Here’s something to think about the next time you board a bus, train, or plane on a hot summer’s day: 2% of humans have a gene that lets them produce non-smelly sweat.
Why do I always catch the wrong bus?!
Here’s something to think about the next time you board a bus, train, or plane on a hot summer’s day: 2% of humans have a gene that lets them produce non-smelly sweat.
Why do I always catch the wrong bus?!
Today’s Thursday Thought quote offers some wisdom from our 16th President:
“He has the right to criticize who has the heart to help.” – Abraham Lincoln |
Today is Ash Wednesday, the start of Lent for Christians. But my post is for everyone, not just Christians and others of faith. Please think about this.
Pope Francis offered this simple Lenten reflection: “A little bit of mercy makes the world less cold and more just.” Almost every day, if we watch for it, we can find a situation in which we can offer “a little bit of mercy.” Simply put, mercy is showing compassion or forgiveness. Can you forgive the person whose unthinking remark insulted or hurt you; or their selfishness when they jumped ahead and took the parking space you were waiting for; or your co-worker who took credit for your idea; or your spouse for forgetting an event very important to you? Can you show compassion by letting a frail elderly woman go ahead of you in the check-out line; or offering to babysit so that exhausted parents can go out to dinner by themselves; or helping a live-alone neighbor clean up their yard that has been ruined by a harsh winter? God gives us ample opportunity to do His merciful work, and Lent is the perfect time to practice mercy toward those around us, starting a habit that can “make the world less cold and more just.”
In this media-drenched world, it’s hard to keep our kids from hearing about, even seeing videos of, the war in Ukraine, with kids their age being killed and maimed. We parents can’t pretend it isn’t happening. We must talk to them about it. Why? And how to go about it with different ages? How to talk to children about the invasion of Ukraine, and why those conversations are importantnt is an excellent guide.