9 June 2025         

   

Life has very kindly provided us with another week to live, to grow, to learn,
to achieve triumph and error, to love and to be loved.
We hope that you're able to make the week that you've been given a very special week.

   
   

   

Devotion (an excerpt)
What Love Is
Bernie Siegel

Focus on the Riches (an excerpt)
Susan Jeffers

Becdming a Gifted Observer
tom walsh

   
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Simple and Profound Thoughts
(from Simple and Profound)

Neither genius, fame, nor love shows the greatness of the soul.  Only kindness can do that.   - Jean Baptiste Henri Lacordaire

As I grow to understand life less and less, I learn to live it more and more.   - Jules Renard

Love is the great transformer, turning ambition into aspiration, selfishness into service, greed into gratitude, getting into giving and demands into dedication.   - unattributed

Half of our mistakes in life arise from feeling where we ought to think, and thinking where we ought to feel.   - John Churton Collins

   

  

Devotion (an excerpt)
What Love Is
Bernie Siegel

What are you devoted to?  The answer determines what kind of life you will have and how much joy you will find.

When I devote myself to changing other people, I have endless problems.  I am compelled to correct them.  I feel I have to criticize them when they aren't helpful and loving enough, or when they aren't spiritual enough or don't clean up after themselves.  Improving the world by trying to improve other people is hard work that leaves me feeling lousy.  In the end, no one, not even me, lives up to my expectations.

Loving means devoting yourself to people, but not to changing them.  When I devote myself to the people in my life all our lives improve.  While I am telling them how to meet my expectations, no one is happy.  As soon as I accept them as they are and start caring about them and trying to make their lives easier, everyone is happier and wonderful things start happening.

Joseph Campbell told a story about overhearing a man in a restaurant telling his child how to eat.  "Why don't you let him do what he wants to do?" the man's wife asked.

"Because I've never done anything I wanted to do in my life," the man answered.

Campbell contrasted that story with a passage in Sinclair Lewis's novel Babbitt.

In Lewis's story, a young man decides not to go to college.  He wants to get married and get a factory job because he likes working with his hands.  His family is giving him a hard time about his decision, but his father takes him aside and tells him he has never done anything he wanted to do in his life.  Now, even though the father isn't happy with the son's choices, he tells him he admires his decision to live his life the way he wants to live it.  Then he puts his arm around his son and they go back into the room to face the family.  I gave a copy of that passage to every one of our five children.

The more children you have, the harder it is to direct everyone's actions.  With five children, you are too busy to tell everyone what to do and it is easier just to watch them grow and blossom.

Our oldest son once asked why I treated the younger children differently than I'd treated him at their age.  "How come they don't have to do what I had to do?"

"Because I've learned that a lot of the things I asked you to do aren't important."  Then I apologized for my inexperience as a father.  He accepted my apology because my newfound wisdom made his life easier, too.

Today I am amazed at the things our children have done and their wide range of interests.  They are all living their lives and not the ones I would have planned for them.  But I have learned their lives are theirs, not mine, and in living their own lives they have given me experiences and an education I would never have had if I'd been fool enough to make them do what I thought they should do.

What are you devoted to?  Think about someone in your family whom you love.  How do you behave toward this person?  Think about your interactions over the past few days.  Are you trying to change her and improve her?  Or are you watching her grow and enjoying her and trying to make her life easier?

more thoughts and ideas on life

   


   
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Focus on the Riches
Susan Jeffers

In the world to come each of us will be called to account for all the good things God put on this earth which we refused to enjoy.  -The Talmud

When I read the above quote for the first time, I gasped.  First, I felt ashamed because I knew that over the course of my lifetime I had been given so much. . . and had appreciated so little.  Then I felt elated.  At last I had been given "permission" to enjoy.  More than permission.  I was being told that if I didn't enjoy, there would be consequences to pay!  What a gift!

I then began consciously to look around and notice all the good things God put on earth that I refused to enjoy.  I was shocked that I had never noticed these things before, except in a very superficial way.  I had only glanced at things I should have embraced.  Like most of us, I had an immense capacity for taking things for granted!  Since then I have learned that,

Taking things for granted is one of the greatest assaults on the quality of our lives.

When we take things for granted, we never get to see the magnitude of the gifts that are constantly being placed before us.  As a result, we feel only scarcity instead of abundance.

It's at this point you may be asking, "What are you talking about, Susan?  Just look around.  The world is a mess!"  Yes, the world is a mess.  Your life might be a mess.  And despite that fact, there is so much to be grateful for that it staggers the imagination.

The riches of the world envelop us, yet we cannot see.

And why can't we see?  We can't see because we humans are creatures of habit.  And the present habit of our society is to focus on what is terrible about life and ignore what is wonderful.  Our task, then, seems very simple--to stop focusing on what is terrible in life and begin focusing on what is wonderful.  But we all know that this task isn't simple at all.  In fact, it turns out to be one of our biggest challenges!  The reason for this is because old habits are extremely hard to break.  Yet in order to truly dance with life, break them we must!

In order to break any habit, repetition of the preferred behavior is a must!

Without it, you will keep falling back into old patterns.  Repetition allows you, little by little, to shift your awareness to the sumptuous banquet that has been set before you.  And you will wonder why previously you weren't able to see what is so obvious now.

It was a wise person who said, "Life is a banquet and most poor bastards are starving to death!"  As you open your eyes and really SEE, you will starve no more.  You will learn that. . . 

Your joy, your happiness, your satisfaction, and your ability to dance with life depend solely on what you pay attention to.

Thankfully, what you pay attention to is entirely up to you!

  

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My wish simply is to live my life as fully as I can. In both our work and
our leisure, I think, we should be so employed. And in our time this means
that we must save ourselves from the products that we are
asked to buy in order, ultimately, to replace ourselves.

Wendell Berry
The Art of the Commonplace

   

 
Celebrating Mediocrity

I've just left my job at a school district that set incredibly low standards for its students, mainly because the school district knew that if they didn't do so, many of their students wouldn't ever graduate.  It was getting very frustrating to work with students who were working two to four years below their grade levels, but who were still being told that they were doing wonderful work.  I saw nothing positive coming out of this situation--the students were definitely not being prepared for life after high school, and they were being passed on from grade to grade without meeting even the most basic of requirements for their age and grade level.

The culture of the school had become one of mediocrity by choice--even the athletes on the sports teams had to have only a 60% average in their classes in order to be able to compete.  The message that was being sent by setting the bar so low was very clear and very disturbing:  we don't think that you can do any better than this, so we're holding you to very low standards.

In working with the students, I saw many of them feel that all they had to do at school was pass and get their credits, so they were striving for one thing only--to maintain their 60% average.  There were very few students who did any sort of extra work, who strived for anything other than doing their work at their current level of ability instead of working to reach higher levels of achievement.  It was like a sickness that permeated the entire school, and it was incredibly frustrating to be around.
   

In today’s culture, it seems, we don’t want to honor real
excellence for the sake of looking up to, learning from,
being inspired by and celebrating such excellence. Instead,
we too often want to lower the bar and then boast about
what is mediocrity for the sake of something as small as
personal ego.  What a shame.  It seems to me there
just isn’t honor in that for anyone.

Betsy Hart

   
But what was worse was the fact that administrators at the school felt the need to constantly give out awards that were basically given because some students had met the bare minimum standards in a certain area.  To me, awards exist to honor someone who has gone above and beyond their normal tasks in order to excel, or they've gone out of their comfort zone in order to achieve something that is significant in their lives.  That's not what our awards were for.

When I told an administrator that I would love to give an award at a ceremony that they had at the end of the year, but that virtually none of my students had done anything extra or had stepped at all out of their comfort zones, he just looked at me and said, "Well, then, make something up."

When we start to reward effort that is no more than average effort, just to give some sort of award, what does that award really mean?  I know that the students who received those awards were completely aware that they had done literally nothing that was award-worthy, but that they had just been chosen arbitrarily because the school needed to give some award to someone.  And nobody talked about the awards or their recipients with any sort of respect or dignity--everyone knew that most of them had just been made up, and that there were absolutely no published criteria that anyone had to meet to receive any award.
    

There does seem to be a general trend in making sure everyone
excels at something, even if it requires a little re-writing of the rules.
And I think that this is why, these days, at least we seem to
embrace mediocrity entirely.  After all, if you don't applaud success,
for fear of upsetting those who haven't succeeded, or you have to
alter the way people are measured to give everyone a boost, then
you risk bringing everyone to the same level.  Just when, and why,
did average become the aim for everyone, instead of a measure
of the half-way point between two extremes?

Nicola Rippon

    
And I need to make one thing perfectly clear--these were great young people, and I loved working with them.  I used to look forward to coming to school to see them each day, and we had a lot of fun in class, and an awful lot of learning took place.  But because no one stepped up to excel, if I had chosen one student who had done very well, I would have been ignoring at least six or seven others who also did very well.  If I had chosen a "most improved" student, I would have neglected four or five others who had improved just as much.

When I taught college, I witnessed first-hand the dangers of rewarding students for mediocre work.  Students who had been getting A's in all of their high school classes were suddenly getting C's and D's on their papers in my class.  In the world of work outside of school, I've seen plenty of recent high school graduates who haven't been able to do basic math or write simple paragraphs without tons of errors.  When we celebrate normal work by calling it exceptional and giving awards for it, then we're actually sabotaging the futures of these young people who truly need an accurate idea of just how good they are at something.
   

Attend many high school graduations today and an astonishingly
high percentage of graduates leave with honors.  My experience,
corroborated by colleagues at many schools, is that this perception
of educational superiority migrates from high school to college.
Students today expect--and unfortunately too often receive--
high grades for what is in reality mediocre work.

R.W. Hafer

   
I was definitely looked down upon by administrators when I refused to give awards for normal work.  Other teachers told me that they didn't want to give awards either, but that the administrators pressured them into doing so.  I have to say quite honestly, though, that I feel it's very important that young people have a truly accurate idea of how they're doing if they're going to be prepared for their futures, and it's important that I be true to my ethics concerning education if I'm to be an effective teacher.

Our society is feeling the effects of young people graduating without many of the basic skills that they need in order not just to succeed, but to thrive in life.  It's a very dangerous situation, one that threatens to undermine the stability of many aspects of our culture, and the way to address these issues is not through giving more awards to people who haven't done award-worthy work, but to give significant awards to those people who truly excel or who truly step out of their areas of comfort in order to do the best they possibly can.  After all, that's how we live our lives fully--by giving our all to all that we do, and doing the best we can whenever we do anything.
   
   

   

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Some people think a miracle is only a miracle if it happens
instantaneously, but miracles can grow slowly and patience
and faith can compel things to happen that otherwise
never would have come to pass.

Boyd K. Packer

  

And when, Humanity, you will return to Nature, on that day your eyes will open, you will gaze straight into the eyes of Nature, and in its mirror you will see your own image.  You will know that you have returned to yourself, that when you hid from Nature, you hid from yourself.

When you return you will see that from you, from your hands and from your feet, from your body and from your soul, heavy, hard, oppressive fragments will fall and you will stand erect.  You will understand that these were fragments of the shell into which you had shrunk in the bewilderment of your heart, and out of which you had finally emerged.

On that day you will know that your former life did not befit you, that you must renew all things, your food, your drink, your dress and your home, your manner of work, and your mode of study-- everything!  On that day, deep in your heart, you will know that you had been wandering until you returned to Nature.  For you did not know life.  A different life, a life not ready-made, a life to be experienced in preparation and creation--that life you did not know.

Therefore your life was cut in two--a very small shred of existence and a huge experience of non-existence, of work, of labor, of busy-ness.  You did not think, and it did not occur to you, that there is no life in a life ready-made.  Preparation is itself Life, for Nature also lives within the preparation of life, within the creation of life.

A.D. Gordon

   

  

If you have some respect for people as they are, you can be
more effective in helping them to become better than they are.

John W. Gardner

    

  

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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