Friday, November 30, 2018

Moral education now and then.


The education system of olden days unique characteristics and qualities which were not found in nowadays education system. The ancient scholars were highly wise than us..
They concentrated on the moral education more than other part of education. That made a simple man to be a strong enough person in all the aspects. Where we are failing in this case. Our education system completely relay on mark. So we educators are unable to concentrate over the moral education which helps the student to become a good citizen to our society. Our country completely relay on the young generation. How to build moral values within the students?? Value based education helps the students to be well rounded, confident, happy and resilient. Schools have a vital role to play in passing on common morality to the next generation. To do this they must provide two kinds of Moral education the first one is moral information second is moral inquiry
Moral formation is cultivating in children the intentions, feelings and habits of moral subscription.
Moral inquiry is engaging the students in discussions and reflection on the nature and justification of moral values.
Promoting the model development of pupils is difficult,but the challenges it poses are not insurmountable. Ensuring children subscribe to common morality and understand the reasons for it, is a task of schools must not shrink from- society depends on it.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Mufti Ismail Menk

Khathija khan, Uswatun Hasanah Jamath of Pooma Educational Trust
INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES OF
Mufti Ismail Menk that can make  us & our Children Successful :
“We love ourselves after so many mistakes; so why do we hate others for one or two mistakes they’ve made.”
“If people display bad character towards us, it should not make us drop our good character as a result.” 

“Whilst smiling is considered an act of reward, putting a smile on the face of others is considered an even bigger act of reward.”
“When you feel heartbroken & disappointed because things don’t seem to make sense, talk to the Almighty.
Speak silently from your heart. He made it.
He will surely mend it.”
“Whenever you are alone, remind yourself that the Almighty has sent everybody away so that it’s only you & Him.”
“The moment you start comparing your life with others is the start of your downfall.
You’ll lose your peace & sense of gratitude. Thank Allah always .”
“We live in a strange world where the poor walk miles to get food while the rich walk miles to digest.”
“When someone tries to offend you, remember you can’t control your response.
Save yourself; don’t react.”
“When you learn to discipline your tongue, you’ll stop scrutinizing, judging & condemning others.
You’ll then focus on your own weaknesses.”
“In this age of nudity, Modest dress plays a key role in purification of the soul and deep inner contentment.”
“I really appreciate those who correct me because without them,
I might have been repeating my mistakes for a long time.”
“When people walk out of your life, perhaps the Almighty knew it was best for you & chose to protect you from unforeseen harm.”
“Not all your days will be the same. A day of sadness & another of happiness. A day of profit, another of loss. That’s the test of life.”
“If it doesn’t involve you, don’t get involved.”
“It is better to lose something for Almighty than to lose the Almighty for something.”
“Insulting others is never a way of correcting them. Instead, it causes more damage; proves that we need help ourselves.”
“Clothing ourself with the best character is more appealing than clothing ourself with expensive labels.”
“Find it in your heart to fully forgive the one who’s wronged you. It’s difficult but the rewards are great,  from the Almighty.”
“If you want peace to prevail in your heart, remove anger, resentment, blame & worry.”
“Why do we keep holding grudges?
Is it really worth wasting that mental energy? Shouldn’t we just forgive & reap the rewards for letting go?”
“Always leave loved ones with loving words. It may be the last time you see them.”
“Pain is there for a reason. It’ll soften your heart. It’ll draw you closer to the Almighty. It’ll let you see His divine wisdom. Embrace it.”
“When you control your anger, you earn His pleasure. It’s a test of the strength of your character. Be conscious of it so you won’t regret.”
“No matter how detached you feel when you pray, don’t let go of the link. It’s your path back to the Almighty. Keep at it.”
“It’s never about material stuff, wealth, fame. It’s always about the heart.
The Almighty looks not at how you look but what’s in your heart.”
“Marry someone who is deeply interested in the way of life prescribed by *ﷲ͜عَزَّوَجَــــل*  because that is how your children will follow you.
“If you want to be respected, learn to respect others.”
“Be kind, polite & cheerful towards the women of the world.”
“Never utter mean words out of anger. Your anger will pass. But your mean words can scar a person for life. So use kind words or be silent.

The best days of life with


A lovely little girl was holding two apples with both hands.
Her mum came in and softly asked her little daughter with a smile; my sweetie, could you give your mum one of your two apples?
The girl looked up at her mum for some seconds, then she suddenly took a quick bite on one apple, and then quickly on the other.
The mum felt the smile on her face freeze. She tried hard not to reveal her disappointment.
Then the little girl handed one of her bitten apples to her mum,and said: mummy, here you are. This is the sweeter one.
No matter who you are, how experienced you are, and how knowledgeable you think you are, always delay judgement. 
Give others the privilege to explain themselves.   
                           
What you see may not be the reality. Never conclude for others.
Which is why we should never only focus on the surface and judge others without understanding them first.
Those who like to pay the bill, do so not because they are loaded but because they value friendship above money.
Those who take the initiative at work, do so not because they are stupid but because they understand the concept of responsibility.
Those who apologize first after a fight, do so not because they are wrong but because they value the people around them.
Those who are willing to help you, do so not because they owe you any thing but because they see you as a true friend.
Those who often text you, do so not because they have nothing better to do but because you are in their heart.
Those who take out time to chat with you, do not mean they are jobless or less busy, but they know the importance of keeping in touch.
One day, all of us will get  separated  from each other; we will miss our conversations of everything & nothing; the dreams that we had.
Days will pass by, months, years, until this contact becomes rare... One day our children will see our pictures and ask 'Who are these people?' And we will smile with invisible tears  because a heart is touched with a strong word and you will say: 'IT WAS THEM THAT I HAD THE BEST DAYS OF MY LIFE WITH'.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Quality time with life

Arun Kumar sutaria for Pooma Educational Trust.
A Monk of the Ramakrishna Mission was being interviewed by a journalist from NY. The journalist started
interviewing the Monk as planned earlier.

Journalist - "Sir, in your last lecture, you told us about Jogajog (Contact) and Sanjog (Connection). It's really confusing. Can you explain?"
The Monk smiled and apparently deviating from the question asked the journalist:
"Are you from New York?"
Journalist: "Yeah..."
Monk: "Who are there at home?"
The Journalist felt that the Monk was trying to avoid answering his question since this was a very personal and unwarranted question. Yet the  journalist said: "Mother has expired. Father is there. Three brothers and one sister. All married..."
The Monk, with a smile on his face, asked again: "Do you talk to your father?"
The  journalist looked visibly annoyed...
The Monk, "When did you talk to him last?"
The journalist, supressing his annoyance said: "May be a month ago."
The Monk: "Do you brothers and sisters meet often? When did you meet last as a family gathering?"
At this point, sweat appeared on the forehead of the journalist. Now who is conducting the interview, the Monk or the Journalist.
It seemed that the Monk was interviewing the Journalist.
With a sigh, the Journalist said: "We met last at Christmas two  years ago."
The Monk: "How many days did you all stay together?"
The Journalist (wiping the sweat on his brow) said: "Three days..."
Monk: "How much time did you spend with your Father, sitting right beside him?"
The journalist looking  perplexed and embarassed and started scribbling something on a paper...
The Monk: "Did you have breakfast, lunch or dinner together? Did you ask how he was? Did you ask how his days are passing after your mother's death?"
Drops of tears coming out started to flow from the eyes of the journalist.
The Monk held the hand of the journalist and said: "Don't be embrassed, upset or sad. I am sorry if I have hurt you unknowingly... But this is basically the answer to your question about "Contact and Connection (Jogajog and Sanjog)." You have 'Contact' with your father but you don't have 'Connection' with him. You are not connected to him. Connection is between heart and heart... Sitting together, Sharing meals and Caring for each other, Touching, Shaking hands, Having eye contact, Spending some time together... You  brothers and sisters have 'Contact' but you have no  'Connection' with each other..."
The journalist wiped his eyes and said : "Thanks for teaching me a fine and unforgettable lesson."
This is the reality today.
Whether at home or in the society everybody has lots of contacts but there is no connection. No communication... Everybody is in his or her own world.
Let us not maintain just "Contacts" but let us remain "Connected."  Caring, Sharing and Spending time with all.
Let us learn from it and improve our lives!

Relationship With Parents.


1. Never be disrespectful to parents. Do not say a harsh word to them.
2. Even if parents are unjust, it is not lawful for children to ill-treat, disobey or displease them.
3. Obey them in all lawful things. If they instruct you to do anything which is unlawful in the Shariah, then politely and with respect and apology decline. Never refuse rudely nor argue with them.
4. When parents abuse, scold or even beat their children, they should submit to such treatment with humility. Never should they utter a word af disrespect or complaint, nor should they display on their faces any indication of disgust or anger. Bear their treatment in silence and with patience. Make dua for them.
5. Assist them in all lawful ways even if they happen to be non-Muslims.
6. Whenever you see them, greet them.
7. If you are living with them, take their permission before.
8. If you are engaged in Nafl Salaat and your parents call you, break your Salaat and answer their call even if there is no urgency or importance in their call. If you are performing Fardh Salaat and you detect urgency in theircall, then break even the Fardh Salaat to answertheir call.
9. Do not call them on their names. Address them with a title of respect and honour.
10. After their death, make Dua-e-Maghfirat for them. Pray for their forgiveness and within your means, practisevirtuous deeds with the intention of the thawaab thereof being bestowed on them by Allah Ta’ala.
11. Pay the debts of your parents.
12. If they had made any lawful wasiyyat (bequest), fulfil it if you are by the means to do so.
13. Be kind, respectful and helpful to the friends of your parents.
14. When entering the private room of parents, seek their permission before entering.
15. Always be cheerful in their presence.
16. Speak kindly and tenderly with them.
17. When speaking to parents, keep your gaze low. Do not stare them in the face.
18. Do not raise your voice above the voices of your parents.
19. Be humble in their presence.
20. When accompanying parents on a walk, do not walk in front of them nor on their right or left side. Walk slightly behind them.
21. Even in their absence speak highly and respectfully of them.
22. Do not give preference to the wife over them (this does not apply to the rights of the wife). Where parents instruct their son to violate or discard the obligatory rights of his wife, it will not be permissible to obey them in this case. – Transla tors).
23. Always endeavour to keep them happy.
24. Do not embark on a journey without their permission.
25. When they question you, do not inconvenience them by delaying your reply.
26. It is highly disrespectful to refrain from answering them.
27. If at any time you were disrespectful to your parents, regret your action and hasten to obtain their pardon.

Saturday, November 17, 2018

Wholehearted Living

           
                                     
Wholehearted living is about engaging in our lives from a place of worthiness. It means cultivating the courage, compassion, and connection to wake up in the morning and think, No matter what gets done and how much is left undone, I am enough. It’s going to bed at night thinking, Yes, I am imperfect and vulnerable and sometimes afraid, but that doesn’t change the truth that I am also brave and worthy of love and belonging.
                                                               
The Journey
Wholehearted living is not a onetime choice. It is a process. In fact, I believe it’s the journey of a lifetime. My goal is to bring awareness and clarity to the constellation of choices that lead to Wholeheartedness and to share what I’ve learned from many, many people who have dedicated themselves to living and loving with their whole hearts.
Before embarking on any journey, including this one, it’s important to talk about what we need to bring along. What does it take to live and love from a place of worthiness? How do we embrace imperfection? How do we cultivate what we need and let go of the things that are holding us back?
The answers to all of these questions are courage, compassion, and connection—the tools we need to work our way through our journey. If you’re thinking, Great. I just need to be a superhero to fight perfectionism, I understand.
Courage, compassion, and connection seem like big, lofty ideals. But in reality, they are daily practices that, when exercised enough, become these incredible gifts in our lives. And the good news is that our vulnerabilities are what force us to call upon these amazing tools. Because we’re human and so beautifully imperfect, we get to practice using our tools on a daily basis. In this way, courage, compassion, and connection become gifts—the gifts of imperfection.
I’ve learned about courage, compassion, and connection and how they are truly the tools for developing worthiness.
Once we get some clarity about the tools that we’re going to use on this journey, we move to the heart of the matter: love, belonging, and worthiness.
I answer some of the most difficult questions of my career: What is love? Can we love someone and betray them? Why does our constant need to fit in sabotage real belonging? Can we love the people in our lives, like our partners and children, more than we love ourselves? How do we define worthiness, and why do we so often end up hustling for it rather than believing in it?
We encounter obstacles on every journey we make; the Wholehearted journey is no exception.    we’ll explore what I’ve found to be the greatest barriers to living and loving with our whole hearts and how we can develop effective strategies to move through the barriers and to cultivate resilience.From there, we’ll explore the  guideposts for the Wholehearted journey, daily practices that provide direction for our journey.
                                                                Defining Moments
This article  is full of big-concept words such as love, belonging, and authenticity. I think it’s critically important to define the gauzy words that are tossed around every day but rarely explained. And I think good definitions should be accessible and actionable. I’ve tried to define these words in a way that will help us unpack the term and explore the pieces. When we dig down past the feel-good words and excavate the daily activities and experiences that put the heart in Wholehearted living, we can see how people define the concepts that drive their actions, beliefs, and emotions.
For example, when the research participants talked about a concept such as love, I was careful to define it as they experienced it. Sometimes that required developing new definitions (like I actually did with love and many other words). Other times, when I started looking around in the existing literature, I found definitions that captured the spirit of the participants’ experiences.

A good example of this is play. Play is an essential component to Wholehearted living, and when I researched the topic, I discovered the amazing work of Dr. Stuart Brown. So, rather than creating a new definition, I reference his work because it accurately reflects what I learned in the research.
I realize that definitions spark controversy and disagreement, but I’m okay with that. I’d rather we debate the meaning of words that are important to us than not discuss them at all. We need common language to help us create awareness and understanding, which is essential to Wholehearted living.
Practicing courage, compassion, and connection in our daily lives is how we cultivate worthiness.
The key word is practice. Mary Daly, a theologian, writes, “Courage is like—it’s a habitus, a habit, a virtue: You get it by courageous acts. It’s like you learn to swim by swimming. You learn courage by couraging.” The same is true for compassion and connection.
We invite compassion into our lives when we act compassionately toward ourselves and others, and we feel connected in our lives when we reach out and connect.
Before I define these concepts and talk about how they work, I want to show you how they work together in real life—as practices. This is a personal story about the courage to reach out, the compassion that comes from saying, “I’ve been there,” and the connections that fuel our worthiness.
                                                                                                                              ....to be continued....

Friday, November 16, 2018

Worthiness- How do we cultivate it



Practicing courage, compassion, and connection in our daily lives is how we cultivate worthiness.The key word is practice.
Mary Daly, a theologian, writes,“Courage is like—it’s a habitus, a habit,a virtue: You get it by courageous acts. It’s like you learn to swim by swimming. You learn courage by couraging.”
The same is true for compassion and connection. We invite compassion into our lives when we act compassionately toward ourselves and others, and we feel connected in our lives when we reach out and connect.
Before I define these concepts and talk about how they work, I want to show you how they work together in real life—as practices. This is a personal story about the courage to reach out,the compassion that comes from saying, “I’ve been there,” and the connections that fuel our worthiness.
Not too long ago, the principal of a large public elementary school and the president of the school’s parent-teacher association (PTA) invited me to speak to a group of parents about the relationship
between resilience and boundaries. I was in the process of collecting data about Wholehearted parenting and schools at the time, so I was excited about the opportunity. I had no idea what I was
getting myself into.
The second I walked into the school auditorium, I felt this really strange vibe from the parents in the audience. They almost seemed agitated. I asked the principal about it, and she just shrugged her shoulders and walked away. The PTA
president didn’t have much to say about it either. I chalked it up to my nerves and tried to let it go. I was sitting in the front row when the principal introduced me. This is always a very awkward experience for me. Well, this introduction was beyond anything I had ever experienced.
The principal was saying things like, “You might not like what you’re going to hear tonight, but we need to listen for the sake of our children. Our guest is here to transform our school and our lives She’s going to set us straight whether we like it or not!”
Courage is a huge theme in my life. It seems that either I’m praying for some, feeling grateful for having found a little bit, appreciating it in other people, or studying it. I don’t think that makes me unique. Everyone wants to be brave.
After interviewing people about the truths of their lives—their strengths and struggles—I realized that courage is one of the most important qualities that Wholehearted people have in common. And not just any kind of courage; I found that Wholeheartedness requires ordinary courage.
Here’s what I mean …
The root of the word courage is cor—the Latin word for heart. In one of its earliest forms, the word courage had a very different definition than it does today. Courage originally meant “To speak one’s mind by telling all one’s heart.” Over time, this definition has changed, and, today, courage is more synonymous with being heroic. Heroics is important and we certainly need heroes, but I think we’ve lost touch with the idea that speaking honestly and openly about who we are, about what we’re feeling, and about our experiences (good and bad) is the definition of courage.
Heroics is often about putting our life on the line. Ordinary courage is about putting our vulnerability on the line. In today’s world, that’s pretty extraordinary.
When we pay attention, we see courage every day. We see it when people reach out for help, like I did with Ash, I see it in my classroom when a student raises her hand and says, “I’m completely lost. I have no idea what you’re talking about.” Do you know how incredibly brave it is to say “I don’t know” when you’re pretty sure everyone around you gets it? Of course, in my twenty -plus years of teaching, I know that if one person can find the courage to say, “You’ve lost me,” there are probably at least ten more students who feel the exact same way. They may not take the risk, but they certainly benefit from that one person’s courage.
I saw courage in my student, Esha, when she called me from a slumber party at 10:30 p.m. andsaid, “Ma,am, can you come and get me?” When I picked her up, she got in the car and said, “I’m sorry. I just wasn’t brave enough. I got homesick. It was so hard. Everyone was asleep.”
I pulled into the driveway, got out of the car, and walked around to the backseat where Esha  was sitting. I scooted her over and sat next to her. I said, “Esha , I think asking for what you need is one of
the bravest things that you’ll ever do.We all have  suffered through a couple of really miserable sleepovers and slumber parties because we were  too afraid to ask to go home. I’m proud of you.”
That’s courage. The kind we could all use more of in our lives.
I also see courage in myself when I’m willing to risk being vulnerable and disappointed. For many years, if I really wanted something to happen—an invitation to speak at a special conference, a promotion, an interview—I pretended that it didn’t matter that much.
If a friend or colleague would ask, “Are you excited about that  interview?” I’d shrug it off and say, “I’m not sure. It’s not that big of a deal.” Of course, in reality, I was praying that it would happen.
It’s only been in the last few years that I’ve learned that playing down the exciting stuff doesn’t take the pain away when it doesn’t happen. It does, however, minimize the joy when it does happen. It also creates a lot of isolation. Once you’ve diminished the importance of something, your friends are not likely to call and say, “I’m sorry that didn’t work out. I know you were excited about it.”
Now when someone asks me about a potential opportunity that I’m excited about, I’m more likely to practice courage and say, “I’m so excited about the possibility. I’m trying to stay realistic, but I really hope it happens.” When things haven’t panned out, it’s been comforting to be able to call a supportive friend and say, “Remember that event I told you about? It’s not going to happen, and I’m so bummed.(excited)”. I recently saw another example of ordinary courage at one preschool event. Parents were invited to attend a holiday music presentation put on by the kids. You know the scene—twenty-five children singing with fifty-plus parents, grandparents, and siblings in the audience wielding thirty nine video cameras. The parents were holding up cameras in the air and randomly snapping pictures while they scrambled to make sure that their kids knew they were there and on time.
In addition to all the commotion in the audience, one three-year-old girl, who was new to the class, cried her way through the entire performance because she couldn’t see her mom from the makeshift
stage. As it turns out, her mother was stuck in traffic and missed the performance. By the time her
mother arrived, I was kneeling by the classroom door wishing  good-bye.
From my low vantage point, I watched the girl’s mother burst through the door and immediately start scanning the room to find her daughter. Just as I was getting ready to stand up and point her toward the back of the classroom where a teacher was holding her daughter, another mother walked by us, looked straight at this stressed mom, shook her head, and rolled her eyes.
I stood up, took a deep breath, and tried to reason with the part of me that wanted to chase after the better-than-you eye-rolling mom and rebuke her.Just then two more moms walked up to this now tearful mother and smiled. One of the mothers put her hand on top of the woman’s shoulder and said, “We’ve all been there. I missed the last one. I wasn’t just late. I completely forgot.” I watched as the woman’s face softened, and she wiped away a tear. The second woman looked at her and said, “My son was the only one who wasn’t wearing pajamas on Culmination Day—he still tells me it was the most rotten day ever. It will be okay. We’re all in the same boat.”
By the time this mother made it to the back of the room where the teacher was still comforting her daughter, she looked calm. Something that I’m sure came in handy when her daughter lunged for her from about six feet away. The moms who stopped and shared their stories of imperfection and vulnerability were practicing courage. They took the time to stop and say, “Here’s my story. You’re not alone.” They didn’t have to stop and share; they could have easily joined the perfect-parent parade and marched right by her.
As these stories illustrate, courage has a ripple effect. Every time we choose courage, we make everyone around us a little better and the world a little braver. And our world could stand to be a little kinder and braver.
Compassion
To prepare for writing a book on shame, I read everything I could find on compassion.I ultimately found a powerful fit between the stories I heard in the interviews and the work of American Buddhist nun Pema Chödrön. In her book The Places That Scare You, Chödrön writes, “When we practice generating compassion, we can expect to experience the fear of our pain. Compassion practice is daring. It involves learning to relax and allow ourselves to move gently toward what scares us.”
What I love about Chödrön’s definition is her honesty about the vulnerability of practicing compassion. If we take a closer look at the origin of the word compassion, much like we did with courage, we see why compassion is not typically our first response to suffering.
The word compassion is derived from the Latin words pati and cum, meaning“to suffer with.”I don’t believe that compassion is our default response. I think our first response to pain—ours or someone else’s— is to self-protect. We protect ourselves by looking for someone or something to blame Or sometimes we shield ourselves by turning to judgment or by immediately going into fix-it mode.
The authoress addresses our tendency to self-protect by teaching that we must be honest and forgiving about when and how we shut down: “In cultivating compassion we draw from the wholeness of our experience—our suffering, our empathy, as well as our cruelty and terror. It has to be this way.
Compassion is not a relationship between the healer and the wounded. It’s a relationship between equals. Only when we know our own darkness well can we be present with the darkness of others,Compassion becomes real when we recognize our shared humanity.”
In every story, Ash was willing to be in my darkness with me. She wasn’t there as my helper or to fix me; she was just with me—as an equal—holding my hand as I waded through my feelings.
Connection
I define connection as the energy that exists between people when they feel seen, heard, and valued; when they can give and receive without judgment; and when they derive sustenance and strength from the relationship.
Ash and I felt deeply connected after our experience. I know I was seen, heard, and valued. Even though it was scary, I was able to reach out for support and help. And we both felt strengthened and
fulfilled. In fact, a couple of weeks later, Ash said, “I can’t tell you how glad I am that you called me that day. It helped me so much to know that I’m not the only one who does stuff like that. I also love knowing that I can help you and that you trust me.” Connection begets connection.
As a matter of fact, we are wired for connection. It’s in our biology. From the time we are born, we need connection to thrive emotionally, physically, spiritually, and intellectually. A decade ago, the idea that we’re “wired for connection” might have been perceived as touchy-feely or New Age.
Today, we know that the need for connection is more than a feeling or a hunch. It’s hard science. Neuroscience, to be exact.
In his book Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships, Daniel Goleman explores how the latest findings in biology and neuroscience confirm that we are hardwired for connection and that our relationships shape our biology as well as our experiences. Goleman writes,“Even our most routine encounters act as regulators in the brain, priming our emotions, some desirable, others not. The more strongly connected we are with someone emotionally, the greater the mutual force.” It’s amazing—yet perhaps not surprising—that the connectedness we experience in our relationships impacts the way our brain develops and performs.
Our innate need for connection makes the consequences of disconnection that much more real and dangerous.
Sometimes we only think we’re connected. Technology, for instance, has become a kind of impostor for connection, making us believe we’re connected when we’re really not—at least not in the ways we need to be. In our technology-crazed world, we’ve confused being communicative with feeling connected. Just because we’re plugged in, doesn’t mean we feel seen and heard.
 In fact, hyper communication can mean we spend more time on Facebook & Whats app than we do face-to-face with the people we care about. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve walked into a restaurant and seen two parents on their cell phones while their kids are busy texting or playing video games. What’s the point of even sitting together?
As we think about the definition of connection and how easy it is to mistake technology for connecting, we also need to consider letting go of the myth of self-sufficiency. One of the greatest barriers to connection is the cultural importance we place on “going it alone.” Somehow we’ve come to equate success with not needing anyone. Many of us are willing to extend a helping hand, but we’re very reluctant to reach out for help when we need it ourselves. It’s as if we’ve divided the world into “those who offer help” and “those who need help.” The truth is that we are both.
I’ve learned so much about giving and receiving from the men and women who are engaged in Wholehearted living but nothing more important than this:
For years, I placed value on being the helper among  my friends. I could help with a crisis or dispense advice. I was always happy to help others. At the time, I would have vehemently denied attaching judgment to my generous giving. But now, I understand how I derived self-worth from never needing help and always offering it.
During the breakdown, I needed help. I needed support and hand-holding and advice. Thank God!
Turning to my siblings completely shifted our family dynamics. I gained permission to fall apart and be imperfect, and they could share their strength and incredible wisdom with me. If connection is the energy that surges between people, we have to remember that those surges must travel in both directions.
The Wholehearted journey is not the path of least resistance. It’s a path of consciousness and choice. And, to be honest, it’s a little counterculture. The willingness to tell our stories, feel the pain of others, and stay genuinely connected in this disconnected world is not something we can do halfheartedly.
To practice courage, compassion, and connection is to look at life and the people around us, and say, “I’m all in.”

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Truth untold


Khathija khan, Uswatun Hasanah Jamath of Pooma Educational Trust.
THIS IS ONE OF THE BEST SET OF ADVISE l HAVE EVER READ. ALL MANKIND NEEDS THIS ADVICE.
1.Take risks in your life. If you win, you can lead; if you lose, you can guide._
2. People are not what they say but what they do; so judge them not from their words but from their actions._
3. When someone hurts you, don't feel bad because it's a law of nature that the tree that bears the sweetest fruits gets maximum number of stones._
4. Take whatever you can from your life because when life starts taking from you, it takes even your last breath._
5. In this world, people will always throw stones on the path of your success. It depends on what you make from them - a wall or a bridge.
6. Challenges make life interesting; overcoming them make life meaningful.
7. There is no joy in victory without running the risk of defeat.
8. A path without obstacles leads nowhere.
9. Past is a nice place to visit but certainly not a good place to stay.
10. You can't have a better tomorrow if you are thinking about yesterday all the time.
11. If what you did yesterday still looks big to you, then you haven't done much today.
12. If you don't build your dreams, someone else will hire you to build theirs.
13. If you don't climb the mountain; you can't view the plain._
14. Don't leave it idle - use your brain._
15. You are not paid for having brain, you are only rewarded for using it intelligently.
16. It is not what you don't have that limits you; it is what you have but don't know how to use.
17. What you fail to learn might teach you a lesson.
18. The difference between a corrupt person and an honest person is: The corrupt person has a price while the honest person has a value._
19. If you succeed in cheating someone, don't think that the person is a fool...... Realize that the person trusted you much more than you deserved._
20. Honesty is an expensive gift; don't expect it from cheap people._
This is very interesting post and I want everyone to benefit.

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Wholehearted creativity and inspiration


Comparison is all about conformity and competition. At first it seems like conforming and competing are mutually exclusive, but they’re not. When we compare, we want to see who or what is
best out of a specific collection of “alike things.” We may compare things like how we parent with parents who have totally different values or traditions than us, but the comparisons that get us really
riled up are the ones we make with the folks living next door, or on our child’s soccer team, or at our school. We don’t compare our houses to the mansions across town; we compare our yard to the yards on our block. When we compare, we want to be the best or have the best of our group.
The comparison mandate becomes this crushing paradox of “fit in and stand out!” It’s not cultivate self-acceptance, belonging, and authenticity; it’s be just like everyone else, but better.
It’s easy to see how difficult it is to make time for the important things such as creativity, gratitude, joy, and authenticity when we’re spending enormous amounts of energy conforming and competing.
Now I understand why my dear friend Sam always says, “Comparison is the thief of happiness."
I can’t tell you how many times I’m feeling so good about myself and my life and my
family, and then in a split second it’s gone because I consciously or unconsciously start comparing myself to other people.
As far as my own story, the older I got, the less value I put on creativity and the less time I spent creating. When people asked me about crafting or art or creating, I relied on the standard, “I’m not
the creative type.” On the inside I was really thinking, Who has time for painting and scrap booking and photography when the real work of achieving and accomplishing needs to be done.
Let me sum up what I’ve learned about creativity from the world of Wholehearted living and loving:
1. “I’m not very creative” doesn’t work. There’s no such thing as creative people and non-creative people. There are only people who use their creativity and people who don’t. Unused creativity
doesn’t just disappear. It lives within us until it’s expressed, neglected to death, or suffocated by resentment and fear.
2. The only unique contribution that we will ever make in this world will be born of our creativity.
3. If we want to make meaning, we need to make art. Cook, write, draw, doodle, paint, scrapbook, take pictures, collage, knit, rebuild an engine, sculpt, dance, decorate, act, sing—it doesn’t matter. As long as we’re creating, we’re cultivating meaning ,Letting go of comparison is not a to-do list item. For most of us, it’s something that requires constant awareness. It’s so easy to take our eyes off our path to check out what others are doing and if they’re ahead or behind us. Creativity, which is the expression of our originality, helps us stay mindful that what we bring to the world is completely original and cannot be compared. And, without comparison, concepts like ahead or behind or best or worst lose their meaning.
Get Deliberate: If creativity is seen as a luxury or something we do when we have spare time, it will never be cultivated. I carve out time every week to take and process photographs, make movies, and
do art projects with the kids. When I make creating a priority, everything in my life works better.
Get Inspired: Nothing inspires me more than my friendship with the Love bombers, a group of artists, writers, and photographers whom I met online and exchange views and opinions on long weekend every year. I think it’s so important to find and be a part of a community of like-spirited people who share your beliefs about creativity.
Get Going: Take a class. Risk feeling vulnerable and new and imperfect and take a class. There are wonderful online classes if you need more flexibility. Try something that scares you or something
you’ve dreamt about trying. You never know where you’ll find your creative inspiration.

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Respect your parents, teachers and mentors

Mr. CLARENCE PETER, Gyanda Academy in Nepal for IUEf Pooma Educational Trust.
While you’re still growing up, you will come across a lot of people who will give you unsolicited advice, a little bit of moral policing and most of all will judge you on your behavior. But there are these very few people who put in a thought when they see you act in a particular manner. They love you and they want to bring out the best in you and that is exactly why they never give up on you no matter how badly you behave with them. They will stick by you when you’re at your worst, when you go through the lowest phase in your life and when your friends might not even want to see your face.
I am talking about the people who love to guide you through the thick and thin of your life, people who actually go that extra mile to show their presence in your life and those who would think a million times before they even start judging you on your actions.
*Parents*
The first people who are officially a part of your life and will try to stick around even when you’re not at your best behavior. The reason one should always respect his/her parents is because they give up practically everything they own, wish for or desire the moment you tell them you want something. Their love for you is selfless and their sacrifices infinite. Most of the times you don’t even realise when your actions hurt them, but they still smile when you try to make things alright. They are one of those people who understand that you’re making an effort, they are the ones who will push you no matter how mad they are at you and this is precisely why one should never disrespect their parents. Because no matter how hard you try, you can never return what your parents have given you.
*Teachers*
No doubt your parents are your first teachers but soon after you start talking and making sense out of what is happening around you, you are made to interact with people who are responsible for your formal education. Most of the times you feel that a person who is not related to you will probably not care about your lives or your future but teachers prove that humanity is the biggest religion and that there can be people who may not be related to you by blood but care for you just as much as your parents do. Teaching has so far been the most thankless and difficult job ever, it is one platform where you are seldom misunderstood but never give up. Thus, teachers should never be disrespected because they are the ones who will tell you that you’re not good but that they’re here to help you regardless of that.
*Mentors*
As you move further in your life you will realize that there will be people you will end up having a love-hate relationship with. They may not necessarily be the same age as you, but they will discuss your problems, debate your actions and criticize you if you’ve done wrong only to bring out the best in you. Mentors and mentees often have the weirdest relationship ever, but believe me when I say, if you do not have a critical mentor, you may never make it big in life. Respecting somebody who is willing to damage his/her image only to see you grow is probably the biggest gift they can give you, respect it and carry it on forever.
Parents, teachers and mentors often play a very similar role in your lives of shaping you for a better future and quality life without thinking about themselves, this role should be acknowledged and appreciated and the best way to do that is to show it through your actions. Show them that you care for them, love them and respect them.