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Inspirational
Nugget
A
Penny For Your Thoughts
When all is quiet, when the necessities of the day have been
tended to, when your mind is free of any constraints, what
do you think about? Do you dwell on anger, limitation, worry,
or envy? Or do you fill your mind with thoughts of love, possibility,
confidence, abundance and generosity?
Wherever
your mind lives, that is where your life is headed. The thoughts
you think most frequently, willingly and intensely have the
power to shape and define the reality of your life. So what
thoughts are shaping you right now?
Your
thoughts are independent of every constraint imposed upon
you. Even in the most unfortunate, desperate situations is
it possible to fill your mind with the loftiest thoughts.
Indeed, it takes effort and intention to direct your thoughts.
Yet it is an ability which no outside power or limitation
can deny to you.
Thinking
alone won't get you anywhere. Yet what you think will surely
determine who you will be.
-- Ralph Marsto

Beautiful
on the Inside
Lisa,
my two-year-old daughter, and I were walking down the street
toward home one sunny morning when two
elderly women stopped in front of us. Smiling down at Lisa,
one of them said, "Do you know you are a very
beautiful little girl?" Sighing and putting her hand
on her hip, Lisa replied in a bored voice, "Yes, I know!"
A bit embarrassed by my daughter's seeming conceit, I apologized
to the two ladies and we continued our walk
home. All the way there, I was trying to determine how I was
going to handle this situation.
After we went into the house, I sat down and stood Lisa in
front of me. I gently said, "Lisa, when those two
ladies spoke to you, they were talking about how pretty you
are on the outside. It's true you are pretty on the
outside. That's how God made you. But a person needs to be
beautiful on the inside, too." As she looked at me
uncomprehendingly, I continued. "Do you want to know
how a person is beautiful on the inside?" She nodded
solemnly.
"Okay. Being beautiful on the inside is a choice you
make, honey, to be good to your parents, a good sister to
your brother and a good friend to the children you play with.
You have to care about other people, honey. You
have to share your toys with your playmates. You need to be
caring and loving when someone is in trouble or gets
hurt and needs a friend. When you do all those things, you
are beautiful on the inside. Do you understand what I'm
saying?" "Yes, Mommy, I'm sorry I didn't know that,"
she replied. Hugging her, I told her I loved her and that
I
didn't want her to forget what I'd said. The subject never
came up again.
Nearly two years later, we moved from the city to the country
and enrolled Lisa in a preschool program. In her
class was a little girl named Jeanna, whose mother had died.
The child's father had recently married a woman who
was energetic, warm and spontaneous. It was readily apparent
that she and Jeanna had a wonderful, loving
relationship. One day Lisa asked if Jeanna could come over
to play for an afternoon, so I made arrangements with her
stepmother to take Jeanna home with us the next day after
the morning session. As we were leaving the parking lot the
following day, Jeanna said, "Can we go see my mommy?"
I knew her stepmother was working, so I said cheerfully, "Sure,
do you know how to get there?" Jeanna said she did and,
following her directions, I soon found myself driving up the
gravel road into the cemetery. My first response was one of
alarm as I thought of the possible negative reaction of Jeanna's
parents when they learned what had happened. However, it was
obvious that visiting her mother's grave was very important
to her, something she needed to do; and she was trusting me
to take her there. Refusing would send her a message that
it was wrong of her to want to go there. Outwardly calm, as
though I'd known this was where we were going all along, I
asked, "Jeanna, do you know where your mother's grave
is?" "I know about where it is," she responded.
I parked on the road in the area she indicated and we looked
around until I found a grave with her mother's name on a small
marker. The two little girls sat down on one side of the grave
and I sat on the other and Jeanna started talking about how
things had been at home in the months leading up to her
mother's death, as well as what had happened on the day she
died. She spoke for some time and all the while Lisa, with
tears streaming down her face, had her arms around Jeanna
and, patting her gently, said quietly over and over, "Oh,
Jeanna, I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry your mother died."
Finally, Jeanna looked at me and said, "You know, I still
love my mommy and I love my new mommy, too." Deep in
my heart, I knew that this was the reason she'd asked to come
here. Smiling down at her, I said reassuringly, "You
know, Jeanna, that's the wonderful thing about love. You never
have to take it away from one person to give it to another.
There's always more than enough to go around. It's kind of
like a giant rubber band that stretches to surround all the
people you care about." I continued, "It's perfectly
fine and right for you to love both your mothers. I'm sure
your own mother is very glad that you have a new mommy to
love you and take care of you and your sisters." Smiling
back at me, she appeared satisfied with my response. We sat
quietly for a few moments and then we all stood up, brushed
ourselves off and went home. The girls played happily after
lunch until Jeanna's stepmother came to pick her up.
Briefly, without going into a lot of detail, I told her what
had occurred that afternoon and why I'd handled things as
I had. To my profound relief, she was very understanding and
appreciative. After they left, I picked Lisa up in my arms,
sat down on a kitchen chair, kissed her cheek and hugged her
tightly and said, "Lisa, I'm so proud of you. You were
such a wonderful friend to Jeanna this afternoon. I know it
meant a lot to her that you were so understanding and that
you cared so much and felt her sadness." A pair of lovely,
dark brown eyes looked seriously into mine as my daughter
added, "Mommy, was I beautiful on
the inside?"
-
Pamela J. deRoy
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