20 January 2025         

   

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Five Methods I Have Used to Banish Worry
William Lyon Phelps

Children and the Way of Peace
Peace Pilgrim

Common Sense
tom walsh

   
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Simple and Profound Thoughts
(from Simple and Profound)

The three hardest tasks in the world are neither physical feats nor intellectual achievements, but moral acts:  to return love for hate, to include the excluded, and to say, "I was wrong."    -Sydney J. Harris

If you imagine that once you have accomplished your ambitions you will have time to turn to the Way, you will discover that your ambitions never come to an end.     -Yoshida Kenko

Modern people are frantically trying to earn enough to buy things they're too busy to enjoy.   -Frank A. Clark

If you are too busy to develop your talents, you are too busy.    -Julia Cameron
   

  

Five Methods I Have Used to Banish Worry
William Lyon Phelps

When I was twenty-four years old, my eyes suddenly gave out.  After reading three or four minutes, my eyes felt as if they were full of needles; and even when I was not reading, they were so sensitive that I could not face a window.  I consulted the best oculists in  New Haven and New York.  Nothing seemed to help me.  After four o'clock in the afternoon, I simply sat in a chair in the darkest corner of the room, waiting for bedtime.  I was terrified.  I feared I would have to give up my career as a teacher and go out West and get a job as a lumberjack.  Then a strange thing happened which shows the miraculous effects of the mind over physical ailments.  When my eyes were at their worst that unhappy winter, I accepted an invitation to address a group of undergraduates.  The hall was illuminated by huge rings of gas jets suspended from the ceiling.  The lights pained my eyes so intensely that, while sitting on the platform, I was compelled to look at the floor.  Yet during my thirty-minute speech, I felt absolutely no pain, and I could look directly at these lights without any blinking whatever.  Then when the assembly was over, my eyes pained me again.

I thought then that if I could keep my mind strongly concentrated on something, not for thirty minutes, but for a week, I might be cured.  For clearly it was a case of mental excitement triumphing over a bodily illness.

I had a similar experience later while crossing the ocean.  I had an attack of lumbago so severe that I could not walk.  I suffered extreme pain when I tried to stand up straight.  While in that condition, I was invited to give a lecture on shipboard.  As soon as I began to speak, every trace of pain and stiffness left my body; I stood up straight, moved about with perfect flexibility, and spoke for an hour.  When the lecture was over, I walked away to my stateroom with ease.  For a moment, I thought I was cured.  But the cure was only temporary.  The lumbago resumed its attack.

These experiences demonstrated to me the vital importance of one's mental attitude.  They taught me the importance of enjoying life while you may.  So I live every day now as if it were the first day I had ever seen and the last I were going to see.  I am excited about the daily adventure of living, and nobody in a state of excitement will be unduly troubled with worries.  I love my daily work as a teacher.  I wrote a book entitled The Excitement of Teaching.  Teaching has always been more than an art or an occupation to me.  It is a passion.  I love to teach as a painter loves to paint or a singer loves to sing.  Before I get out of bed in the morning, I think with ardent delight of my first group of students.  I have always felt that one of the chief reasons for success in life is enthusiasm.

II.  I have found that I can crowd worry out of mind by reading an absorbing book.  When I was fifty-nine, I had a prolonged nervous breakdown.  During that period, I began reading David Alec Wilson's monumental Life of Carlyle.  It had a good deal to do with my convalescence because I became so absorbed in reading it that I forgot my despondency.

III.  At another time when I was terribly depressed, I forced myself to become physically active almost every hour of the day.  I played five or six sets of intense games of tennis every morning, then took a bath, had lunch, and played eighteen holes of golf every afternoon.  On Friday nights I danced until one o'clock in the morning.  I am a great believer in working up a tremendous sweat.  I found that depression and worry oozed out of my system with the sweat.

IV.  I learned long ago to avoid the folly of hurry, rush, and working under tension.  I have always tried to apply the philosophy of Wilbur Cross.  When he was governor of Connecticut, he said to me:  "Sometimes when I have too many things to do all at once, I sit down and relax and smoke my pipe for an hour and do nothing."

V.  I have also learned that patience and time have a way of resolving our troubles.  When I am worried about something, I try to see my troubles in their proper perspective.  I say to myself:  "Two months from now I shall not be worrying about this bad break, so why worry about it now?  Why not assume now the same attitude that I will have two months from now?"

more thoughts and ideas on worry

   


   
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Children and the Way of Peace
Peace Pilgrim

I met a couple who were determined that they were going to train their four children in the way of peace.  Every night at dinner they gave a regular sermon on peace.  But one evening I heard the father scream at the older son.  The next evening I heard the older son scream at the younger son in the same tone of voice.  What the parents said hadn't made any impression at all--what they did was what the children were following.

Implanting spiritual ideas in children is very important.  Many people live their entire lives according to the concepts that are implanted in them in childhood.  When children learn they will get the most attention and love through doing constructive things, they will tend to stop doing destructive things. Most important of all, remember that children learn through example. No matter what you say, it is what you do that will have an influence on them.

This is a very challenging area for parents.  Are you training your children in the way of love which is the way of the future?

It concerns me when I see a small child watching the hero shoot the villain on television.  It is teaching the small child to believe that shooting people is heroic.  The hero just did it and it was effective.  It was acceptable and the hero was well thought of afterward.

If enough of us find inner peace to affect the institution of television, the little child will see the hero transform the villain and bring him to a good life.  He'll see the hero do something significant to serve fellow human beings.  So little children will get the idea that if you want to be a hero you must help people.

A minister I know spent some time in Russia.  He saw no Russian children playing with guns.  He visited the large toy stores in Moscow, and discovered that there were no toy guns or other toy implements of destruction for sale.

Peaceful training is given in a few small cultures right within our larger culture.  I knew a couple who lived for ten or twelve years among the Hopi Indians.  They said to me, "Peace, this is amazing--they never hurt anyone."

I have walked among the Amish people myself.  They have sizable communities. Peaceful, secure communities with no violence.  I talked to them and I realized it's because they learn, as little children onward, that it would be unthinkable to harm a human being.  Therefore they never do it.  This can be accomplished if you are brought up that way.

When my folks put me to bed they would say to me very wisely, "It gets dark so that it will be restful for you to sleep. Now go to sleep in the nice friendly, restful darkness."  And so to me darkness has always seemed to be friendly and restful.  And when I'm either walking all night to keep warm or sleeping beside the road, there I am, in the nice, friendly restful darkness.

Children need roots somewhere while they are growing up, and parents might do well to choose the place where they want to raise them before they have them.

* * * * *

read more of Peace Pilgrim's writings at peacepilgrim.com.

  

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All my life I had been looking for something, and everywhere I turned
someone tried to tell me what it was. I accepted their answers too,
though they were often in contradiction and even self-contradictory. I
was naïve. I was looking for myself and asking everyone except myself
questions which I, and only I, could answer. It took me a long time and
much painful boomeranging of my expectations to achieve a realization
everyone else appears to have been born with: that I am nobody but myself.

Ralph Ellison

   

 
Common Sense

In my experience, one of the most important parts of living life fully is using the common sense that we've been given to help us to make our decisions and set our courses.  We all have within us a great deal of wisdom that tends to be obscured by the vast amounts of information and entertainment to which we subject ourselves, and often we feel desperate for answers when very simple answers are readily available to us all the time--as long as we access our common sense and trust it.  Far too often we think far too much; I can't even begin to count the number of times I've told students that they're not able to find the answers they need because they're over-analyzing and thinking far too much.  And I can tell them that because I recognize it, having done myself the exact same thing so often.

Because we think so much, the use of common sense is far less common than it should be.  I don't think that we lose it, but I do believe that we too often decide to forego the common sense approach because it seems too simple or because we want to impress others with our ability to reason.  But common sense can be one of the most valuable guides that we have, and it can help us through all sorts of problems and difficulties.  Common sense sees simple solutions instead of complex ones; it see straightforward approaches rather than strategies that force us to work our through a difficult maze of steps and procedures.
   

The three great essentials to achieve anything
worth while are first, hard work; second,
stick-to-itiveness; third, common sense.

Thomas Alva Edison

   
Common sense has been called the combination of knowledge and experience, but that seems to be only the cover of the book.  We also have to be able to make connections between what we know, what we've seen, and what we've done so that the next time a similar situation comes up, it will be easy for us to make a decision based on what we know may be the results of that decision.

What are some examples of common sense?  For example, if you place a heavy plate full of food on the edge of a flimsy table, there's a good chance it's going to fall.  If you're going very fast in your car and you need to stop, it's going to take you longer to do so.  If you click on something and you don't know what it is, there's a good chance it's going to cause you problems.  If you spend all your money today, then you probably won't be able to pay the bills that are due next week.  Generally, we think of common sense as an "if. . . then" concept, and our problems arise when we ignore the facts that we really should know.  After all, the very term "common sense" indicates that one doesn't need to be a genius in order to understand the concepts.

Our problems with common sense arise when we ignore it.  If we put that plate full of food on the edge of a flimsy table, instead of having a nice relaxing meal, there's a good chance that we'll end up cleaning up a mess, losing some perfectly good food, and maybe even breaking a good plate.  How many car collisions happen because people ignore common sense?  After all, common sense does tell us that we shouldn't drive after drinking, doesn't it?

At school, I often see ridiculous things happen because administrators feel pressured to follow complicated procedures when there are simple, common-sense solutions to problems.  I saw a school go into lockdown because a student had shot another student with a self-made bow and arrow--that he had made from toothpicks.  I've seen students suspended for extremely minor offenses, while other students who have done far worse things have merely gotten a slap on the wrist and a warning because there were no rules written for their offenses.  Common sense is often left outside the door when administrators walk into their offices because they're so afraid of making mistakes that they rely far too much on written rules to make their decisions for them.

A fifteen-year-old recently decided to streak across a football field, a pretty harmless stunt when all is said and done.  School administrators, however, decided to threaten criminal charges which would have required the boy to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life if he were found guilty.  Overwhelmed by the response to his silly prank, the boy hanged himself.
    

It is a thousand times better to have common sense without
education than to have education without common sense.

Robert Green Ingersoll

    
The news is full of stories of people who have violated minor drug possession violations in prison for years because of supposed "three strikes" laws, while people who commit far more serious crimes get far more lenient crimes.  Alabama has a law, for example, that requires life imprisonment for a fourth felony conviction, even for something as minor as stealing a bike.  Does it really help the state to be paying to support that person in prison for his or her entire life?  Does it really help society to use public funds to pay for such a thing to keep minor thieves off the streets?

If we're to make this world a better place and make our lives richer, we really do need to pay closer attention to common sense.  It's a gift that has been given to us that can help us to make the world and our lives much more enjoyable and much less stressful, but we choose so often to ignore it--or we get so caught up in thinking that we don't recognize it when we see it--that sometimes it's completely useless because we don't take advantage of it.  Often, we get so caught up in how other people say things should be that we really don't consider how they really should be, and how they actually would be if we weren't so concerned about how those other people view us when we do allow common sense--instead of the expectations of others--to be our guiding principle.
   

Common sense is the knack of seeing things as they are,
and doing things as they ought to be done.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

   
We can find success in business, in relationships, in hobbies, in challenges that we undertake, if only we can tap into the common sense that we already possess.  Perhaps we'll need to learn how to do so, and the common-sense approach to doing so simply says that we should spend more time with people who use their common sense regularly, as we learn from example far more effectively than we learn from theory.  Perhaps our grandparents have much more to teach us than we give them credit for.  And if we don't have many people like that in our lives, then reading books that focus on common sense (Dale Carnegie and Rachel Naomi Remen leap to mind) can help us by providing examples that we can emulate.

And it's important not to forget that we can be common sense role models, especially for our children, but also for our families, friends, and co-workers.  When we value our common sense and make use of it consistently (and show positive results from it, of course), we can help others to see the value of tapping into their own common sense.  And imagine what our world would be like if we all were to value common sense and use it regularly in our lives.  It may not turn into heaven, of course, but it would become a place in which far more things made sense than they seem to do now.

   
More on common sense

   
   

   

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Our inability to see the beauty doesn't suggest in
the slightest that beauty is not there.  Rather, it
suggests that we are not looking carefully enough
or with broad enough perspective to see
the beauty.

Harold Kushner

  
Norman Cousins was in his late forties when he was diagnosed with severe arthritis.  He needed painkillers to get through the day, and sleeping pills to sleep at night. And his doctors told him that his days were numbered.

Cousins remembered reading somewhere that stress and painful emotions might negatively affect the immune system.  At the time, this was merely a hypothesis, but Cousins was convinced that it was true.  Armed with his conviction, he decided to do battle with his disease. He left the hospital and began his own self-prescribed alternative treatment whose main component was laughter.  He watched Marx Brothers movies and hired a nurse to read him funny stories.  He soon discovered that after enjoying a dose of belly laughter, he was free of pain for a couple of hours.  Eventually, the treatment was so successful that he was completely off sleeping pills and painkillers and returned to work.

It took the scientific community years to catch up with Cousins’s findings.  Today you can find countless studies that illustrate how laughter can alleviate pain and strengthen the immune system.  Through the tireless work of Patch Adams, the medical clown, and many others around the world, humor has been embraced as an important component of the healing process.

You don’t need the excuse of illness to bring more humor to your life and enjoy higher levels of happiness, better relationships, and improved health.  Introduce levity into your days:  Watch a favorite TV program, read jokes on the Internet, or meet up with a friend who makes you laugh.

Tal Ben-Shahar
Choose the Life You Want
Reaching for Happiness

Know that. . .

You can't be all things to all people.
You can't do all things at once.
You can't do all things equally well.
You can't do all things better than everyone else.
You are human like everyone else.

So. . .

Find out who you are, and be that.
Decide what comes first, and do that.
Discover your strengths, and use them.
Learn not to compete with others,
because no one else is in the contest of being you.

Then you'll have. . .

Learned to accept your uniqueness.
Learned to set priorities and make decisions.
Learned to live with your limitations.
Learned to give yourself the respect that is due.
And you'll be a most vital mortal.

Dare To Believe. . .

You're are a wonderful, unique person.
You're a once-in-all-history event.
That it's more than a right to be who you are.
That life is not a problem to solve,
but a gift to cherish.
And you'll be able to stay one up
on anything that tries to get you down.
   

  

We are all citizens of one world, we are all of one blood.
To hate people because they were born in another country,
because they speak a different language, or because they
take a different view on this subject or that, is a great folly.
Desist, I implore you, for we are all equally human. . . .
Let us have but one end in view:  the welfare of humanity.

Johann Amos Comenius

    

  

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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