The other day I was driving and listened to a delightful recording of Barbara Streisand singing "people who need people are the luckiest people in the world".
While enjoying the song and her singing it, I simultaneously began to change the word, that is right just one word and felt it a duller and deeper expression of a truth of life. It is not that I do not get what she is singing or saying or what the song writer, I think Burt Bacharach had in mind but it was another perspective, a shift, an alternating idea.
What if we sang it,
"People people who like people are the luckiest people in the world"
I am doing some substitute teaching in elementary school and have noticed what I think some research is validating that when teachers genuinely like their students the students are more students and are less a management problem. When they do not like the student (even due to behavior that is not likeable) the student feels the "unlikeability sensation" which exacerbates the behavior problem.
When we genuinely like people is it because we like ourselves in a heathy way with all our falterings, failings, and feral like behaviors.
People who Like people are just Happy People inside and it flows outside.
John reminds us in his epistle that, "We love Because He first loved us"
So "Be Happy"
Be Liked
Be Liking of otherstreisand
About Me
- Don Paine
- I am a pastor and a clinical psychotherapist. My life's passion is defining healthiness from a human perspective and paralleling it to the holiness of God, divine perspective. Shifting perspectives creates a paradigm that is alongside of rather than over and against. The parakalein of God and the paradoxes of humanity are redefined. Humanity is all about winning and yet we are losing ground everywhere. Divinity is all about letting go of the desire to win and the fear of loss. The Divine embraces the world with loving care regardless of anything.
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I listened to AndyAndrews www.andyandrews.com at Influence & Impact Summit <michael@michaelhyatt.com> going on thru Oct 13th.
He stated that "Discipline was acting in a way regardless of how you feel to get or accomplish what you want to accomplish".
I was in church yesterday stockbridgeucc.org and heard a message from pastor Brent that focused on Psalm 22 which expresses the feelings inside of the human Jesus as he was dying on the cross. He said, "My God, My God, why have you forsaken me". While he knew the history and knew God was good he could make no earthly sense of this feeling of abandonment but he knew he had to honor it which is to speak honestly about it. A couple of years ago a series of events happened in my life that had me feeling abandoned, hopeless, deserted and depressed. I was looking at just one thing, my feelings.
In verse 23/4, a remarkable thing occurs which I think shifted Jesus form his feelings to the goal of accomplishing what he came to do: "to give his life a ransom for many" (more on that in a later blog).
V.23/4 "All of you that fear the Lord, praise him!...for He has not despised or abhorred the affliction of his own, neither has he his his face from him, but when he cried out he heard so my focus is to praise God". He shifted his focus from what he was feeling which he had to honor to what he was disciplining himself to do, the task of giving himself so others might live and learn the secret of discipline. He shifted to as Hebrews 12"2 tells us "the joy that was set before hime while enduring the cross its affliction and pain. I believe that on the cross in the afflcition and in the feeling of abandonment, Jesus shifted to the comfort of the much shorter but focused Psalm 23. He literally said in the inner regions and from the vision of his soul to, Yeas I feel abandoned but what I KNOW is that "The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want, He leads me in my mind the choice central of my will to green pastures, still waters,...He restores my focus...though I walk through the valley of death and feel abandoned I know it is not true for the rod of their affliction gone bad turned to good and your staff the sign of the shepherds care, they comfort me. You prepare a table before me (so in between me and my enemies) in the presence of my enemies (death, Rome, Religious zealots, fearful deserters, quiet onlookers, people of helplessness and hopelessness) my cup overflows surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord
forever! Now that is a shift.
I have learned the hard way that that shift from the feeling of loss, misunderstanding, abandonment, hopeless ness, helplessness are true feelings that need to be honored but they do not need to direct our lives. We can shift. God can help us to shift to focusing on the discipline of doing what God has called us to do regardless of anything we feel.
God is good. And His Goodness transforms the not good into something good for us, in us and for the world.
Praising God is not an act ewe do because God needs our praise but because our praise shifts our focus form our feelings to the fact of God's eternal presence in the pain through the pain into any pain that comes turning it all with creative genius into goodness and mercy that follows us all the days of our living
Thanks be to God.
I am enrolled in an online course with Michael Hyatt <michael@michaelhyatt.com> called: "Influence and Impact Summit" which I am finding very helpful in my reengaging the world and my readers. In fact yesterday one of the speakers said that engagement of people not advancement of career or revenue had to be number one. It can's be to influence poor impact people so you get the notoriety, or make more money but to really help people because you really care.
Michael Hyatt blogged http://michaelhyatt.com/start-here
to day that he had fearful parts that had negative gremlins, well he did not call them that but I am, that chewed away at his confidence but in the face of fear he went ahead.
So Iwant to blog what I have realized that has helped me to step back into the land of the living, from the island of fear. "Fear is a place where we let Scared Parts rule, Faith is a place where the Sacred Place of Hope overshadows the Scared Place" What a difference the position of a letter or a though makes in the choices we make.
Be bold, courageous and find that sacred space. It is in you and all around you. I have found that out so I know it is true.
I was walking and thinking in the early morning hours when the air is fresh and so are thoughts. I began to think about how I heard someone say a hurtful thing but knew they did not intend that hurt so mused as to why that would happen. Why do we sometimes hurt the people we love. It is not an intentional hurt but it hurts just the same, maybe deeper.
Context and compassion must be interwoven.
During introductions at a training, I recalled that I would jokingly say, mostly out of nervousness, that I was schizophrenic as I lived and had an office in MA and NY. Some laughed but I realized supposing someone in the room was struggling with a diagnosis of schizophrenia even a mild case they would not hear this as funny. In fact it would be hurtful.
At the same time I recalled being in a relay race on Nantucket Island where each team had 5 members each doing 10-12 miles in the sand around the beautiful island that at times seemed like it would never end. As I approached my relay member and passed off to him I saw a female runner throw up her hands in disgust that her relay partner was still not in sight and by the way you could see for two miles down the seacoast. As I fell somewhat exhausted I said, "You need to know men are just more responsible than women" every one laughed and she said, "You are absolutely right I am never being part of a woman's relay team again, ever!"
I do not think it is true and I do not think it would be funny in any other setting ing=fact it woudl probably be received with disdain.
You just have to know the context, your audience, and not be so self focused that you offend while attempting just to be funny. It is not funny if it hurts anyone even if there is not intention to do so.
So I am learning to pay attention rather that fall back on lack of intention.
So What is the Knowledge of Good and Evil/Not Good/Bad and why did God place this tree in the "middle" of the garden.
I often muse about this so want to keep my musing to a short concise statement but I am tempted to give you all of my thoughts. Too much is just hat too much. So let me do what might seem an arrogant or egoistic thing that is speak as if I were God which I am not.
So I want you to know that I put the tree in the middle of the garden because always and for all time the temptation to reach for that which is self destructive is right in the middle of whatever you are going through, wherever you are walking wether in a garden or in a storm the temptation to be irrespective of limits, of other people, and /or of nature is omnipresent. In any given situation people can act in a self centered "reach out and take whatever I want" without concern for the impact and effect on anyone else is rife. The freedom of choice I gave to humanity had to include the freedom to use that freedom in a self destructive way. When Adam and Eve, who please note from Genesis 3:8 were together while the whole internal and external discussion about this tree was going on. The discussion was about its fruit, the pleasant taste and sight of it. It included why I gave it, and why I gave a prohibition about it suggesting that my fear was that the day they ate of this tree they would be as God, as me, knowing Good and Evil. Really? How absurd! Here is the partial truth veiling the real truth. It is true, they became as God knowing good and evil (cf Genesis 3:22) but it is not true that they became as God. It is one thing to know good and evil without the moral fiber to choose the good and reject the evil. It is another thing to know good and evil and have the moral capacity to always choose the good, to always work all things together for good, to always be good in your heart toward the bad that people do in the world. That in a word is, God!
So I put the tree there to help you to know that respect for limits is good and healthy, and disrespect of limits, of people, of anything that I have given is itself the nature of moving a good thing to a bad/evil/or not good status.
So enough musing for today!
I sat with a friend who was at Madison Square Garden to see her pope, Pope Francis. A Pope of the People, for the People, and with the people. In this he was really a "with us" representative of the God who is with us. She was overtaken by his presence, not his holiness. She saw his holiness and respected that but it was his presence that moved her along 18,000 others who gathered that day.
Moving days, powerful words, momentous issues accompanied the popes visit. Of all that I heard him say one thing stands out, "Only when the strongest among us care for the weakest among us is God's will being done". The way of the world is that the strongest or at least those in power, abuse, misuse, or neglect the weakest through exploitation, oppression, or suppression. The way of the God of love, hope, and faith is the way of serving the weakest, nurturing strength in them, and building them up to the equality of peers. Jesus came not to be served, but to serve and to give his life that people in oppression might walk the path to redemption, that is finding their place as loved members of the community of earth.
Maybe when Jesus said the first will be last and the last will be first was his way of saying there is ultimate equality of rights, opportunities, and responsibilities for all, to all. Only when this is true will there be liberty and justice for all.
Thank you Pope Francis for visiting America and challenging us a the strongest nation on earth to lead with humility conferring dignity on all people. The strongest religious body is called to do the same. Amen
www.nydailynews.com/.../pope-francis-stops-interfaith-service-