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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Paid in full with one glass of milk

Today I would like to share you one of the best inspirational stories I have ever red... the title of the story is “Paid in full with one glass of milk” 

One day, a poor boy who was selling goods from door to door to pay his way through school, found he had only one thin dime left, and he was hungry. He decided he would ask for a meal at the next house. However, he lost his nerve when a lovely young woman opened the door.

Instead of a meal he asked for a drink of water. She thought he looked hungry so brought him a large glass of milk.
He drank it slowly, and then asked, “How much do I owe you?”
“You don’t owe me anything,” she replied. “Mother has taught us never to accept pay for a kindness.”
He said, “Then I thank you from my heart.”
As Howard Kelly left that house, he not only felt stronger physically, but his faith in God and man was strong also. He had been ready to give up and quit.
Year’s later that young woman became critically ill. The local doctors were baffled. They finally sent her to the big city, where they called in specialists to study her rare disease.
Dr. Howard Kelly was called in for the consultation. When he heard the name of the town she came from, a strange light filled his eyes. Immediately he rose and went down the hall of the hospital to her room.
Dressed in his doctor’s gown he went in to see her. He recognized her at once. He went back to the consultation room determined to do his best to save her life. From that day he gave special attention to the case.
After a long struggle, the battle was won. Dr. Kelly requested the business office to pass the final bill to him for approval. He looked at it, then wrote something on the edge and the bill was sent to her room.
She feared to open it, for she was sure it would take the rest of her life to pay for it all. Finally she looked, and something caught her attention on the side of the bill. She began to read the following words:

“Paid in full with one glass of milk”


Signed, Dr. Howard Kelly.

Friday, October 22, 2010

~ Don't Quit ! ~

When things go wrong as they sometimes will,
When the road you are trudging seems all uphill,
And you want to smile, but you have to sigh,
When care is pressing you down a bit --
Rest, if you must, but do not quit.

Life is queer with its twists and turns,
As everyone of us sometimes learns,
And many a failure turns about
When he might have won, had he stuck it out;
Do not give up, though the pace seems slow -
You may succeed with another blow...

Success is failure turned inside out -
The silver tint of the clouds of doubt,
And you can never tell how close you are,
It may be nearer, when it seems afar;
So stick to the fight, when you are hardest hit -
Its when things seem worst, that you must not quit.
.....................................Leo Piggoti

NEVER EVER GIVE UP!

Don't give up trying to find your way. But do remember that sometimes it takes bending to avoid breaking....... Katinka Hesselink

Never give up, never give up!
Even if you lose your way
A great many times,
You must realise that your destination
Is sleeplessly expecting your arrival.
............Sri Chinmoy


Never give up
Never lose hope.


Always have faith,
It allows you to cope.

Trying times will pass,
As they always do.

Just have patience,
Your dreams will come true.

So put on a smile,
You’ll live through your pain,

Know it will pass,
And strength you will gain.

..................Charlie Remiggio


Between you and every goal that you wish to achieve, there is a series of obstacles, and the bigger the goal, the bigger the obstacles. Your decision to be, have and do something out of the ordinary entails facing difficulties and challenges that are out of the ordinary as well. Sometimes your greatest asset is simply your ability to stay with it longer than anyone else.........Brian Tracy 

 It does not matter how slowly you go so long as you do not stop.......Confucius 

 Perseverance is a great element of success. If you knock long enough and loud enough at the gate, you are sure to wake up somebody....Henry Wadsworth Longfellow


SO, DO NOT EVER GIVE UP!!!




Friday, September 24, 2010

Happy Meskel Celebration to all Ethiopians!!!

HAPPY MESKEL FEAST!
Demera

It's time again to celebrate another grand celebration which is celebrated throughout the country by Ethiopian Christians! Meskel or the feast of finding true cross is a religious holiday celebrated annually by Christians in Ethiopia. It's a way of commemorating the finding true cross by Queen Helena in the 4th century.


This event happens annually on Meskerem 17 according to Ethiopian Calendar (which is equivalent to September 27 in the Gregorian calendar). Therefore, it coincides with the World Tourism Day, which falls on the same day, except during the leap years according to Ethiopian Calendar in which case the Meskel occurs on September 28.



During the Meskel feast, all christian family in Ethiopia celebrate together with their neighbors. This feast is also known as the Feast of exaltation of the holy cross in  Orthodox, Catholic or Protestant churches in other countries.The Meskel celebration includes the burning of a large bonfire, or 'Demera', based on the belief that Queen Eleni(Helena) had a revelation in a dream. She was told that she shall make a bonfire and that the smoke would show her where the true cross was buried. So she ordered the people of Jerusalem to bring wood and make a huge pile. After adding frankincense to it the bonfire was lit and the smoke rose high up to the sky and returned to the ground, exactly to the spot where the Cross of Jesus Christ had been buried.



This Demera-procession takes place in the early evening the day before Meskel or on the day itself, according to local traditions. The firewood is decorated with daisies prior to the celebration. Afterwards, charcoal from the remains of the fire is collected and used by the faithful to mark their foreheads with the shape of a cross (compare Ash Wednesday). There are a number of beliefs with regard to Demera. Accordingly, some believe that it "marks the ultimate act in the cancellation of sins, while others hold that the direction of the smoke and the final collapse of the heap indicate the course of future events -- just as the cloud of smoke the Lord over the Tabernacle offered guidance to the children of Israel (Exod. 40:34-38).


Ethiopian Cross


Besides its religious significance, Meskel has a special festive atmosphere to it because it comes in the wake of the Ethiopian New Year, celebrated on September 11, and heralds the end of the rainy season. Meskel also ushers in the 'Tseday' season, a season with cool, pleasant weather, when the Ethiopian countryside is covered with multitude of colors from the ripening crops, blooming wild flowers and green pasture.


In Ethiopia, eventhough all Ethiopian Christians celebrate the Meskel feast, Meskel is uniquely celebrated in Oromo,Gurghe, Wolaita, Gamo, Gofa, and some others (mainly in the southern part of the country) as some of them consider Meskel feast as a the beginning day of their New Year. 


In most of these places, the Meskel is celebrated by slaughtering a fattened oxen and preparing other cultural dishes to eat during the feast. During this time, parents buy new clothes for their children and the children play the Meskel songs at their neighborhood. In southern part of the country the feasting of Meskel continues up to three to four weeks with different activities and events of the celebration.


HAPPY FEAST!      MELKAM MESKEL!                 ENKUAN ADERESACHIHU!



Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Happy Ethiopian New Year 2003 to all my fellow Ethiopians!!!

ENKUAN ADERESEN !!!

 

Ethiopia has its own calendar, the Ethiopian Calendar, which is based on the older Coptic calendar in the Julian calendar format. It is the principal calendar used in Ethiopia. It also serves as the liturgical calendar for the Christians in Ethiopia.

Like the Coptic calendar, the Ethiopian calendar has twelve months of 30 days each plus five or six epagomenal days, which comprise a thirteenth month. The Ethiopian months begin on the same days as those of the Coptic calendar, but their names are in Ge'ez. The sixth epagomenal day is added every four years without exception on August 29 of the Julian calendar, six months before the Julian leap day. 

 On the New Year’s Eve, torches of dry leaves and wood bundled in the form of tall and tick sticks are also set on fire in front of houses as the young and old sing. Early in the morning everybody goes to church wearing traditional Ethiopian clothing. After church, there is a family meal of ‘Injera’ (flat bread) and ‘Wat’ (stew). The girls go from house to house singing New Year songs for money and the boys sell pictures about New Year that they have drawn. In the evening, families go to visit their friends and drink ‘Tella’, the Ethiopian traditional beer. While the elders discuss their hopes for the New Year, the children go and spend the money they have earned.

 

'Enkutatash' or 'Addis Amet' is the word for the Ethiopian new year in Amharic, the major working language in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian new year occurs on September 11 in the Gregorian Calendar , except for the leap years, when it occurs on September 12.



As we used to do since old times, now also it is time again to renew our covenant of living in harmony. Our country, Ethiopia, is cradle of human kind and a country of various nations, nationalities and peoples. We have been living in unity and harmony since old times and now as we gear up to celebrate and embrace the new Ethiopian year 2003, we hope to see more blessing and bright future full of good opportunities to our fellow Ethiopians.

Happy Ethiopian New year 2003!

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Let's take a look at how humble we are

So many people have said and wrote a lot about humility. It really pays to be humble or being humble, really! Unlike this fact, most of us do not accept or find it difficult to accept the truth. Let me share you some of the quotes I have red from different people's books. Hope it helps :)
 ~ Humility makes great men twice honorable ~ Benjamin Franklin 
~ Humility is the solid foundation of all the virtues. ~Confucius
~ Life is a long lesson in humility. ~ James M. Barrie 
~ I believe the first test of a truly great man is humility. ~ John Ruskin  
~Pride is concerned with who is right. Humility is concerned with what is right. ~ Ezra Taft Benson

Written in Early Spring:
I heard a thousand blended notes
While in a grove I sate reclined,
In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts
Bring sad thoughts to the mind.

To her fair works did Nature link
The human soul that through me ran;
And much it grieved my heart to think
What Man has made of Man. ~ William Wordsworth

~ For the LORD takes delight in his people; he crowns the humble with salvation ~Psalms 149:4
~When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.~ Proverbs 11:2 
~For whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.~ Matthew 23:12

Humility!
Have I the ability
To see desires of those
Who need, from me, humility
Where once I stood and froze
It would be God given
A change of self and stance
From being cold and inward
To one who wants to dance
With anyone I come across
Samaritan to all
Available to be the sort
Who's ready for the call.
         ~ anonymous Christian

These and a lot others tell and advise us how we can benefit if we become humble. But, the truth is, most us find it difficult to be humble...let's just try. It's worth it! Peace!!!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

# Just wanted 2 share you some thing...#

11 Most Important Philosophical Quotations.

1. “The unexamined life is not worth living” – Socrates (470-399 BCE)


Socrates’  belief that we must reflect upon the life we live was partly inspired by the famous phrase inscribed at the shrine of the oracle at Delphi, “Know thyself.” The key to finding value in the prophecies of the oracle was self-knowledge, not a decoder ring.



Socrates felt so passionately about the value of self-examination that he closely examined not only his own beliefs and values but those of others as well. More precisely, through his relentless questioning, he forced people to examine their own beliefs. He saw the citizens of his beloved Athens sleepwalking through life, living only for money, power, and fame, so he became famous trying to help them.



2. “Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily” – William of Ockham (1285 – 1349?)

Commonly known as Ockham’s razor, the idea here is that in judging among competing philosophical or scientific theories, all other things being equal, we should prefer the simplest theory. Scientists currently speak of four forces in the universe: gravity, the electromagnetic force, the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear force. Ockham [wiki] would certainly nod approvingly at the ongoing attempt to formulate a grand unified theory, a single force that encompasses all four.



The ultimate irony of Ockham’s razor may be that some have used it to prove God is unnecessary to the explanation of the universe, an idea Ockham the Franciscan priest would reject.



3. “The life of man [is] solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” – Thomas Hobbes (1588 – 1679)

Referring to the original state of nature, a hypothetical past before civilization, Hobbes [wiki] saw no reason to be nostalgic.



Whereas Rousseau said, “Man is born free, and he is everywhere in chains,” Hobbes believed we find ourselves living a savage, impossible life without education and the protection of the state. Human nature is bad: we’ll prey on one another in the most vicious ways. No doubt the state imposes on our liberty in an overwhelming way. Yet Hobbes’ claim was that these very chains were absolutely crucial in protecting us from one another.



4. “I think therefore I am” – René Descartes (1596 – 1650)

Descartes [wiki] began his philosophy by doubting everything in order to figure out what he could know with absolute certainty. Although he could be wrong about what he was thinking, that he was thinking was undeniable. Upon the recognition that “I think,” Descartes concluded that “I am.”



On the heels of believing in himself, Descartes asked, What am I? His answer: a thinking thing (res cogitans) as opposed to a physical thing extended in three-dimensional space (res extensa). So, based on this line, Descartes knew he existed, though he wasn’t sure if he had a body. It’s a philosophical cliff-hanger; you’ll have to read Meditations to find out how it ends.



5. “To be is to be perceived (Esse est percipi).” Or, “If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound?” – Bishop George Berkeley (1685 – 1753)

As an idealist, Berkeley [wiki] believed that nothing is real but minds and their ideas. Ideas do not exist independently of minds. Through a complicated and flawed line of reasoning he concluded that “to be is to be perceived.” Something exists only if someone has the idea of it.



Though he never put the question in the exact words of the famous quotation, Berkeley would say that if a tree fell in the forest and there was no one (not even a squirrel) there to hear it, not only would it not make a sound, but there would be no tree.



The good news is, according to Berkeley, that the mind of God always perceives everything. So the tree will always make a sound, and there’s no need to worry about blipping out of existence if you fall asleep in a room by yourself.



6. “We live in the best of all possible worlds.” – Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646 – 1716)

Voltaire’s famous novel Candide satirizes this optimistic view. And looking around you right now you may wonder how anyone could actually believe it. But Leibniz [wiki] believed that before creation God contemplated every possible way the universe could be and chose to create the one in which we live because it’s the best.



The principle of sufficient reason holds that for everything, there must be sufficient reason why it exists. And according to Leibniz the only sufficient reason for the world we live in is that God created it as the best possible universe. God could have created a universe in which no one ever did wrong, in which there was no human evil, but that would require humans to be deprived of the gift of free wills and thus would not be the best possible world.



7. “The owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the falling of the dusk.” G.W.F. Hegel (1770 – 1831)

Similar to “vision is 20/20 in hindsight,” Hegel’s [wiki] poetic insight says that philosophers are impotent. Only after the end of an age can philosophers realize what it was about. And by then it’s too late to change things. It wasn’t until the time of Immanuel Kant (1724 – 1804) that the true nature of the Enlightenment was understood, and Kant did nothing to change the Enlightenment; he just consciously perpetuated it.



Marx (1818 – 1883) found Hegel’s apt description to be indicative of the problem with philosophy and responded, “the philosophers have only interpreted the world differently, what matters is to change it.”



8. “Who is also aware of the tremendous risk involved in faith – when he nevertheless makes the leap of faith – this [is] subjectivity … at its height.” – Søren Kierkegaard (1813 – 1855)

In a memorable scene from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Indy deduced that the final step across his treacherous path was a leap of faith. And so it is in Kierkegaard’s [wiki] theory of stages of life.



The final stage, the religious stage, requires passionate, subjective belief rather than objective proof, in the paradoxical and the absurd. So, what’s the absurd? That which Christianity asks us to accept as true, that God became man born of a virgin, suffered, died and was resurrected.



Abraham was the ultimate “knight of faith” according to Kierkegaard. Without doubt there is no faith, and so in a state of “fear and trembling” Abraham was willing to break the universal moral law against murder by agreeing to kill his own son, Isaac. God rewarded Abraham’s faith by providing a ram in place of Isaac for the sacrifice. Faith has its rewards, but it isn’t rational. It’s beyond reason. As Blaise Pascal said, “The heart has its reason which reason does not know.”



9. “God is dead.” – Friedrich Nietzsche (1844 – 1900).....huh!

Well, you might not hear this one in a graduation speech, but you’ll probably hear it in college. Actually, Nietzsche [wiki] never issued this famous proclamation in his own voice but rather put the words in the mouth of a character he called the madman and later in the mouth of another character, Zarathustra.



Nevertheless, Nietzsche endorsed the words. “God is dead” is often mistaken as a statement of atheism. It is not, though Nietzsche himself was an atheist. “Dead” is metaphorical in this context, meaning belief in the God of Christianity is worn out, past its prime, and on the decline. God is lost as the center of life and the source of values. Nietzsche’s madman noted that himself came too soon. No doubt Nietzsche, too, thought he was ahead of his time in heralding this news.



10. “There is but one truly serious philosophical problem, and that is suicide.” – Albert Camus (1913 – 1960)

Camus’ [wiki] solution to the philosophical problem was to recognize and embrace life’s absurdity. Suicide, though, remains an option if the absurdity becomes too much. Indeed Camus’ own death in a car crash was ambiguous. Was it an accident or suicide?



For Camus, the absurd hero is Sisyphus, a man from Greek mythology who is condemned by the gods for eternity to roll up a stone up a hill only to have it fall back again as it reaches the top. For Camus, Sisyphus typified all human beings: we must find a meaning in a world that is unresponsive or even hostile to us. Sisyphus, Camus believed, affirms life, choosing to go back down the hill and push the rock again each time. Camus wrote: “The struggle itself toward the heights is enough to fill a man’s

heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”



11. “One cannot step twice in the same river.” – Heraclitus (ca. 540 – ca. 480 BCE)

Heraclitus definitely isn’t alone here. His message was that reality is constantly changing it’s an ongoing process rather than a fixed and stable product. Buddhism shares a similar metaphysical view with the idea of annica, the claim that all reality is fleeting and impermanent.



In modern times Henri Bergson (1859 – 1941) described time as a process that is experienced. An hour waiting in line is different from an hour at play. Today contemporary physics lends credence to process philosophy with the realization that even apparently stable objects, like marble statues, are actually buzzing bunches of electrons and other subatomic particles deep down.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Happy Feast of the Finding of True Cross '' MESKEL'' for all Ethiopians!!!

Meskel (Finding of the True Cross)
Meskel is celebrated by dancing, feasting and lighting a massive bonfire known in Ethiopian tradition as "Damera". Meskel commemorates the finding of the True Cross in the fourth century when Empress Helena, mother of Constantine the Great, discovered the True Cross on which Christ was crucified. The feast is celebrated in Ethiopia on September 17 Ethiopian calendar (September 27 Gregorian calendar), 6 months after the discovery of the True Cross. The celebration of Meskel signifies the presence of the True Cross at mountain of Gishen Mariam monastery and also symbolises the events carried out by Empress Helena.

According to tradition, Empress Helena lit incense and prayed for assistance to guide her. The smoke drifted towards the direction of the buried cross. She dug and found three crosses; one of them was the True Cross used to crucify Jesus Christ. Empress Helena then gave a piece of the True Cross to all churches, including the Ethiopian Church. This piece was then brought to Ethiopia. According to the Ethiopian legend, when people get close to the piece of the True Cross it made them naked by its powerful light. Because of this, a decision was made to bury it at the mountain of Gishen Mariam monastery in Wollo region. The monastery of Gishen Mariam holds a volume of a book which records the story of the True Cross of Christ and how it was acquired.