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Author Topic: Happy Valentine's Day!  (Read 2513 times)
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RichardF
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« on: February 14, 2009, 10:26:04 AM »

Happy Valentine's Day!

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Soul lives by giving.
Eli
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Make coffee, not war [_]2

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« Reply To This #1 on: February 14, 2009, 11:35:06 AM »



It matters not
who you love,
where you love,
why you love,
when you love,
or how you love.
It matters only
that you love.

~John Lennon


Give Rose


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In the end, we will conserve only what we love.
We will love only what we understand.
We will understand only what we have been taught.
                           ~Baba Dioum, Senegal
P, B and J
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« Reply To This #2 on: February 14, 2009, 01:16:11 PM »

Happy Valentine's Day!

Richard, thanks for that endearing video!  I guess all I can say about it is Awwwwwwwwwwwwww!
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Unilove
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« Reply To This #3 on: February 14, 2009, 02:56:42 PM »

Okay, I was totally sniffling and tearing up on that lil video.  I'm such a softie!  Happy Valentine's Day Smiley
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Jan & John
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« Reply To This #4 on: February 15, 2009, 11:21:14 AM »

Didn't see this till this morning but it's worth sharing now...

The Heart Nebula

jan


* IC1805_Daniel_rc800.jpg (167.32 KB, 800x662 - viewed 97 times.)
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"The place God calls you to is the place where your deepest gladness and the world's deepest hunger meet" - Fredrick Buechner (in Wishful Thinking).
"Every child should be well born, well fed, well taught, well housed and well treated."
Maude Riley, Alberta Council on Child and Family Welfare 1923
"Each of us feels that we are just a drop in the ocean, but the ocean would be less without that missing drop." --Mother Teresa

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Patricia SF
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« Reply To This #5 on: February 11, 2010, 06:50:14 PM »

A beautiful love story:  Give Rose

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/02/09/DD701BUCC9.DTL&type=books

"He who has never loved at first sight, has never loved at all."  Unknown

To learn more about Page Hodel's project or to join her email list to get a heart, go to mondayheartsformadalene.com.


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Mona
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« Reply To This #6 on: February 12, 2010, 03:16:05 AM »

This is a story I got today by email. Not sure if it is true, but it is a wonderful reminder of what really counts in life. Love and peace to you all!  Give Rose
----------------

One day a teacher asked her students to list the names of the other students in the room on two sheets of paper, leaving a space between each name.

Then she told them to think of the nicest thing they could say about each of their classmates and write it down.

It took the remainder of the class period to finish their assignment, and as the students left the room, each one handed in the papers.

That Saturday, the teacher wrote down the name of each student on a separate sheet of paper, and listed what everyone else had said about that individual.

On Monday she gave each student his or her list. Before long, the entire class was smiling.. 'Really?' she heard whispered. 'I never knew that I meant anything to anyone!' and, 'I didn't know others liked me so much,' were most of the comments.

No one ever mentioned those papers in class again. She never knew if they discussed them after class or with their parents, but it didn't matter. The exercise had accomplished its purpose. The students were happy with themselves and one another. That group of students moved on.

Several years later, one of the students was killed in Viet Nam and his teacher attended the funeral of that special student. She had never seen a serviceman in a military coffin before. He looked so handsome, so mature.

The church was packed with his friends. One by one those who loved him took a last walk by the coffin. The teacher was the last one to bless the coffin.

As she stood there, one of the soldiers who acted as pallbearer came up to her. 'Were you Mark's math teacher?' he asked. She nodded: 'yes.' Then he said: 'Mark talked about you a lot.'

After the funeral, most of Mark's former classmates went together to a luncheon. Mark's mother and father were there, obviously waiting to speak with his teacher.

'We want to show you something,' his father said, taking a wallet out of his pocket 'They found this on Mark when he was killed. We thought you might recognize it.'

Opening the billfold, he carefully removed two worn pieces of notebook paper that had obviously been taped, folded and refolded many times. The teacher knew without looking that the papers were the ones on which she had listed all the good thi ngs each of Mark's classmates had said about him.

'Thank you so much for doing that,' Mark's mother said. 'As you can see, Mark treasured it.'

All of Mark's former classmates started to gather around. Charlie smiled rather sheepishly and said, 'I still have my list. It's in the top drawer of my desk at home.'

Chuck's wife said, 'Chuck asked me to put his in our wedding album.'

'I have mine too,' Marilyn said. 'It's in my diary'

Then Vicki, another classmate, reached into her pocketbook, took out her wallet and showed her worn and frazzled list to the group. 'I carry this with me at all times,' Vicki said and without batting an eyelash, she continued: 'I think we all saved our lists'

That's when the teacher finally sat down and cried. She cried for Mark and for all his friends who would never see him again.

The density of people in society is so thick that we forget that life will end one day.. And we don't know when that one day will be.

So please, tell the people you love and care for, that they are special and important. Tell them, before it is too late.

Remember, you reap what you sow. What you put into the lives of others comes back into your own.

May Your Day Be Blessed As Special As You Are.
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Jill
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« Reply To This #7 on: February 12, 2010, 04:59:37 AM »

Hey Mona,

That was Very fun to read that story about the teacher you'd posted.  I can't say for sure that it's true, but I'm close to sure it is.  Years and years ago, I read it in one of my teacher books.  The way it was written up, that, in combination with the way things touch me pretty easily, anyway, well, it definitely brought tears to my eyes.  And it struck me as one of the neater ideas, one of the more "right-sounding" ideas, one of the sweetest and easiest kinds of gifts a teacher could give her kids, that I could imagine.

So, while I was (at the time, only volunteer-) teaching at the school I loved, each year after, I did the same thing.  It was before I had much practice with my computer, and I had to collate everything, by hand, so it took almost "forever" to do it.  But, it ended up being so happily received by my kids, something that clearly allowed every single one of them to feel reassured, sometimes surprised, to feel just really good about themselves because they'd had twenty some odd other kids, their classmates, coming up with at least one thing (different things they could think of) to celebrate, to praise about them (about each kid), it was so absolutely worth the time it took.  I loved it, the impact it seemed to have, and so, so very obviously, did they.

And years later, though not so many years had passed for me as had passed for the teacher in the book, my friend (the "regular" teacher who'd let me do it) and I took a couple of kids, now college-age, out for lunch.  We discovered that they, too, had hung onto their "sheets" of all the good things their classmates had found in them to write about.  I don't remember, specifically, but I'd bet that I got tears in my eyes then, too, when they told me (sort of like I'm getting right now, at 10 to 2 in the morning, as I'm writing about it and remembering!).

So, thanks, Lady, for posting that.  It's a touch of sweetness every time I think of it.
Jill

And yours was a neat story, too, Patricia.  Thank you, too.

EDIT: I just remembered.  One of the kids,  by then, a young woman, whose heart I'd always especially loved, told of how she'd moved away from all her friends and had had to go to a new neighborhood, a new school when she was going to high school.  She said that she'd felt really sad and really nervous about it, knowing that it's sometimes pretty hard to get accepted, particularly when all the other kids had been friends for years.  She said, if I remember right, it was on the morning of her first day at the new school, when she was feeling especially worried, she remembered that sheet of paper from that time in the fourth grade. 

She said she took it out, read it again, and somehow, it comforted her.  So, she went to school and somehow, lo and behold, she managed to survive that first day, after all, with everything having gone just a little bit softer, merely because of that one precious, probably, by then, pretty wrinkled little piece of paper that she'd held onto from the fourth grade.
« Last Edit: February 12, 2010, 05:20:41 AM by Jill » Logged
Jan & John
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« Reply To This #8 on: February 12, 2010, 11:27:50 AM »



 Cry
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"The place God calls you to is the place where your deepest gladness and the world's deepest hunger meet" - Fredrick Buechner (in Wishful Thinking).
"Every child should be well born, well fed, well taught, well housed and well treated."
Maude Riley, Alberta Council on Child and Family Welfare 1923
"Each of us feels that we are just a drop in the ocean, but the ocean would be less without that missing drop." --Mother Teresa

1 click per person per day on this link means 1 additional cent for the Fistula Foundation - thanks!
Patricia SF
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Medicine Buddha (painting by Tibetan refugee)

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« Reply To This #9 on: July 20, 2010, 03:02:07 PM »

I believe this picture belongs here.  Give Rose



http://www.kiva.org/lend/137063
 
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