that I really can do all this stuff."

In today's world when too many people complain about everything, here's a role model who is determined to make the most of life.  Where do his drive, commitment, and enthusiasm for life come from?  I suspect his mother and father are much of the source of his inspiration.  Instead of spoiling him by catering to his whims and allowing him to feel sorry for himself, they've made the wise choice of encouraging him to believe in himself and letting him do everything he can do, while still being available to help when it is required.  That's love in action, and the results are spectacular.
  

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Be aware of wonder.  Live a balanced life-- learn some
and think some and draw and paint and sing and dance
and play and work every day some.


Robert Fulghum

   

 

Undivided Attention

I was having a cup of coffee the other day when I saw something nice--a young mother came in with her two young kids and sat down with them for what looked to be a nice time out with them.  She bought them something to eat and drink and everyone settled in--and then she pulled out her cell phone and called a friend to chat.  What had seemed to be some nice "togetherness" time turned into her ignoring her kids while she talked on the phone with a friend.

Last week my wife and I were taking a walk when we saw a young girl outside a store hanging out with her boyfriend.  They were hugging and talking to each other in that clinging way that many 16-year-olds have, paying attention only to themselves and each other.  Unfortunately, two little kids about five or six years old were sitting on a short retaining wall nearby, looking on.  The girl obviously was babysitting, and she had brought the kids to the store so that she could meet with her boyfriend.

   

Pay attention.  It's all about paying attention.
Attention is vitality.  It connects you with others.
It makes you eager.  Stay eager.

Susan Sontag

   
It was sad for me to see these two instances, for I know that they aren't exactly uncommon.  Unfortunately, many people aren't willing or able to pay undivided attention to kids, or to anything else in their lives for that matter.  Many people aren't able to focus entirely on work when they're at work, and others aren't able to focus on school when they're there.  It isn't always a question of attention deficit disorders, either--it's a question of choice.

The woman in the cafe chose to be on the phone with a friend rather than sit and talk with her kids.  The girl who was babysitting chose to pay attention to her boyfriend and ignore the kids.  These were only public occurrences--how often are kids ignored while the parents do things that they want to do, either at home or in the car or while on vacation?  How often do people choose to surf the Internet and leave the job they're getting paid to do undone for the moment?  How often are we thinking of other things while having a conversation with someone?  How often do we try to do two or three jobs at a time, instead of focusing all of our attention on one particular task?

And how often do we put other people, ourselves, and our loved ones in significant danger (study after study backs up this claim) by talking on cell phones, reading, eating, or even watching movies while we're driving our cars, rather than paying undivided attention to our driving?
    

Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way;
on purpose, in the present moment, and nonjudgmentally.

Jon Kabat-Zinn

    
In his book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Robert Pirsig mentions a trip to a mechanic's shop, and finding out that part of the reason that they did lousy work there was because they had a radio blaring loud music in the shop, which kept the mechanics there from focusing completely on the task at hand.  The people who worked there were more interested in finishing the day and going home than they were in doing a very good job, and because of that, the jobs they did were quite poor.

Dividing our attention almost always means that the results of our actions are less effective than they would be if we were to give our undivided attention.  Undivided attention helps us to be completely present in the moment, and it helps us to see more of and learn more about whatever we do.  It helps us to achieve results that most of us only dream of, yet most of us truly never have learned what it means to give our undivided attention.  We've grown up in cultures that seem to value accomplishment of many things over all else, and we reward people who split their attention and efforts between several tasks.

Personally, I have a very difficult time giving my undivided attention--it takes a great deal of effort on my part to keep focused on just one thing at a time, but I do try, with varying degrees of success.  One promise that I've made to myself, though, is always to do my best to stay completely focused when I'm with kids, for there are few things more important in young people's lives than to be with adults who are willing to give them their undivided attention.  Such attention gives them the unmistakable message that they're worth that attention, that someone is interested in them for exactly who they are.  Giving them only part of my attention can send the message that there are other things more important than them.

It's been important to me to practice paying attention.  Sometimes I stop and look at something for a while, and I try to recognize the other thoughts that come into my mind while I'm looking.  If I'm looking at a flower, for example, and I start to think about a letter that I have to write, I do my best to recognize that thought and push it out of my mind by re-focusing on the flower, or some particular part of the flower.  I try to see parts of the flower that I've never noticed before, and I look for patterns that might have escaped me.  This practice helps me when I'm talking to friends and thinking about all I have to do today--I do my best to refocus on our conversation, leaving that stuff for later.
   

Mindfulness can be summed up in two words: 
pay attention.  Once you notice what you’re
doing, you have the power to change it.

Michelle Burford

   
This type of attention is an important element of meditation, for example.  One of the most common ways of entering a meditative state is to focus on your own breathing, with the goal of eventually noticing nothing else but the breathing, trying to empty the mind of the many distracting thoughts that keep us from the centers of our being, that part of us that is truly who we are.

We hear a lot about "living in the present moment," and I'm completely convinced that the only way we truly can do so is by learning how to give our undivided attention to whatever it is that deserves that attention right now.  Once we divide it, we lose out on much of what is bright and beautiful, right here, right now.

It took a lot of effort for me not to go over and talk to those little kids who were being ignored by their mother in a public place, just to say hi.  And I know that I would have been the one to benefit the most from that conversation--just as the mother could have benefited greatly from paying some attention to her children.
   

more thoughts and ideas on mindfulness

    
   

   

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When you have worn out your shoes, the strength of
the shoe leather has passed into the fiber of your body.
I measure your health by the number of shoes and hats
and clothes you have worn out.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

  

Fear of failure

So much of life involves risk
and the possibility of failure.
If you are not afraid of failure,
you will take many more risks
in your life.
The more risks you take,
the more alive you will feel.
You are afraid of failure
because you fear rejection.
The moment you give up seeking
acceptance from others,
your fear of rejection will disappear.
And with it, the fear of failure.

Leonard Jacobson

   

  

It is essential that our love be liberating, not possessive.  We must at all
times give those we love the freedom to be themselves.  Love affirms the other
as other.  It does not possess and manipulate another as mine. . . . To love is
to liberate.  Love and friendship must empower those we love to become
their best selves, according to their own lights and visions.

John Powell

    

  

Yes, life can be mysterious and confusing--but there's much of life that's actually rather dependable and reliable.  Some principles apply to life in so many different contexts that they can truly be called universal--and learning what they are and how to approach them and use them can teach us some of the most important lessons that we've ever learned.
My doctorate is in Teaching and Learning.  I use it a lot when I teach at school, but I also do my best to apply what I've learned to the life I'm living, and to observe how others live their lives.  What makes them happy or unhappy, stressed or peaceful, selfish or generous, compassionate or arrogant?  In this book, I've done my best to pass on to you what I've learned from people in my life, writers whose works I've read, and stories that I've heard.  Perhaps these principles can be a positive part of your life, too!
Universal Principles of Living Life Fully.  Awareness of these principles can explain a lot and take much of the frustration out of the lives we lead.

   
   
    

   

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