Today’s Just Be thought

This one is on love. It’s easy to get caught up in the moment with love and then get caught up in the moment when we think love has gone MIA.

I think love is like road trip.

Somewhere around hour 8 of a 20 hour trip I start wondering if this is really worth it. Technically I can turn around and go home and still be on the road less time than if I continue. The idea of pushing on to the end becomes honestly questionable at that point.

Same with love.

When I go on a road trip I have a destination in mind. I have a reason for getting on that road. That’s why I always end up completing the journey.

Love should be like that too. We should have a goal in mind and a reason for putting ourselves out in a vulnerable place.

And, like on a road trip, love should be an Adventure. We should absolutely live in the moment, in the ups and downs, in the excited rush of the start and in the dull hummmmmm of the wheels repeating their seemingly endless rolling over and over again. Love is more than, and deeper than, just the heated, fiery moments of excitement.

Just like we look off the side of the road on a trip and grab a spontaneous family break at the roadside attraction or cafe, we ought do the same in love. Grab that porch picnic lunch, play a game together, read the same book together and compare notes.

Be in the moment together, on an adventure. Adventures can be small as well as grand.

Here’s the quote:

“Love, like everything else in life, should be a discovery, an adventure, and like most adventures, you don’t know you’re having one until you’re right in the middle of it.”
E.A. Bucchianeri, Brushstrokes of a Gadfly, (Gadfly Saga, #1)

Today’s Just Be thought

This one is on lifting up others. It can take place anywhere, but in our modern world, the opportunity to do so is easier than ever.

For instance, I’ll find a random post in the group where we pretend to be ants. It doesn’t need to be a heavily commented one. I usually let my inner eye pick it out.

Then, I’ll post a positive reply. Sometimes I’ll create a pic or find one online to accompany the reply.

Always, it’s to lift the posters’ spirits. Or rather, “LIFT+” in this case.

I do the same with other people on social media like those I know directly. Sometimes I do offer feedback the other doesn’t like, but it’s done in a way that still lifts them up. But not in an insulting complement kind of way (“I like how your lovely hat distracts from the shape of your nose”).

Looking for these moments is important. You never know when that person needs to be lifted up.

Here’s the quote:

“Sometimes all we need to soothe our soul and ease our burdens is the loving hand of a friend gently touching our heart and lifting us towards love”

Mimi Novic

Today’s Just Be thought

This one came from your Gpa. He shared a long but very awesome post and I’ve captured the part that stood out to me.

This is a core concept in just being in the moment. When you do it properly, you are aware of the timeline that stretches behind and in front of you. However, you aren’t fretting over past events not are you anxious about future events.

Learning from the past and planning for the future are necessary but what’s not necessary are regret and anxiety.

When we can enjoy today for today, learn from the past without regret, and plan for the future without anxiety, we are building a lifestyle that positively impacts not just ourselves but others around us.

Here’s his full post:

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=3433074786712727&id=100000307184939

Today’s Just Be thought

Today’s thought is about Words. Amazing thing, words. They are really thoughts captured and trapped into an object. If they are recorded, they are a way to share ideas with people in the future.

Words also impact us, now, in real-time. Even a subtle change from using the words good/bad to using happy/sad can alter how we approach problems in real-time.

Many people wiser than me have written on the subject, but I’ll share my personal experience here when I noticed a change in myself after changing word usage:

https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10157042100011249&id=647596248

Today’s Just Be thought

This is not a quote but a meme. Still, it’s worth noting because it’s true.

Many times I find myself wondering why some things are so painful to me and what I did to bring them on.

Many times, yes, I chose to act rashly or procrastinate in a given moment, and that causes hardship to not just me but impacts others.

When I’m in the moment of self-realization that I’m in a tough spot, it’s good to remember this is only a spot. Not a lifestyle.

Not to mean choices don’t have permanent consequences. If I choose to drive impaired and hurt or kill someone, the impact could last a lifetime.

But the moment of darkest despair is only for a brief moment of time. The rest is managing the issue at hand.

And this is why the idea in this meme is so powerful.

I can take the moment of pain and use its power and inherent energy to fuel my actions to a better place.

There’s incorrect but partly flawed wisdom dispensed in many TV shows and movies where the bad person hovers over the victim, saying, “YESSSS USE YOUR ANGERRRRRR….” Usually this is meant to show the victim refuses to use the pain or uses it and becomes dark and evil.

That’s only partly correct.

We can use pain and dark emotions as fuel. I have and still do.

What the TV shows fail to show is a cleansing of that pain before using it as fuel for action. Only when we cleanse the pain can we use it without harm to ourselves and others.

Personally I rely on God’s help for this. After recognizing I’m upset but before I start using the emotion I quickly check in with God to ask for help using this. When I know I’m holding his hand then I open the power gates. It has worked for me for years.

Today’s Just Be thought

This one is a two-fer. I started looking for a quote on blessings and found one on that subject and on humility as well.

When we’re focusing on the moment and not on how great or terrible we once were or are going to be, we can be honest with ourselves and with others. We also can see blessings in the moment as well.

Some people think being humble is to put one’s self down and tell others and ourselves we aren’t as great as others.

That’s exactly wrong!

Humility is the ability to give an honest assessment of ourselves. Not to bring ourselves up or down in the process. It means we can see the amazing beauty in our soul and heart yet still recognize the work still to be done to get us to where we want to be. And then, once we assess ourselves, we stop looking at ourself and move on.

Doing this with a joyous attitude actually attracts blessings. Or maybe not. Maybe when we stop looking at ourselves we clear a path to see the blessings that surround our life every moment.

This quote always makes me laugh. It’s funny because it’s true

James Carlos Blake
“A man who can laugh at himself is truly blessed, for he will never lack for amusement.”

Today’s Just Be thought

This started out as a thought on fulfilment and contentment with what we’ve accomplished. This is different from pride, as pride insists that others know of the accomplishment.

However, this thought very quickly changed when I saw this quote. It’s about disabilities. I’d love to add more to this but simply can’t. What better way to be in a moment with someone when this is on our mind?

Mister Rogers has a way of making each of us feel welcome in the neighborhood.

“Part of the problem with the word ”disabilities’ is that it immediately suggests an inability to see or hear or walk or do other things that many of us take for granted. But what of people who can’t feel? Or talk about their feelings? Or manage their feelings in constructive ways? What of people who aren’t able to form close and strong relationships? And people who cannot find fulfillment in their lives, or those who have lost hope, who live in disappointment and bitterness and find in life no joy, no love? These, it seems to me, are the real disabilities.”

Fred Rogers

Today Just Be thought

It’s not a quote today but a meme. It’s about safety.

Now this may sound strange coming from a man who’s dealt with the after effects of his own risky behavior and those of his kids.

I believe a danger-free life is also a dead life.

Life is not meant to be lived danger and risk-free. We must calculate the risk we face as best as we can and move forward – even into danger – if we are meant to thrive.

How many times have I chosen not to do something, or have done something else, just because that decision will keep me safe? What was the cost of that safety?

Was it worth the price I paid? In many cases, yes. But also in many cases, no.

Today, in this moment, think of a choice you face.

Is taking action on that choice an experiment, or a longer term, permanent change?

We can be riskier on experiments than on long term goals. It’s ok to take on higher risk and less safety during experimentation. Usually the outcome of an experiment will factor into a decision of whether or not to use the same action on your long term plans.

The quote:
Be as safe as necessary

Today’s Just Be thought

This one is about silence. Learning how to live in silence is worth doing. It takes time and dedicated effort to shut off the background noise.

When I say “silence”, I don’t mean putting earcoverings on and blocking out all sound. I mean shutting off the noisy distractions that we purposely turn on to fill voids.

This includes background music, tv on but muted, phone notifications (except for emergency pings), etc.

For example, when I’m typing up these Just Be notes, I shut off the music and lock both work and personal laptops. I want to be in the moment undistracted by anything else.

In doing so I can be more creative. I can hear the birds singing, Cash barking, the neighbor cutting and collecting hay. I hear the whirrrr of the air conditioning and the gentle creaking of the house as the midday sun warms different parts of it up.

I can feel the breeze of the aircon fan and the tenseness of my legs telling me I’ve been standing too long and must rest.

I am living in the moment, and in doing so am much more creative now than I would be otherwise.

Here’s the quote:

“Everything that’s created comes out of silence. Your thoughts emerge from the nothingness of silence. Your words come out of this void. Your very essence emerged from emptiness. All creativity requires some stillness.”

Wayne Dyer

Today’s Just Be thought

This thought is on thankfulness. Not thankfulness that things work out the way we’d like, but thankfulness that we were challenged in the first place.

We can’t run without knowing how to walk.

We can’t walk without knowing how to stand.

We can’t stand without pushing up from the ground.

All involve challenge. Falling down. Being frightened of falling again. Managing the pain that comes from fear and hard knocks and those who disappoint us on the path to our goals.

Without those challenges we can’t grow and be strong.

That’s the thankfulness I seek – being honestly grateful to have opportunities to push past, around, and through obstacles.

Here’s the quote:

“The difference between who you are and who you want to be is what you do.” Anonymous

Today’s Just Be thought is a little early but maybe it’s needed early

Your precious gift is in a lot of pain right now and honestly a bit of danger. It’s so hard for any parent to see this.

With a very recent painful past and a scary path ahead of her, how can you possibly ever think of fluffy clouds and happy rainbows?

You shouldn’t, to be honest. Doing so would be pretending everything is happy happy joy joy when the reality is anything but that.

But what does exist are moments between the scary parts. Your sending that pic of lovely Olive was one of those. You’d stopped bailing water out of the life raft long enough to see the lovely shore on the horizon.

You were practicing just being in the moment.

Keep pouring peaceful love on that daughter of yours. Her thought-brain will forget the thought patch she’s going through. Her heart-soul will remember the love and support you and the nurses and doctors are dousing her with. She will be enriched by that.

Hugs and so much love to you all!

Today’s quote comes from someone who has always been a great inspiration to me. She was born deaf and blind and for years was basically a crazed animal. Yet with the help of an awesome friend she understood language and became an amazing writer.

“Although the world is full of suffering, it is full also of the overcoming of it.” Helen Keller

Today’s Just Be thought

This one is not in itself a way to maintain your peaceful presence in the moment but a platform that is needed to make the peace within happen.

It’s about forgiveness.

I’ve struggled with forgiveness in the past with many people. I thought forgiveness meant accepting and embracing the other person’s misdeeds or even acting as it never happened.

No, it’s not that at all. And it’s much much deeper than that.

Here are things I’ve learned about this, and a quote that helps me to keep my eye on the right thing here.

Forgiveness is acknowledgement that I have been done wrong, but not allowing that wrong to continue to harm me.

Forgiveness has nothing to do with how the other person thinks of me before or after I admit forgiveness.

Forgiveness means I can admit it to only myself and no one else and it still is effective.

Forgiveness is like taking off a heavy, wet, dirty coat and leaving it at the door.

“Forgiveness does not change the past, but it does enlarge the future.”
Paul Boose

Today’s Just Be thought

This one’s about peace. It’s hard to just be in the moment when we are at conflict.

We are certainly living in the moment when were in conflict, but we are in survival mode then, and not in thoughtful mode.

A peaceful mind can concentrate on things that need to be done now, without having anxiety over what’s happening next or what has just happened.

But peaceful existence does not mean giving in and letting others roll over us. Sometimes peace means pushing back, and pushing back FIRMLY sometimes. How we do this contributes to our inner harmony.

Here is the quote:

“Peace is not absence of conflict, it is the ability to handle conflict by peaceful means.” —Ronald Reagan

Today’s Just Be thought

This one is technically not a Just Be thought that focuses on the moment, but it kind of does relate.

It’s about procrastination – something I struggle with daily. You’ve seen my boxes of stuff that have yet to be unpacked. So I know a thing or three about the lure of the beast.

But for other things, I choose not to procrastinate and choose to live and act in the moment by doing what needs to be done.

Planning for action and making small daily steps to a goal is so different from taking immediate random action. The end result may look the same but inner peace comes from the small daily steps.

For planned immediate action, I’ve thought ahead to consider what might be needed. Then when an opportunity comes at the moment, I’ll take it if I haven’t already planned to do so. An example is purchasing and getting installed this power backup generator. I thought about it for a long time, and set things up financially, slowly but surely, to allow myself to be in a good position. When the opportunity arose I stopped thinking and took immediate action to call and set up the unit. It seemed like a spontaneous action but it was actually put in place one ‘today’ decision at a time.

And now here’s the quote

A year from now you may wish you had started today.” ~ Karen Lamb

Today’s Just Be thought

This one touched me deeply for some reason – especially the idea that our true self lies beneath the self that manages the outside world. The self that faces the world must know how to manage disappointment and pain and frustration. This is to shield our true self from these things. And then I thought of the Incredible Hulk, and Bruce Banner, haha. I can do relate to that wild and crazy pair of goofballs.

“Be the silent watcher of your thoughts and behaviour. You are beneath the thinker. You are the stillness beneath the mental noise. You are the love and joy beneath the pain.” Eckhart Tolle

Today’s Just Be thought brings to mind the power of humility when it comes to taking criticism from others. The more I read it the funnier it gets, actually. Funny because it’s true.

“If anyone tells you that a certain person speaks ill of you, do not make excuses about what is said of you but answer, ‘He was ignorant of my other faults, else he would have not mentioned these alone.’” – Epictetus

Today was particularly rough at work.

Sometimes things are difficult. There seems to be no end to a particular problem.

When that happens, it’s time to adjust focus and see if there’s a new way to look at the issue.

If you’ve reached the limit of your viewpoints, it’s often useful to wonder, “how would I get this done of my life depended on the solution?”.

Sometimes one just has to be more stubborn than the problem.

For some odd reason I was reminded of a prank my classmates and I played on our 7th grade orchestra sub.  We were pretty good at what we did and the teacher had been excited about a recent performance we did at a local mall.

So we heard the teacher would be out one day and a sub would take his place. Someone had the brilliant idea (hehehe) to have all of us switch seats. Not just switch seats but instruments as well. The instruments stayed in place but we swapped seats.

Some chickens decided not to switch but that was ok because we had enough to do damage.

And damage we did. The sub came in all smiles and we opened up the music books.

Tap tap tap went the sub’s baton on the music stand and we were off.

“Off” being the key word here.

We honestly tried our best; the music in front of us was well-rehearsed over weeks of effort and practice.

But those of us who switched seats and instruments had zero experience with these. For instance I was a French horn player. Nothing in that prepared me for the tenor saxophone in my hands. Likewise the drummer on the tuba was equally lost. I can’t recall the rest but we were all horrid. Those who chose not to switch carried the tune best as they could but it wasn’t enough.

To the sub’s credit, he stayed the entire period. Screeches and flat notes and missed beats from whoever was on drums filled the room.

Our regular teacher came back the next day and was a little quiet, which was unlike him. Someone finally spilled the beans about our prank, and the teacher’s face completely changed as he started chuckling. He told us the sub was worried about the progress our class was making.

Imagine handing off a promising set of people to someone with the knowledge that you’d be proud of the work you’d done with them, only to be told they ain’t as great as you thought they were.

That was a great class and a great teacher.  Totally worth the mile daily walk to school and back lugging that borrowed French horn in that black case around.

I’ve fallen in love with the album, “Duke” by Genesis all over again.

I originally bought it because one of the songs was getting so much airtime on a local rock n roll radio station. Didn’t have streaming audio or MP3s (remember those?) so my only option was to get the vinyl album. That’s still here somewhere, packed up in a box with some of the albums I “borrowed” from my mom over time.

Tonight, instead of carefully dusting the shiny black vinyl grooves and gently placing the metal stylus on the spinning platter, I’ve stumbled across this album thanks to my magic music AI butler who suggested it to me. How things have changed.

Technically it’s not rock. Not dance, but some parts are dancy enough. Kind of progressive rock-ish.

Loads of sweeping vocals.

But the thing is love the most are the chord changes. They are like what I imagine feeling like flying is like.

Neil Diamond did an outstanding job with his music for the “Jonathan Livingston Seagull” thing. Never saw the movie. The book was really good. Most folks reading this won’t remember that, either.

But I could imagine this album’s music would be an an outstanding accompanying score for the idea of that story.

Haven’t heard this album in like literally 35 years.

I wore it out in my first apartment as a solo bachelor. In my mind’s eye I can still see the turntable where I’d play the album before heading out to work the evening shift at a local Mexican place as a waiter.

Not one for reliving the glory days. That’s because the glory days start every morning when I’m celebrating another day of living. (There’s another song that comes to mind… look up “Rare Earth I just want to celebrate”)

But sometimes there’s a composition that just hovers, gently but powerfully, right in front of you, waiting for you to see it. Really see it. For me this is one of those things.

Not hearing this set of songs in over three decades after hearing it often for a year or so is an odd thing. It’s like experiencing a very familiar sensation for the very first time. Yah, that idea messes with my head, too.

Will I wait another three decades to hear it again? Maybe. There’s so many full albums to experience still that I’ve never heard before.

But tonight, we’re surfing these marvelous chords.

I was chatting with a colleague at work and was reminded of a high school classmate who changed my world view forever by happenstance.

The high school mate eventually became a fairly good friend – to the point where he not only didn’t punch me for dating his ex-girlfriend but playfully ribbed me for it.

He was a huge young man. Built like a gorilla. Lifted weights. But he was about my height, meaning he wasn’t very tall. Kind of wavy, curly dark brown, almost blackish hair. Hair everywhere. By the end of the school day his beard grew out enough to make him look like a pirate.

Being a 16-17ish teen who lifted weights and who stretched out his t-shirts you’d think he would have been pretentious and vain. If he was, I didn’t see that aspect of him. What I saw was lots of funny, good natured, and playful attitude from him.

We met as science/chemistry lab partners and found our personalities were a good fit. Almost too good, as we both enjoyed doing side experiments we ouldn’t have been doing. These always involved mixing things together or burning something we shouldn’t have done.

His name was Jean (pronounced “Jon”). He was also from Lebanon. Both I remember as I called him “Jon-Jon from Lebanon”. His personality being what it is, he didn’t mind and thought this was funny.

He and family had been in the States for a few years already. The reason they’d moved was to get him out of the Lebanese Army. He’d been a soldier since he was ten years old. I don’t recall if he fought for or against the Palestinians.

Naturally that info raised questions for me and one of the first I asked was, “Did you get to kill anybody?”

I remember him saying, “Yes” and then making a deflection joke to steer us away from that topic. That was a clear message to me to not follow this line of questioning any more. Ever.

That’s when my world view changed. It was like a veil was lifted and I could see things outside of my cotton-wrapped existence.

While I was learning how to operate the gears of my Christmas-gifted ten-speed bicycle so I could race with my friends, Jean was learning how to disassemble, reassemble, and maintain field rifles so he could kill the opposition.

While I was playing “let’s see who could jump down the most stairs without falling” game with my brothers and sisters, Jean was learning how to scale and descend walls to keep from being bayonetted by people chasing him.

While I was lobbing snowballs over the street at my friends on a cold winter’s day for the satisfaction of seeing the snow splat on them, Jean was lobbing rocks and Molotov cocktails at fellow children and grown men and women with the intent of disfiguring or killing them.

Some say we are America the land of Capitalist Pigs. Do we consume too much without thinking of others? At times, yes. But now and again I am reminded of Jon-Jon from Lebanon and am thankful that we are not America the land of Child Soldiers who are conscripted to fight State-sponsored gang wars.

At least, not yet.