Monday, March 19, 2012

Longing for eternity...

Longing for eternity...
Click image to visit more works by, Pablo Jimenez Photography.
Longing for eternity…

I long for that which I cannot explain
As my soul conflicts to forget.
Through toil and struggle it still remains,
The balance of peace and regret.

Maybe this desire we find deep within,
Can only be met at life’s end.
Yet one life ends, and another begins
Stilling desire in the hearts of men.

But what is life, in purpose and meaning;
Are there reasons why we exist?
How can one know life from the beginning,
And will knowing bring significance?

Halfhearted pursuits surely promise pain
As we surrender our humanity.
For some seek, and yet few attain,
For the desire we seek is eternity.

Yet it is not that life may be lost
When eternity calls us by name.
We understand not the absence or cost
Restless we are sure to remain.

Chase eternity, then, through love and good deed;
And find significance and purpose for being.

Do good, yet forget not the desire you seek,
Pursue joy in all you do.
It is here, perhaps, amidst desire and pursuit,
That eternity will find you.
Photograph by my friend, Pablo Jimenez.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

The Gift of Giving

This last week I was asked to be featured as a guest blogger for a friend who started an organization called the DAR Project.  I was so encouraged by the offer, and happy to share a few of my own thoughts and experiences on the subject of giving.  Please check out their blog when you have some time! http://darproject.wordpress.com/

The Gift of Giving-

What happens when we give, especially when we give because we know it is in our heart to give?  Something happens, I don’t think anyone will argue that.  The difficulty comes when we try to understand what this gift is that we receive from giving.


During my last two months of traveling my perspective on the subject of ‘change’ has been challenged, and with the challenge came many questions about giving… how should someone give, when should someone give, and even what can we give?  Since I began this trip, I rarely have more to give other than my time, talents, or friendship.  Everything I own fits into my backpack; and when it comes to giving money, I think it needs to be done wisely in order to not create dependence.  Yet in many of my experiences and conversations, I have constantly been reminded that everyone has something to give. 

More and more I feel that in my giving I find myself on the receiving end, instead of simply being the giver.  Even though many of the people I have been blessed to meet have no shoes, no electricity, or no proper place to use the restroom, most of them realize that they all have something to give, and give from whatever they have.  

The trick then is understanding what you have to give, and how you should give it.  We have so much more to give than we realize, and many of us are fully aware of how much we could give yet we don’t.  But what if the challenge wasn’t to give in order to meet the physical needs of others?   Because in my experiences I do not believe my perspective on giving has truly challenge me to understand the humanity we share.  Instead, what if the goal was to fully know what you are giving to, and to express the love that inspired it…  That’s where the giving becomes the gift.  It should be much more than a watered down philanthropic idea of “giving” or “supporting”.  Instead, giving should become, or remain, more about love, care, compassion, and understanding.  



Understanding giving doesn’t mean you have to go to the place to meet the people receiving your gift, or that you can’t donate to a person or a cause you’ve just met.  I believe giving should be as meaningful as receiving, and that is what I hope to explain.  When we give, let’s not give without emotion, or assume we know what other people need.  Let us pursue the gift that comes from giving, the gift given in full understanding that those receiving the gifts are just as much human as you and I, the gift that has the potential to truly change people because it was done with intentions founded in love, and the gift that tells people just how valuable they are.  

We will probably never know the extent of our influence, especially when we give gifts to people we haven’t met.  I do not write to discourage people from being generous, but it is my hope that we pursue the gift that comes from giving, and that we invite other people to experience what we discover.  How?  We start with the desire to know why it feels good to be generous and to question what giving should look like.    It is my hope that we don’t limit what giving might look like, but instead that we pursue all the possibilities of what giving could look like.  Remember, giving is not made possible because there is a need. Giving is made possible because we all have something to give, that’s the gift.