An Angel's Special Christmas Gift

Written by Steve Brunkhorst


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2. Continue to focus onrepparttar feelings within your present experience. Rather than compare your experience with a previous one, bask inrepparttar 123375 moment. Focus on its uniqueness.

3. Return a silent feeling of gratitude for each experience, knowing that all events are divine gifts given to help us learn and grow in faith.

4. Record your experience by writing it in a journal, recording it on tape, or taking photographs if possible. Your recorded perspectives will allowrepparttar 123376 sensations of your experience to remain fresh in your memory.

5. Share your experience. Thoughts that continue to receive our attention will increase in our daily experience. Sharing our experiences dividesrepparttar 123377 joy with others. It is also a great way to keep a newfound level of awareness growing and thriving.

The snow angel indeed provided a unique Christmas gift for my friend, and also for me. It's a special gift that has kept giving year after year.

Every time I viewrepparttar 123378 angel's image, it reminds me to attend torepparttar 123379 present moment, and to viewrepparttar 123380 gift of life through a spiritual lens. Life's perfection is always there, in sunshine and storm, in bright and overcast light.

I will always recall that crisp December day when I met an unexpected friend inrepparttar 123381 forest - an angel made of snow. Her reminder to see withrepparttar 123382 spirit's eyes has been a life-empowering Christmas gift -repparttar 123383 kind of gift one might expect to receive from an angel.

(C) Copyright 2003 by Steve Brunkhorst. Steve coaches talented professionals who want to renew or enhance their sense of personal empowerment and creativity. Get Steve's free motivational mini-zine, "Achieve! 60-Second Nuggets of Inspiration" by visiting http://www.AchieveEzine.com


Good, Good, Good, Good IntentionsMaya

Written by Maya Talisman Frost


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The same thing happens on a much larger scale all aroundrepparttar world. Rich countries want to help poor countries. They need to raise money in order to give it away. In order to raise that money, they need to show results from previous efforts. To get positive results, they have to come up with programs that sound feasible and promise outstanding outcomes. They must jump throughrepparttar 123374 appropriate hoops. Any grant writer can tell you that there is an art to getting money, and it has very little to do with good intentions.

We need guidelines even when we haverepparttar 123375 best of intentions, but sometimes we get so caught up in following our plan that we fail to dorepparttar 123376 right thing. A recent news story told of a local organization that missed out on over $700,000 in funding it receives from a particular agency each year. Why? The grant application was submitted using margins that were four letters too wide. The agency expressed regret that they would be unable to support this worthy but unfortunate group this year, but stood by its strict rules as a means of filtering out those who are not able to follow instructions torepparttar 123377 letter.

We use good intentions as a cloak on far too many occasions. There are times when it's necessary to recognize that where we're headed wasn't anywhere on our map when we startedrepparttar 123378 journey. Just because we mean well doesn't mean it's okay to keep going inrepparttar 123379 wrong direction.

It's fine to figure out what you want, and it's okay to ask for it. There's certainly no reason why we shouldn't think of ways to improve ourselves and our world and set out to achieve our goals.

But it's not okay to pursue an activity once we realize thatrepparttar 123380 original intention--the reason for beginning in repparttar 123381 first place--has been lost inrepparttar 123382 flurry of activity required to pursue it. If you kick your brother inrepparttar 123383 teeth while stealing his toy, you're going to get in trouble, and Mom will show no mercy.

We know what we want for all humans onrepparttar 123384 planet. It's right there in writing, in that document which has been translated into over 300 languages. We're not even close to achieving all that we want, or all that we can. We created a beautiful promise in that proclamation, but we've become too distracted to make it our priority.

If Mom were taking care of this, she'd sit us down and make us readrepparttar 123385 Universal Declaration of Human Rights until we knew its salient features by heart. We'd emerge from our bedroom contrite and committed to being a better citizen. We'd do our best to please her and to make things right, not because we feared her wrath but because we knew she was lovingly teaching us what it means to be excellent.

O Mother, where art thou?



Maya Talisman Frost is a mind masseuse. Her course, Massage Your Mind!: Defining Your Life Philosophy, has inspired thinkers in over 70 countries around the world. To sign up for her free weekly ezine, the Friday Mind Massage, visit http://www.massageyourmind.com.


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