19 May 2025         

   

Good day, and welcome to the newest Tuesday in our world!
This day offers us plenty to do and to enjoy, and it also offers
us the chance to rest and reflect--let's figure out what's best
for us today, and take that path.

   
   

   

Loving Ourselves Unconditionally
Melody Beattie

How Wonderful You Are!
Arthur Gordon

Problems with Ethics
tom walsh

   
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Simple and Profound Thoughts
(from Simple and Profound)

Begin each morning by resolving to find something in the day to enjoy.  Look into each experience which comes to you for some grain of happiness.    - unattributed

The ultimate value of life depends upon awareness, and the power of contemplation rather than upon mere survival.    - Aristotle

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

A lot of our 'busyness' is a way for us to avoid thinking about what is most important.  There's a difference between being busy and being productive.    - Kristen Lippincott

   

  

Loving Ourselves Unconditionally (an excerpt)
Melody Beattie

Love yourself into health and a good life of your own.

Love yourself into relationships that work for you and the other person.  Love yourself into peace, happiness, joy, success, and contentment.

Love yourself into all that you always wanted.  We can stop treating ourselves the way others treated us, if they behaved in a less than healthy, desirable way.  If we have learned to see ourselves critically, conditionally, and in a diminishing and punishing way, it's time to stop.  Other people treated us that way, but it's even worse to treat ourselves that way now.

Loving ourselves may seem foreign, even foolish at times.  People may accuse us of being selfish.  We don't have to believe them.

People who love themselves are truly able to love others and let others love them.  People who love themselves and hold themselves in high esteem are those who give the most, contribute the most, love the most.

How do we love ourselves?  By forcing it at first.  By faking it if necessary.  By "acting as if."  By working as hard at loving and liking ourselves as we have at not liking ourselves.

Explore what it means to love yourself.

Do things for yourself that reflect compassionate, nurturing, self-love.

Embrace and love all of yourself--past, present, and future.  Forgive yourself quickly and as often as necessary.  Encourage yourself.  Tell yourself good things about yourself.

If we think and believe negative ideas, get them out in the open quickly and honestly, so we can replace those beliefs with better ones.

Pat yourself on the back when necessary.  Discipline yourself when necessary.  Ask for help, for time; ask for what you need.

Sometimes, give yourself treats.  Do not treat yourself like a pack mule, always pushing and driving harder.  Learn to be good to yourself.  Choose behaviors with preferable consequences--treating yourself well is one.

Learn to stop your pain, even when that means making difficult decisions.  Do not unnecessarily deprive yourself.  Sometimes, give yourself what you want, just because you want it.

Stop explaining and justifying yourself.  When you make mistakes, let them go.  We learn, we grow, and we learn some more.  And through it all, we love ourselves.

We work at it, then work at it some more.  One day we'll wake up, look in the mirror, and find that loving ourselves has become habitual.  We're now living with a person who gives and receives love, because that person loves him- or herself.  Self-love will take hold and become a guiding force in our lives.

Today, I will work at loving myself.  I will work as hard at loving myself as I have at not liking myself.  Help me let go of self-hate and behaviors that reflect not liking myself.  Help me replace those with behaviors that reflect self-love.  Today, God, help me hold myself in high self-esteem.  Help me know I'm lovable and capable of giving and receiving love.

more thoughts and ideas on self-love

   


   
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How Wonderful You Are!
Arthur Gordon

Some criticism, no doubt, is constructive, but too much is a subtle poison.  A friend of mine told me of a club he belonged to in his undergraduate days at the University of Wisconsin.  The members were a group of brilliant boys, some with real literary talent.  At each meeting one of them would read a story or essay he had written and submit it to the criticism of the others.  No punches were pulled; each manuscript was mercilessly dissected.  The sessions were so brutal that the club members dubbed themselves The Stranglers.  This club was strictly a masculine affair, so naturally the coeds formed a comparable group of their own known as The Wranglers.  They too read their manuscripts aloud.  But the criticism was much gentler.  In fact, there was almost none at all.  The Wranglers hunted for kind things to say.  All efforts, however feeble, were encouraged.

The payoff came about twenty years later, when some alumnus made an analysis of his classmates' careers.  Of all the bright young talent in the Stranglers, not one had made a literary reputation of any kind.  Out of the Wranglers had come half a dozen successful writers, some of national prominence, led by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, who wrote The Yearling.  Coincidence?  Hardly.  The amount of basic talent in the two groups was much the same.  But the Wranglers gave one another a lift.  The Stranglers promoted self-criticism, self-disparagement, self-doubt.  In choosing a name for themselves, they had been wiser than they knew.

Awareness of the power of affection to unlock human capabilities is at least two thousand years old ("A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another.")  But affection is not much good unless it is expressed.  What's more, I have a notion that unexpressed feelings have a tendency to shrink, wither, and ultimately die.  Putting an emotion into words gives it a life and a reality that otherwise it doesn't have. . . .

Expressing confidence in a person's ability to accomplish something actually strengthens that ability.  Once, visiting a college classmate who has made an outstanding mark in life, I happened to open a book in his library.  It was a birthday gift from his mother, and it was inscribed:  "With love and pride for my son, who has done great things and will do greater yet."  I was reminded of this the other day when Charles Dumas became the first athlete to high-jump seven feet.  His mother, apparently, was not surprised.  "I just told him," she said later, "to go out there and jump seven feet!"  Whereupon he rose, you might say, to the occasion.

Emerson, that incredible old nutshell-putter, has said, "Our chief want in life is somebody who shall make us do what we can."  He might have added that the best method for this somebody to use would be simply to expect us to achieve and then let us know about it.  The human animal is a strange creature:  it will often make more of an effort to please someone else than to please itself.

The expression of affection does a lot, I think, for the person who expresses it; people who give admiration and affection get them back--if what they give is spontaneous and sincere.  People are irresistibly drawn to "warm" people.  And what is a warm person, except one who instinctively takes the checkrein off his or her emotions and enthusiasms when dealing with people he or she cares about?  Such warmth is contagious.  If even one member of an indifferent family can recapture it, it will spread imperceptibly to the others, until the decline of intimacy is halted.

So, while I found no valuable stamps or rare autographs in those dusty trunks in the attic, I took away a legacy in the form of a question to ask myself from time to time.  To be manifestly loved, to be openly admired are human needs as basic as breathing.  Why, then, wanting them so much ourselves, do we deny them so often to others?

Why, indeed?

  

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Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of
a second-rate version of somebody else.

Judy Garland

   

 
Problems with Ethics

Ethics can be problematic.  While most of us have the desire to be ethical people and to live according to our sense of right and wrong, it can be very difficult sometimes to follow our ethics as a guide to our lives and our actions.  Life isn't as simple as we'd like it to be, and often we find ourselves being pushed into situations in which we have to decide between doing what we feel is right and doing what we know will be expedient and convenient.

People encourage us to develop a strong sense of ethics, but very often those same people will be the ones to criticize us when we do our best to live by those ethics.  Many of the decisions that we make as ethical people will affect other people in negative ways, and those people often aren't happy with us for our decisions.

An interesting example:  I was recently asked to submit some paperwork to the state in order to secure funding for the school where I work.  The paperwork, with my signature on it, made it clear that I intended to follow up on some very specific issues--issues which I had no intention at all of pursuing (it had to do with getting an extra endorsement for my teaching certificate).  I refused to sign the paperwork, for I knew that in doing so, I would be making a promise that I didn't intend to keep.  My refusal, of course, angered the very administrators who constantly tell us how important it is to maintain extremely high ethical standards as teachers.

Yes, it is extremely ironic.  But it also put me in a very difficult situation, given that those are the same administrators who evaluate me and who determine my employment status.  The bottom line is that due to this action of mine, I'm basically being pushed out of the school district--and while it's something that I accept because there are many, many other problems at the district, it's also something that never, ever should happen.
   

Live one day at a time emphasizing ethics rather than rules.

Wayne Dyer

   
While I'm pretty sure that I will consider my decision to be the proper one for the rest of my life, I also know that most ethical considerations should not be written in stone--and I think that most of us recognize this fact.  Our ethics can help us to make decisions that will be positive for us and for our loved ones, but they are most definitely not absolute.

For example, I value truth very highly, but I'm also willing to bend the truth (okay, lie) when it seems the most appropriate thing to do.  I recently saw a young person do something that would have gotten her into a great deal of trouble, but it was an accident and she definitely regretted it.  The trouble she would have faced would have been grossly unfair to her for a very minor mistake; therefore, it was very easy for me, when I was asked, to say that I hadn't seen the act so I couldn't say whether she had done it or not.  She and I had talked over the situation, and I knew that I wasn't doing something that was going to make her feel like she could manipulate me or the truth.  She's a good kid who made a mistake, and I believe that keeping her out of the trouble was more valuable to her than allowing her to be punished harshly for a very simple mistake.

And I could be wrong.  But it was an ethical call that I made, and that I will stand by.  I see too many adults want to punish young people for virtually every little misstep that they make, but sometimes lessons are best taught and learned through compassion and communication.  Life is not a black-and-white experience, and we live through many shades of grey our whole lives long.
    

Ethics is a code of values which guide our choices and actions
and determine the purpose and course of our lives.

Ayn Rand

    
Of course, I am not advocating lying in any situation that we wish simply to make life more comfortable for us.  Truth is a concept that I value very highly, but it most certainly is not an absolute--there is no one truth, no one way of seeing the world (there's plenty on truth here).  And if we are to be ethical people, we need to recognize the fact that if a person doesn't conform to our concept of truth, that doesn't necessarily make them bad or unethical.  And such an idea isn't limited to truth--if I find something on the street that isn't mine, I make an effort to find the owner and return it.  In other cultures, though, it can be quite normal to simply keep it, for keeping it isn't anything at all wrong.

When we develop our own personal ethical codes, though, we give ourselves a chance to live our lives more fully and richly, for we're able to make decisions that give us peace of mind and that allow us to live comfortably with ourselves.  When we make decisions that conflict with our own ideas of right and wrong, then we're setting ourselves up for feeling torn, feeling that we've done something wrong, feeling guilt that we've done something we shouldn't have done.
   

Ethics is knowing the difference between what you
have a right to do and what is right to do.

Potter Stewart

   
Having a strong ethical code can simplify our lives considerably, but it's very important that we don't allow ourselves to stagnate, to adopt an ethical stance and never revisit it, never look at it from a different perspective and consider the possibility that we or our ideas have changed enough that our ethics may need a bit of adjustment, too.  We shouldn't allow our ethics to function as a pair of handcuffs that keep us from being and acting free; rather, we should keep our ethics as a compass, one that can help to guide us on our journey as we make our ways through life.  With enough reflection and consideration, we can develop an ethical code that allows us to live well while living honestly and fully and abundantly.

   
More on ethics.

   
   

   

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Almost any intense emotion may open our “inward eye” to the
beauty of reality.  Falling in love appears to do it for some people.
The beauty of nature or the exhilaration of artistic creation does
it for others.  Probably any high experience may momentarily stretch
our souls up on tiptoe, so that we catch a glimpse of that marvelous
beauty which is always there, but which we are not often
tall enough to perceive.

Margaret Prescott Montague

  

On the Companionship with Nature
Archibald Lampman

Let us be much with Nature; not as they
That labour without seeing, that employ
Her unloved forces, blindly without joy;
Nor those whose hands and crude delights obey
The old brute passion to hunt down and slay;
But rather as children of one common birth,
Discerning in each natural fruit of the earth
Kinship and bond with this diviner clay.
Let us be with her wholly at all hours,
With the fond lover's zest, who is content
If his ear hears, and if his eye but sees;
So shall we grow like her in mould and bent,
Our bodies stately as her blessed trees,
Our thoughts as sweet and sumptuous as her flowers.

   

  

When the philosopher's argument becomes tedious, complicated,
and opaque, it is usually a sign that he or she is attempting to prove
as true to the intellect what is plainly false to common sense.

Edward Abbey

    

  

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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