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It’s a brave new day in Love School …
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Dear Friends …
Sam decided late morning, the Friday before Father’s Day, that he could get off early and meet me at the plane at 1:00. My job was to quit buying groceries and go home and pack.
I wore one pair sandals and packed one. I wore my wedding band and took no other jewelry. Packed minimal toiletries, no mascara, and used a glow stick from my purse for color. Everything we needed until early Monday morning, including two down pillows, was in one small bag.
I loved the freedom … but it wasn’t about being swept off to Key West or traveling light. I finally revel in who I am without the stuff. I want to look at, listen to, play with, travel with authentic me.
And I want to choose what to do, eat, read, without any preconceived notions.
Naked is as good as we get! Let’s cut the ties that bind us.
Love and smiles,… More
What would you have more of if you were seriously authentic?
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Growing a life in the truth …
Even when nobody else hears what we say, we hear it. We feel it; and so do others. By consciously choosing our thoughts, we can also choose our silent chatter and how we feel.
When we allow our unconscious minds to choose what we feel, we allow unconscious programming and bias to choose how we live.
Let’s bring the unconscious into our consciousness, so we can delete false programming and replace it with the truth.
We can grow a life full of love in the truth. … More
“Real Age” is more than a number …
From a Reader: “She’d kill me if she knew I felt this way — I love her and would marry her, BUT she’s 10 years older than I am. I’m 36 and she’s 46. What happens when I’m 56 and she’s 66?”
Age is a number. Theoretically, it’s indicative of how mature we are. But we find exceptions to that faster than we can get to the end of the sentence. But beauty fades, right? Nah — we all know people who get better looking. Skin loses its resilience? True enough, but not at the same rate.
And in much the same way, some people seem to put on the brakes and stop learning and growing at 40, while others seem to stay interested and interesting as long as they live. Some people stay physically vibrant and active into their 90s and counting; some start to “die” in their 40s.
“I don’t believe one grows older. I think that what happens early on in life is that at a certain age one stands still and stagnates,” said T. S. Eliot.
We’re learning, though. We look younger and die older. What used to be old is still young … and the older we get, the younger it is.… More
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