Posts Tagged ‘an attitude of gratitude’

Revolution of Virtue Trumps Race War

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

 

Do not mistakenly assume I am a white supremacist because of my last posting.  The day prior I posted what I really believe in:  That upon which our form of government and country were founded—a revolution of virtue.

 

You have been warned what is possible as the United States of America sinks into disorder and chaos: We regress and are unable to control ourselves.

 

There are many other lines upon which we might divide and kill one another.  For instance, it could be baseball team endorsement or even eye color.  However it might start, the lowest common denominator of behavior is a civil war based upon race.

 

Be advised the only thing that might pull us through the atrocities of the coming months is a revelation in our behavior based valuing virtue.  For many this will require a return to God in order to make the changes necessary. 

 

Let me clarify:  This means valuing people, valuing relationships over things, over that retirement of which you were recently robbed.  One values one’s word and one’s character above taking unfair advantage over others.

 

This means giving up any deceptive business practice which we may become accustomed to engaging, especially those we perpetrate upon others by acts of commission or omission.  In the language of a six year old, this means giving up lying.

 

This means ceasing business with any and every company that is not honest or not completely on the up and up.  This includes utility companies and every corporation that practices deceptively.  If their advertising is deceptive to any degree, they are to be shunned.

 

By boycotting those who lie and deceive, we shut them down, teach them a lesson.  Generally the fittest who value honesty and virtue as we do will survive and thrive.

 

The revolution of virtue and an attitude of gratitude are only antidotes to guide and to manage & minimize the government intrusions and other invasions that will soon be upon us. 

 

To those who want to be prepared, I recommend (a) getting in good physical condition and (b) building your relationship with the Holy Ghost.

 

Guns aren’t going to save you but may help.  The weapons our own government has and their diabolical plans (Forced vaccination against the current swine flu—a man made strain of flu!) are unbelievable.

 

I will close:  A revolution valuing virtue that builds character is the best way to overcome the enemy and the insanity of their programming & brain washing.  Violence is their language and violence plays right into their plans.  This can only be won spiritually.  This is a spiritual battle for the mind.

 

This is Psychosociopolitical Warfare.

 

A Delayed Sense of Gratification: “An Attitude of Gratitude”

Monday, January 19th, 2009

 

As I said during one of my earlier shows (Check my Archived Shows as they are edited commercial free.), I got by for years earning a very meager living in order to become a psychologist.  One of my early lessons with my mentor was facing my impoverished sense of delayed gratification.  It was underdeveloped.

 

For years I lived out of card board boxes and my mattress (no box spring or frame) was on the floor.  A cardboard box with a towel over it served as a night stand.  Even though I probably qualified for Food Stamps and had a lot of seemingly tremendous unmet needs, I would motivate myself via my self talk.  And I would ask myself each day:

 

“What can I do without today?”

 

“What can I live without today?”

 

You’d be surprised what you can do without for one day that day, today.  I learned during extremely hard times to enjoy little things and dwell on them.  Rather than focus on what was wrong or what I didn’t have, I learned the peace & positive frame of mind achievable just by having an attitude of gratitude for the seemingly simple things in life.

 

Let’s see . . .   I slept in peace last night.  I’m having three meals today.  I got a shower and my clothes are clean.  Such simple things as dwelling on the beauty of the day, the smell of the roses if you will, became very important to me. 

 

From a dear one I learned to admire and enjoy the finer things, such as automobiles, of others from a distance.  Not so much wanting one but just enjoying the fact they were around and I could see them.  Just enjoying those for their beauty and reminding myself that I didn’t have to own an expensive car in order to enjoy the beauty in someone else’s instilled a wonderful peace.

 

I hope you, too, can develop a sense of delayed gratification, an attitude of gratitude and enjoy your life as much as I have mine.