Tag: Mindful Thinking

never neglect now for then

We are all taught to practise mental strategies such as “contingency planning” or “saving for a rainy day” or “thinking ahead”. And with good reason: they are eminently useful & practical.

But I think they ought to come with a proviso, because we all have an unfortunate tendency to neglect the present for the future.

And neglecting any “now” for any “then” is most unwise, for it is in our present that we initialize our futures.

 

a sample worthwhile goal

How about….

To love justice, to long for the right, to love mercy, to forget wrongs and remember benefits, to love the truth, to be sincere, to love liberty, to cultivate the mind, to be familiar with the mighty thoughts that genius has expressed, the noble deeds of all the world, to cultivate courage and cheerfulness.

🙂

never feel pressed for time

Is not a day divided into twenty-four hours, each hour into sixty minutes, and every minute sub-divided into sixty seconds?

Now in 86,400 seconds very many things can be done. – Dumas

how to go with the flow

It is a sad fact that the world is rife with frightened people who, rather than making the effort to elevate themselves, simply park on feeling inadequate and parrot terminologies that they have heard yet fail to sufficiently comprehend. And one victim of this is the idea of being logical & systematic. This is in fact a tremendously valuable trait, but it is often maligned as “being anal” by the weak-minded, who often find themselves incapable of any kind of sustained and focused concentration.

That said, even many intelligent people have been misled to believe that being logical, organized & systematic necessitates being rigid and closed-minded. This is a fallacy. On the contrary, disciplining yourself to think & behave in a systematic way endows you with the power to consider insightful questions for yourself which you then feel compelled to answer in an effective manner.

Possessing such a mindset enables you to engage any activity to its successful conclusion without a moment of wasted time, effort, or energy. In this light, I think it is safe to say that being described as logical & systematic is most definitely a complement, and as a quality available to all with the initiative to cultivate it, worth the effort.

 

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