Skip to content
Home » News » Inspirational Quotes for the WEEKEND

Inspirational Quotes for the WEEKEND

By Charles Leyman Kachitsa

Every vision materialisation is as strong as how its first dice or push is stronger. For Human kind, every individual person living normal life without malaise has dreams and have their thinking apparatus functional through and through. The difference is in the level and some have said the colour of the thinking that then affect the outcome including how the dream is crafted.

If a vision is well grounded it does surpass the visioner (initiator of the vision), as the creation outlives them. Such should be every persons intent to have visions implemented that surpasses their own time in this earth. Quality of the vision has to be assured through deliberate measured inputs. As others have always done, they have encouraged dreaming in colours as an alignment to make the quality of the outcome superior.

The start of implementation of the vision also matters. You have to start on a stronger way to make the vision go far. In fact a vision that is so thrown out with great measure attract advocates easily who even when the initiator has since retired, go on to make sure that the work still goes on yonder. We should all desire such legacy for our life purpose to be fulfilled.

The quotes this week are from a book that has compilation of life’s basic teaching all brought together for those who desire to be in the know. I am sure that the selected quotations below from this book will enlighten you to one or two life lessons. Read and enjoy:

CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen & Amy Newmark

“In the West what we generally call love is mostly a feeling, not a power. This feeling can be delicious, even ecstatic, but there are many things love is meant to do that feelings cannot. —— When love and spirit are brought together, their power can accomplish anything. Then love, power, and spirit are one. —– There has never been a spiritual master – not Buddha, Krishna, Christ, or Mohammed – who wasn’t a messenger of love, and the power of the message has always been awesome: It has changed the world. Perhaps the very immensity of such teachers has made the rest of us reticent. We do not accept the power love can create inside us, and therefore we turn our backs on our divine status.”

“I’ve had just a few moments like that. Falling in love is one example. And looking at a baby. Why do we smile when we we see a baby? Perhaps it’s because we see someone without all the defensive layers, someone whose smile for us we know to be fully genuine and without guile. And that baby-soul inside us smiles wistfully in recognition.”

“We all have something in our lives that we wish we could change. And we each get to decide whether or not we will allow that something to hold us down. Let your obstacle become your mentor. Let your pain become your opportunity. Some form of suffering is inevitable. It’s how we deal with the suffering that matters. Will you let it devour you or will you ride it straight into the brightness. —– No one will give you permission to live. Change now. Love now. Live like you really mean it right now. That permission is your birth-right, hot stuff; grab it!”

“The path to love is something you consciously choose to follow, and everyone who has ever fallen in love is shown the first step on that path. The unfolding of spiritual potential has been the chief concern of all the great seers, saints, prophets, masters, and sages in human history. Theirs was a carefully charted quest for the Self, a far cry from our notion of love as a messy, emotional affair.”

Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial