Wednesday, December 23, 2015

20 LESSONS FOR LIVING A PEACEFUL LIFE

I don't always "re-BLOG", but when I do... it is worth reading!

This blog from the Dalai Lama was too good not to share. I hope it offers you as much inspiration as is has me. These are wise words, indeed.



1.    Always remember that great love and great achievements involve great risk.
2.    When you lose, don’t lose the lesson.
3.    Follow the three R’s:
– Respect for self,
– Respect for others and
– Responsibility for all your actions.
4.    Remember that not getting what you want is sometimes a wonderful stroke of luck.
5.    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
6.    Don’t let a little dispute injure a great relationship.
7.    When you realize you’ve made a mistake, take immediate steps to correct it.
8.    Spend some time alone every day.
9.    Open your arms to change, but don’t let go of your values.
10. Remember that silence is sometimes the best answer.
11. Live a good, honorable life. Then when you get older and think back, you’ll be able to enjoy it a second time.
12. A loving atmosphere in your home is the foundation for your life.
13. In disagreements with loved ones, deal only with the current situation. Don’t bring up the past.
14. Share your knowledge. It is a way to achieve immortality.
15. Be gentle with the earth.
16. Once a year, go someplace you’ve never been before.
17. Remember that the best relationship is one in which your love for each other exceeds your need for each other.
18. Judge your success by what you had to give up in order to get it.
19. If you want others to be happy, practice compassion.
20. If you want to be happy, practice compassion.





Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Today I'm 48. I think I like it!

Today I am forty-eight. That’s nearly five decades on this planet! It’s a rather grown-up, adult-sounding age and number. It sounds really old when I say it, but it doesn’t feel that old. It feels like I’m still a giggly 16-year-old girl trapped in a much older body that doesn’t move quite like it used to. It feels like life is moving so fast I cannot quite keep up. It feels like I’ve entered “Act II” of my life and I’d better make every day count.

I like being forty-eight. I’m sure some baby boomer has coined a kitschy phrase like, “Forty-eight is the new twenty-eight” or some such nonsense. But the truth is, being forty-eight is just fine with me. It doesn’t have to be the new anything. It can just be forty-eight, in all it’s glory.

At forty-eight, I don’t have the pressure of looking 25 years old anymore. I don’t have to ever look like a supermodel or movie star. After all, women who are nearly fifty are supposed to have wrinkles and less than perfect bodies, right? We’ve earned our wrinkles and stretch marks! I don’t feel like I need to impress anyone anymore with my abilities, my knowledge, my charm, my success, or my appearance. People can choose to like me or not, and that’s fine. I’ve stopped needing the approval of others, which is a wonderful gift. I know who I am, and more importantly, who I’m not. There are things I’m good at, and there are things I will never do well. That’s okay. It’s who I am. At forty-eight, I am far from perfect, but I like me. I like myself in all of my imperfection. I’ve stopped trying to be perfect, and instead I try to be authentic and real. And being a single woman with three children, real life struggles, and a demanding career at forty-eight is very, very real.

I have realized many dreams in 48 years. I had the privilege of growing up in a loving, supportive family, receiving a wonderful education, playing tennis in high school and college, getting to sing all over the world in amazing venues, and raising three incredible kids who are now in college. I’ve had the opportunity to travel in my job, I am constantly learning new things, I have had the privilege of recording CDs of original music I’ve written with our band, and I celebrate loving, supportive relationships with the people in my life who are most important to me. I have a job that allows me to pursue my passions and to encourage others to connect with birds, nature, and with one another. Lots of dreams have come true in my life. At forty-eight I am grateful.

I’ve also experienced lots of pain and loss in my forty-eight years, but I don’t spend much time looking in the rear-view mirror. But lest you think my cheery smile is due to a carefree life of leisure, I assure you, it is not. I’ve experienced multiple miscarriages and one stillbirth, a violent physical abuse in my teenage years by someone I trusted, health struggles, divorce, significant career changes, major financial struggles, some very unique and challenging relationships, deep heartbreak that left me in despair, some big, embarrassing mistakes, and like everyone, the challenges of balancing career, family, and life. I own all of this. Some of these things were the result of my choices, and some were just things that happened. All of the pain and loss has shaped me, taught me, humbled me, and helped me. I’ve cried many tears, faced many fears, and overcome many obstacles. I’m sure there are more challenges ahead, but I’m thankful to have survived this far and come through smiling. I’m happy because I choose to be, not because life is easy.

At forty-eight I still have lots of dreams yet to be realized. Dreams about many places I’d like to go, adventures, people I’d like to meet and learn from, dreams of love and life and experience. I’d love to climb a mountain, go deep sea diving, write a novel, write lots more music, become a grandma some day, and see rare birds and wildlife in as many countries as possible. I have dreams of seeing my children become the people they are meant to be, and follow their own dreams and passions. I have dreams of growing old with a partner I adore, with whom I can share the ups and downs, joys and disappointments of life, someone who will dance with me in the rain and make me laugh when I want to cry. I have dreams of being as healthy as I can be for as long as I can be. I have dreams of giving and blessing others, and dreams of improving the natural world around me. I dream of leaving this world much better than I found it, and perhaps leaving each person I meet feeling a little stronger, a little more confident, and a lot more loved.

At forty-eight, there is nothing I want or need that can be bought in a store. What I want now revolves around the happiness and well being of the people I love and the world I live in. I want to make a difference, even in a small way, in this life. I want a simple, happy, purposeful life. Peace, health, love, joy. What I want now is to pursue my passions, to fill my life with inspiring people, and to keep learning and growing and changing. I want everyone I love to be happy, healthy, and strong. I want my world to be free of violence, crime, sickness, pain, and hate. I want to make my planet healthier and happier. It’s really not complicated. Forty-eight is rather simple.

Whether I’m forty-eight, sixty-eight, or lucky enough to see eighty-eight, I will always be most grateful for the people in my life. Honestly, I feel like I am the luckiest woman in the world! Not because life is so easy, but because I am so very loved. I have an amazing family, true friends from all over the globe, a roof over my head, food in the fridge, and love, passion, and forgiveness in my heart. The love of family and friends make life worth living. Things don’t matter, people do.

At forty-eight, I think that maybe, just maybe, I’m finally starting to get it. This is NOT a dress rehearsal. This is life, and it’s happening NOW. I can live it or lose it. I can become bitter or better. I can be brave, or I can quit. I can be happy or sad, full of joy or self-pity. At forty-eight, I have choices every single day.

I wonder what my 48th year will hold! Many surprises and challenges, successes and failures, no doubt. But I’m grateful to see another birthday, another sunrise, another day to love and laugh. At forty-eight, every day you wake up is a good day!

Thanks for being part of my life. I hope I get to spend the next 48 years enjoying all of YOU!









Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Birding. Just DON'T do it.

Whatever you do, don't become a bird watcher.

Let me explain.

As you are probably well aware, birding is for losers. You will see from my photos that birding is an extremely boring, stodgy, and dull hobby. Birding is completely uninteresting. You stand around waiting for hours for a bird or two to fly around in your direction, then you take a quick look at it and go home. Its not very exciting. It's really for people who have nothing else to do, and who have no other skills or abilities.

And if the experience of birding wasn't humdrum enough for you, just wait until you meet the other BIRDERS.

The people you meet birding are just as you might expect. Unattractive, old and shriveled up, extremely negative, always complaining, unintelligent, and non-conversational. They are dark, sinister SUPER NERDS. They have no social skills and never seem to smile. In fact, I've never seen any of them have any fun at all, nor have I ever had a moment's fun with any of them. There is very little personality represented in the birding community. It's really like a giant group of lifeless, soulless potatoes. Boneless chickens. Crash test dummies with a pulse.

Birders have no spirit of adventure, no zest for life, they do not love learning new things, and they are rather uneducated and stupid. They hate sharing helpful information, they are generally unkind and insensitive, and they despise any type creative discussion. They are selfish and never ever give advice about anything. They love to argue. They hate the world around them, they abhor the planet they occupy, and they loathe the people and creatures who inhabit it. They know very little about current events and have no interest in these things. Birders NEVER get excited about anything, especially traveling to new and interesting places, seeing beautiful birds, reptiles, animals, plants, or wildlife. They hate all that stuff. In fact, they hate life in general.

Birders are haters.

I hope you will take a moment to look at this gallery of photos and all of the miserable people I have met through bird watching. It's all so very sad. I am in most of these photos, and it is clear that my life is being destroyed by birding and the global birding community in general.

Birding is where dreams go to die.

We all are incredibly unhappy human beings and we all live horrible, useless lives.

Save yourself.

Don't become one of us.