Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Nature of the beast

I don't expect you guys to share my faith. 

But I do expect you guys to share my fears. 

Do you ever stop and wonder, how fragile this thing we call "life" really is?  My father put it into perspective for me long ago, when he said "we're all just passing by this world." It always baffled me how perplexed this statement was, coming from such a simple man. Not to sell him short as a person, my father achieved much for a man who was given little, and who wasn't expected of much long ago. But as celebrated as ingenuity, intelligence, and innovation are, so are courage, competence, and creed. He dared and succeeded where many dared and succumbed. I celebrate my father for resembling what it takes to achieve peace. Sometimes we need to dare ourselves to believe that peace is truly attainable in a world always full of strife.  We can certainly ask ourselves; "when wasn't the world a dangerous place to live in?" 

But we can also ask ourselves, “Why can’t we make the world a safer place to live in?”

It often times starts with you. With me. With us.  Mahatma Gandhi once said, ‘you must be the change you wish to see in the world.’ 

Easier said than done? 

Certainly not. 

All it takes is one act of courage or one act of kindness for us to start changing the world.  It needs to be a grass roots moment in order to be successful.  Was the empire of Rome built in a day?  It certainly wasn’t.  It was constructed over years, expanded (not through the most virtuous’ ways, but for purpose of argument, let’s leave it in the context of growth and prosperity) and built into what the world considers one of the greatest empires the world has ever seen.  Its success and time of prosperity in history has been coined in Latin, ‘Pax Romana,’ or ‘Roman Peace.”

Acts of kindness and acts of good deeds can be spread like wildfire. 

But we must first light the flames within ourselves.  To make the effort. To do good and to be good.

Buddha once stated:

"Thousands of candles can be lighted from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared."

Peace breeds happiness.  And happiness fosters lives worth living.  We may not always have happiness.  But that doesn’t mean we can’t always give it.

"We're all just passing by this world." Why do we choose to leave it a more wretched place than how we found it? Why choose to kill? Destroy? Break a heart? Break a family?  

We have to do as much as we can with what little the world gives us. 

Go out and do something nice for someone today.  Little acts of kindness go a long way.
And it starts with you.


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