Wednesday, August 31, 2016

The Stress Is Worth It

Good morning, God, and thanks for this new day! We're in our third day of the new semester now, and the stress has kicked in--waking up at 2 in the morning, my mind all over the place getting things ready, trying to remember new names of new people, feeling the pressure of wanting to make sure that my students' experiences are worth their while. But it's a stress that's definitely worth it, of course. Teaching is what I've chosen to do, and I'm pretty good at it. And teaching allows me to make a positive contribution to the lives of other people--and a contribution that isn't limited to just the people in my classrooms. I may wake up in the middle of the night and I may spend hours on things that I'd prefer not to spend hours on, but it definitely is worth it--to me and, I hope, to the students in my classes.

The stress is here, I know it, and I hope that I'm able to deal with it effectively so that it doesn't make me less effective in the class. I hope that it makes me a better teacher, not a burned-out teacher. I'd prefer to sleep the night through, but during the school year I very often don't, even after as many years as I've been at this. So please be with me this semester--and every time I step into the role of teacher--and help me to give my students what they really need and more, and help me to deal with the stress so that my students never notice that I'm dealing with it. Thanks!

A reply:

You're welcome. It's gratifying to hear that you love teaching, for it is an important gift of yours, and one that's necessary among human beings. The fact that you take it seriously and that you stay focused on the students is very important, as you well know--you've had those teachers who simply didn't care and seemed to just be making a paycheck. You got very little out of their classes, and you don't want to do that to your students.

The stress is another issue. Perhaps it's time that you start taking seriously some of the stress-reducing techniques that other people have developed. They're out there, many of them, and they're not that difficult or time-consuming to do. One of your problems is that you don't tend to feel stress as stress--in fact, you thrive in stressful situations, so you often mistake them for things going just right. And things may be going just right, but still be stressful. Think about how you grew up and how predominant stress was in your life, and how you got "used" to it. Yes, you do know how to relax, but you're also very good at functioning just fine--even at a higher level--when things get terribly stressful. That, too, is a gift, but not one that you've learned to compensate for in other ways. It's like when you run a race--you run slower when you're running a 10k than you do when you're running a 5k because you need to pace yourself and save something for the end of the race.

But in your stressful situations, you're not able to pace yourself. You have to do what you have to do. So it's important that you find other things that will help you to deal with the stress so that you'll be saving something for later. Yes, you have your running, and that is helpful, but you run even when you're not under stress. It's not something you do specifically for stress. If you do find something for stress, such as some sort of exercise, meditation, or hobby, I think you'll find that your sleepless nights are fewer and your ability to be effective in the classroom even higher.

It's something for you to consider, at least. Enjoy the semester, enjoy the students, and enjoy your experiences.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

New Starts

Good day, God, and thanks for this new day! I have a lot to do today, all of which is pretty pleasant, so it looks to be a good day. Of course, what I give to the day will mostly determine what kind of day it is, so please be with me to help me to give all that I can.

Starting next week, I'll be teaching five new classes with about 110 new students, so once again, I ask you to be with me during my new start so that I may be able to be an effective teacher for these young people who need effective teachers in their lives. I hope to be someone who can help them to learn the things that they need and want to learn, but mostly who can help them to learn how to learn. My goal is to help them to enjoy the learning, too, so that it isn't something that they're doing just to fulfill requirements.

So please help me on this new start to have patience, insight, love, discernment, and the necessary knowledge to help them to learn and to grow. I'm good at what I do and that fact helps me to be confident as a teacher, but I never want to grow to be too confident and stop seeing the needs of the students and mistakes that I may be making.

A response:

Good day to you, too. It sounds like it will be a good day if you go into it with a positive attitude--your attitude does more to make a day positive or negative than anything else, and if your perspective is focused on the positive, then the positive will be what you see and experience. And even some things that others may see as negative can turn out in positive ways for you.

As far as your new start is concerned, all you have to do is remember that when you ask me to be with you in any endeavor, what you're really asking for is the consciousness of the fact that whatever you do in my name, you're doing with the right motivation and in connection with me. I am with you always, so you don't have to ask me to be with you; when you do, it's like you're lighting a candle that you already have that was full of potential and that's now being useful and helpful.

One of the reasons that so many people feel so much anxiety is that they try to do everything themselves. They forget that they have a connection with me that never goes away and that never diminishes--but that they don't always tap into as they could or should. A prayer opens that connection, it doesn't establish it. When your heart is yearning for something and you ask for my aid, remember that the candle is always there and that it never burns down or out--but it does need you to light it in a very simple way.

You know from experience that the semester will be a good one. You're not facing any challenges at this point that will be difficult, but one never knows--with 110 students, there are bound to be some unforeseen issues coming your way. But you also know that the means to deal with those issues is within you and with you all the time--a simple shift in focus from doing everything yourself to asking for my help, an act that will strengthen the connection you have with me in order to deal with any situation in a way that you wouldn't be able to do otherwise.

Enjoy your semester, and enjoy your students' company. Help them to learn and to grow, and make the time that they spend in your class worthwhile. And have fun.

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Good morning

Good morning, God, and thank you much for this new day--I hope that I'm able to make something special of this new day in my life.

I don't really have anything special to ask today, or anything in particular that I wish to discuss. I just want to say thanks for the day and thanks for all I have, and ask you to be with me so that I can treat others well and do things that are helpful to others. I don't really have anything in particular to ask for, either. So thanks!


A reply:

You're welcome. And I'm always with you, so I'll be with you today, as well. Enjoy all that it has to offer you.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Watching Lies

Good morning, God, and thanks very much for a new day in our lives. I really do appreciate this gift, and I hope that you'll help me to make the most of it! It's promising to be a very nice day, so I hope that I'm able to help it to live up to that promise in my life--and perhaps in the lives of others, as well.

As you know, we're in the midst of a presidential campaign here, and we have to be exposed over and over again to the candidates and their words. This campaign, though, seems to be different because we have at least one candidate who loves to lie, and who doesn't even care if he's caught at it. When he's caught in a lie, he'll just say something stupid, such as "I never said that."

The other candidates aren't as blatant as all that, but they do their share of twisting facts to make themselves look better. What's bothering me isn't the lies so much--they help me to determine whether I can trust someone or not--but the fact that most of the people who support these politicians don't care whether they lie or not. Even when they're presented with strong facts that prove that the person has lied, people support that person anyway, seemingly not caring at all that if a person is going to lie to you now and then deny it, that person is going to lie to you in the future--and possibly as an elected official who now affects our lives very strongly--and then turn on you when you call out that lie. And with the influence that comes from an elected office, turning on you can become extremely dangerous.

How can we allow things like this to go on? How can we embrace and support people who simply don't seem to care about the truth, and who are willing to manipulate us and deceive us at every turn? I'm very worried for the future of our country when I look around and see the terrible things that are happening.

A reply:

You're welcome for the day. I truly do appreciate it when you appreciate it.

Yes, what you mention is very concerning. I gave all of you a pretty decent mind that you can use not just to receive messages and comprehend them, but also to analyze them and judge their veracity. The fact is, though, that many of you choose to turn off your minds because you fear the dissonance that will result when someone you support says something that you cannot support. You fear losing the illusions that you've built up that make you comfortable and that give you a sense of safety.

The societies that you live in are different than societies in the past, but they're also very similar. People still have insecurities that plague them their entire lives long, and fears that keep them up nights. One of those fears is the fear of being wrong, and different people feel that fear at different levels. And when you add insecurities to the picture, that fear of being wrong leads to the fear of losing friends, losing respect, losing status, etcetera, because of being wrong. So rather than admit being wrong in a case like this, it's easier to simply continue to support a candidate even when the dissonance becomes extremely strong.

It's also human nature to deflect an argument to something else rather than face facts. "The only reason people think he's a racist is because of the press." "Maybe he did do that, but look at the opponent--that person did something even worse." When people do this, they're trying to protect a decision and/or belief that they've already espoused or made or developed. You find yourself now in the middle of a situation that allows people to believe things that aren't true--and worse, to choose to believe things that they have tons of evidence that they aren't true.

A lot of this has to do with a focus on the worldly things rather than on spiritual things, rather than on love and peace and hope. I've given you love to work with, and I've given you a heart and spirit that cannot be deceived. Yet you choose to do all your thinking with your brains, and to make all of your decisions based on logic and thinking. Right now, though, people are feeling more isolated from one another than ever, in a large part due to their new-found addiction to screens of all sizes, and that isolation strengthens the fear that they feel. And how do they deal with that fear? By constantly searching for more information--on those screens--and using their brains instead of their hearts and spirits.

It's going to get worse before it gets better. The current campaign is a symptom of a much larger sickness in your society than is evident on the surface--it's like a sore that indicates a cancer beneath the surface of the skin. It's definitely going to test everyone in many different ways. Peace and love are always possible, but people are choosing information and technology instead. It's not making for a pretty picture.

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Worries

Good morning, God, and thank you for the opportunities that this new day has brought to us. We have an entire day stretching out before us, full of many chances to be nice to people, to give to people, to compliment and encourage, to share and to love. I hope that I'm able to take advantage of as many of those opportunities as I can.

It's kind of amazing that there are so many different things coming up in my life right now, so many different new things to do and new possibilities, yet behind it all are the worries that a summer without full-time work can bring. We're still paying off someone else's loan--money that we don't really have--so we're stuck in an extremely difficult financial situation that isn't getting any better. We have to pay out $1000 a month that we don't owe--and you know the reasons why--so that someone else doesn't lose her home. It's extremely difficult, and though the fall looks to be more positive, I won't see a paycheck from the fall until September. Until then, we have to struggle by.

The plans that I had for bringing in money this summer aren't working out, unfortunately. I've definitely tried, but so far, no go. So we're watching what we owe start to increase again, and neither of us want to be stuck in that type of situation again. We've worked too hard to get out of it, and now we see ourselves being dragged under again. It's only for a short time, it seems, but a lot of damage can be done in a short time.  We both know that making the payments is the right thing to do, but why does doing the right thing cause so much damage to us and cause so much worry? It's extremely difficult to deal with, and we're not getting any help from anyone to alleviate the situation.

A reply:

You're very welcome for the day. I hope that you make it a marvelous one.

We've talked about the money issues before. This is the first time you've been so specific about the causes, though. Your financial problems are being caused by your willingness to help out other people and to make sure that someone else doesn't go under because of a commitment that you made over a decade ago. Your worries are caused by a combination of your need to be in control of situations and a lack of faith that things will be okay--even better than okay. You will not go under. There will be resolutions to problems that you cannot see or even imagine right now.

It's okay to have a lack of faith. There are many so-called religious people who try to make a lack of faith seem to be a personal fault, something that only less-devout people suffer from. The truth is, though, that anyone who tells another person that a lack of faith is a personal shortcoming, really doesn't know what faith is. Faith is something that you strive for, not something that just magically appears because you "believe in" me. Your personal faith doesn't give you any sort of personal in with me--I love all of you equally--though it can improve your life simply by the nature of what it is.

You see, having faith helps you to think with confidence, and when you think and act with confidence, doors open up to you simply because you approach things differently. You don't go to a job interview thinking negative thoughts and hoping against hope that you may get hired; rather, you go to that interview knowing that you have a lot to offer and that you could be a tremendous asset to the organization. With confidence, you don't talk to other people in a hesitating fashion, hoping that they'll like you; instead, you talk to them knowing that you have a lot to offer them, and that if they reject you for whatever reason, the problem is theirs, not yours.

And many people mistake this type of approach as arrogance--but there's a huge difference between arrogance and confidence. A confident person will recognize another confident person, yet a person who has little confidence will often mistake confidence for arrogance. Unfortunately, they'll also often mistake arrogance for simple confidence, and they don't notice the warning signs of the problems that an arrogant person can cause.

Your faith can give you confidence. It can't cause money to appear out of nowhere, and it can't change situations immediately. But the confidence that comes from a clear and simple faith can help to change situations, and it can also help you to feel at peace and to get more from each day that you live because you're coming from a place of peace. And when you feel at peace, you're able to treat others much better. Have faith. That's not a mandate, but a suggestion.

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Priorities

Good morning, God, and thanks for this new day in our world. It promises to be a beautiful, mild summer day, and I hope to make the very most of this gift in my life.

As the summer goes on, I find myself once again trying to deal with setting and keeping priorities--I find that it's far too easy to waste a lot of time on things that don't really matter to me, and to neglect doing many of the things that are very important. I am working on a book, and that's going fairly well, though it could be going better. I have a lot of website work to do, and I'm doing much of it, but not all that I could be doing. Part of my problem is that even though I promise myself to sit down and write out all that I need to do, I avoid doing that as I do other things.

I don't think life is all about doing and achieving--you know that. But I do know that there are many things that really need to be done, and putting them off isn't at all a good idea. I do know also that I get things done much more effectively when I have some sort of plan to do so--yet sitting down and making the plan is one of my weaknesses, and when I don't do so, hours can go by with nothing getting done. That makes me feel that I'm squandering time, because those hours also aren't a restful, peaceful time for me, as rest should be.

A reply:

Yes, it is a beautiful day, and yes, it holds many great opportunities for you to make the most of it. Please do so--that's why you have it!

Priorities. . . there's a word that humans have a very hard time with. Life is full of choices, isn't it? And each time you face a choice--of what to do, what to buy, what to throw away--your choice can be a reflection of your priorities, or not. Most people set priorities about things that they feel they should, such as work or accomplishments, but relatively few people make priorities of things like encouraging and helping others, resting and relaxing, spending time with the family. Priorities are something that can be used to help one to organize their thoughts and make decisions, yet most people react to the present moment's realities and spend time on Facebook even though their priorities don't include that at all.

The hard part is sticking to your priorities, it seems. Because one of your priorities is to have priorities, but you don't really. Believe it or not, I've given you enough time to do whatever you may want to do in life; most people, though, spend that time doing anything but the things that will help them to make their dreams come true.

Life isn't about achieving, but achievement definitely makes people feel good, especially about themselves. And if you want to achieve, remember that doing so isn't necessarily a question of prioritizing or using time well--it's about making the decisions that will allow you to do so, such as deciding not to visit Facebook at all today, or sitting down with that piece of paper to write that letter, or not turning on the television to watch a show that you've already seen (and trust me, even though you might not have seen a particular episode of a particular show, you've already seen the story in some other series).


Perhaps next time we can talk about decisions.












Saturday, July 2, 2016

All This Killing

Good morning, God, and thank you for this new day in my life. I hope that I'm able to make something special of it--you've given me the day and the tools, and I sincerely hope that I'm able to use them and make this an extraordinary day in some way.

I have to say that I'm getting very frustrated and even somewhat disheartened by all the killing that's going on in the world. Whether it's killing by individuals with assault weapons here in our country or terrorist attacks in other places, it hurts to see so many people willing and able to kill other people for reasons that are simply incomprehensible. If you disagree with someone, then talk to them. If you believe something different, then acknowledge the differences and move on with your life. These are the strategies that human beings have been given; these are the ways that we can use our minds and hearts to deal with our fears and prejudices rather than using violent means to make a point that virtually never is taken in the way it is intended.

The violent people are not having their claims examined in objective ways. They lose that chance when they choose to harm and kill other human beings. They are not eliciting sympathy for any cause, nor are they helping people to understand problems. And because of their misguided attempts to deal with their fears and challenges, other people must live in fear of physical violence, which makes their lives very difficult, indeed. So many people are dying needless and tragic deaths because a relatively few people feel that they have some sort of right to kill others, and there really are no words that can express how awful it is that they do this, and how awful it is for the rest of the world to see the constant killing of innocent people on a regular basis.

A response:

This has been going on forever, as long as human beings have been around. It's extremely sad and completely unfair to virtually everyone, yet no matter how much human beings progress in their knowledge and scientific endeavors, you still do a relatively poor job at teaching young people how to live together in peace, how to deal with fears and insecurities, and especially how to employ effective problem-solving skills in order to accomplish your desired goals without resorting to the lowest form of persuasion: violence and intimidation. The people who are doing the killing are afraid and they're angry, and they are willing to listen to others who are afraid and angry more than they're willing to listen to people who are not.

Even with good upbringings, such people can be "caught" by others at times when they're most vulnerable--when they feel alone, and are afraid that they always will feel that way; when they feel no hope for their future, and they're afraid that lack of hope will last forever; when they see what they perceive as injustice and feel angry about it, and they don't think that other people will do anything at all about that injustice. When you're feeling these things, it's very easy for someone else to convince you that other people are to blame for your problems and the problems of your country, and it's very easy for those people to convince you that a completely appropriate way of responding to these issues is indeed a way that is actually completely inappropriate.

Humans like to go after symptoms rather than diseases, so they declare war on terrorist groups rather than examining the situations that give rise to such groups and then doing something to deal with the problems that people are having. There are too many arguments about how much money to spend on creating more jobs, for example, an act that would bring hope to many more people, and not enough recognition of how that expenditure would actually save time, money, and much heartbreak down the road. You need to create situations that help people to have hope, you need to create inclusive social structures to help young people to have a sense of belonging, and you need to teach people not just about how to deal with their problems in life, but also a deep respect for their fellow human beings and their own fears and hopes and dreams. The violence is real and it will not go away until more people feel connected and hopeful, rather than disenfranchised and hopeless.

And what can you do as an individual who doesn't have any influence at all over the decision-making processes that could help to solve some of these problems? Not much, of course. But your prayers and your positive thoughts will help not just to keep you aware of the problems, but to think about how to avoid such straightforward problems in your own sphere of influence--to see how your own contribution to your own world can keep people there from feeling the things that the violent people feel.