
How can we have the feelings of childhood AND the words of adulthood?
Be awed every day.

But in our society, one that puts so many external pressures on us to behave certain ways, it is difficult to do. In his book “A Hidden Wholeness,” author Parker Palmer helps people understand the importance of learning how to listen inwardly.
He refers to the direction one gets when doing this as coming from the soul.

I was reading the book “Brain Rules,” specifically a chapter on exercise and its impact on how we age, and it got me thinking. What if I tweak the adage to, “I’m not inheriting my body from my childhood, I’m borrowing it from my old age?”
How might I treat myself now, on the dawn of my 50th birthday?

Those closest to your link are most impacted, of course, as you are most impacted by those closest to you. But in impacting those close to you, you carry influence as to how these links impact those on down the line.
Your kind smile can literally change someone’s day, thus sending ripples of warmth down the chain.

Okay.
One night when my dad was home and my mom was at a meeting, I got into it with my brother, Steve, who was in the process of dragging me up the stairs. Now if my mom was home, I’m pretty sure she would have handled it differently than my dad. He heard the commotion, came out of his office, noticed my new pair of glasses, and said, “Don’t break his glasses.”
There is wisdom in there somewhere.

The logic and brilliance of this was immediately clear to me. As a parent, her philosophy is to provide what each of her children needs when they need it. To do otherwise creates competition and materialism. Treated this way, each of her children could relax, knowing that their needs would consistently be met.
This was actually the most “fair” thing she could do, she told me.

I try to describe it to my students this way. There is “you.” There is “me.” And then, coming together, there is “us.” Each alone, there are only two things, “you” and “me.” Together we have three things, “you,” “me” and “us.”
What kind of “me” do I bring to the “us?”

Do you know that if you take the penny doubled that by the end of the month you will have received over 10 million dollars, and over 5 million dollars on the last day alone?
I see that as a metaphor for the power of collaboration.

Being sick and alone so far from home could cause one to feel very lonely. Instead, a neighbor showed up with bread and soup. Another friend not only asked if there was anything she could do, she phoned Ella’s school to make sure they’d know she would be out for a few days.
At one time these things may have sounded small. I know better now.

I find this to be a very interesting comment and am spending a lot of time thinking about it. To me, it means that we need to refine our ability to receive things. But I think it’s even more than that.
I think it has more to do with refining our ability to NOTICE things.