Wednesday, December 10, 2008
While all humans feel ashamed of weakness and afraid of rejection, our Western culture is a breeding ground for the kind of shame and self-hatred the Dalai Lama couldn't comprehend. Because so many of us grew up without a cohesive and nourishing sense of family, neighborhood, community or "tribe," it is not surprising that we feel like outsiders, on our own and disconnected. We learn early in life that any affiliation—with family and friends, at school or in the workplace—requires proving that we are worthy. We are under pressure to compete with each other, to get ahead, to stand out as intelligent, attractive, capable, powerful, wealthy. Someone is always keeping score.
After a lifetime of working with the poor and the sick, Mother Teresa's surprising insight was: "The biggest disease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis but rather the feeling of not belonging." In our own society, this disease has reached epidemic proportions. We long to belong and feel as if we don't deserve to.
-unknown
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(95)
-
▼
December
(12)
- Into.
- Mae has a crowd
- Love is painful because it creates the way for bli...
- People are interested in sex, because sex is not r...
- Lanvin is summa cum laude
- What are you doing?
- serve love through the lover, so that you neve...
- Step outside so we can talk about the weather.
- While all humans feel ashamed of weakness and afra...
- Anthony is in the gutter.
- Lilly Hardy
- Nicholas to the stand
-
▼
December
(12)

No comments:
Post a Comment