Discovered Inspirations

I love manifestos!  I hope one day I can create my own manifesto.  In the meantime, I surround myself with manifestos I chance upon to invite more positivity in my life.  I have shared the Lululemon Manifesto and Do the Crazy Thing Manifesto before and I want to share another manifesto making the rounds on the internet for sometime now which starts with, “This is Your Life“.  I discovered that it was from a lifestyle company called “Holstee“.


The Holstee Manifesto


This is your life. Do what you love, and do it often.
If you don’t like something, change it.
If you don’t like your job, quit.
If you don’t have enough time, stop watching TV.
If you are looking for the love of your life, stop; 
they will be waiting for you when you start doing things you love.
Stop over analyzing, life is simple.
All emotions are beautiful.
When you eat, appreciate every last bite.
Life is simple.
Open your mind, arms, and heart to new things and people, we are united in our differences.
Ask the next person you see what their passion is, and share your inspiring dream with them.
Travel often; getting lost will help you find yourself.
Some opportunities only come once, seize them.
Life is about the people you meet, and the things you create with them so go out and start creating.
Life is short.
Live your dream, and wear your passion.

Wishing you a week filled of happy smiles and positive thoughts!

After our clan’s mini-reunion and my Mum’s vacation in Sydney (she went back to Manila last Saturday), I am much more inspired to make a few changes in my life.  I can’t pinpoint what it was but seeing my family has given me new insights and motivation to do better and be better.  Being with them has grounded me, gave me better perspectives and a new direction.  The past six weeks has humbled me and made me more grateful for the blessings I/we have.  At the same time, I realized that some things in our life needs a bigger improvement, hence, a change is in order.

The Husband and I had a good talk about this and I’m glad he is eager to take that chance for change with me.  We are taking little steps here and there.  A big change may not happen soon but we find comfort in the knowledge that our little sacrifices now will be fully realized later on.
This song will always remind me of endless choir practices on weekends with my childhood friends and it was, for me, the most challenging piece we have sung together.


Whenever I’m needing some explanation in an aspect of my life or when my emotions seem to be running on uncertainties, I play this song in my head and draw inspiration from the comfort this song brings.


When feeling tired, down, angry or needing to forgive, this song calls out to me to look into my heart and find love in whatever situation I’m in.  And it is through LOVE that I get the courage to love and forgive myself or others, to accept things as they are and let God take care of me and my loved ones. 

LOVE IS THE ANSWER
by: Raymond Hannisian

Morning comes and I must go; day is breaking yonder.
After all the places I have been, now I’m going home.

I have been to seek the sky, to travel on the highway

And the time has come, I don’t know why
I am going home.

Refrain 2:

Where is the answer to so many questions

I don’t know, so I begin another journey

Where is the meaning for my world 
I see the answer now.

Though we came by diff’rent roads, now we walk together.

Stay beside me all our days, strangers never more.

Through the cool of summer rains, by the hearthside fire

Here I’ll be with you when nothing remains
I am home to stay.

Refrain 2:

For love is the answer to so many questions

Now I know, and I can stop my endless wand’ring

Love gives the meaning to my world

I see the answer now.

Love gives meaning to my world

And I see the answer now

Love is the Answer… Love!

{video source}


Have a great week, everyone!

Since Chuck ended, the Husband and I have been on the lookout for a new TV series worth watching.   This weekend, we were happy to discover SMASH, a TV series about what goes on in producing a theatre show in New York.

As theatre enthusiasts, we got interested with the storyline when we read about it online.   We got ourselves a copy of the first episode and towards the end, we were hooked.  We finished three episodes of the Season 1  in one day and we can’t wait to see how the story will unfold.  At this early too, we are already loving the songs featured in the series.

If you like Glee and if you are a theatre enthusiast, I suggest you have a go at watching the first episode and see if you’d like SMASH too.



At the end of the third episode, one of the lead characters named Ivy Lynn (portrayed by Megan Hilty) sang an inspiring song that calls out to dreamers like me.  Read the lyrics below and if you have time, please play the video to hear the song.

Crazy Dreams 
(originally by Carrie Underwood)
Sung by Megan Hilty in SMASH

Hello you long-shots, you dark horse runners,
Hair brush singers, dash-board drummers,
Hello you wild magnolias, just waiting to bloom.
There’s a little bit of all that inside of me and you,
Thank God even crazy dreams come true.

I’ve stood at the bottom of some walls I thought I couldn’t climb.
I felt like Cinderella at the ball, just running out of time.
So I know how it feels to be afraid, and think that it’s all gonna slip away
Hold on, Hold on.

Here’s to you free souls, you fire-fly chasers.
Tree climbers, porch swingers, air guitar players.
Here’s to you fearless dancers, shaking walls in your bedrooms
There’s a lot of wonder left inside of me and you,
Thank God even crazy dreams come true

Never let a bad day be enough, to go and talk you into giving up.
Sometimes everybody feels like you, oh, feels like you, just like you, yeah.

I’ve met some go-getters, some difference makers.
Small town heros, and big chance takers.
I’ve met some young hearts with something to prove.
Oh yeah.

Here’s to you long-shots, you dark horse runners
Hair brush singers, dash-board drummers
Here’s to you wild magnolias, just waiting to bloom.
There’s a little bit of all that inside of me and you.

Thank God even crazy dreams come true.
Thank God even crazy dreams come true, yeah.



Have a great week and may we all be inspired to dream the crazy dreams!

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I received a this forwarded email from a dear friend and found the suggestions below very insightful.  May we all have a blessed season of Lent. 

Fasting, praying and almsgiving are the three penitential practices that we are asked to engage in during Lent. In addition to fasting and abstaining with the rest of the Church on Ash Wednesday and the Fridays of Lent, we are also challenged to make individual sacrifices appropriate to our own spiritual condition. However, before we choose something to give up for Lent, it’s important to assess our current spiritual state:

  • What habits do I engage in that are destructive to my spiritual health?
  • To what material things am I too attached?
  • What areas in my life are unbalanced?
  • To what do I devote too much or not enough time?

Only after asking questions like these are we are ready to decide what to give up or what to add to our lives during Lent. The following list is meant to be an aid in this process. Use it as you need based on your current circumstances.

“Through fasting and praying, we allow Him to come and satisfy the deepest hunger that we experience in the depths of our being: the hunger and thirst for God.”

–Pope Benedict, Lenten message, 2009

The Usuals:
1. Give up candy/sweets.
2. Give up television time.
3. Give up eating snacks between meals.
4. Give up or limit soda or coffee.
5. Give up or limit video games.
6. Spend more time with family.
7. Give to the poor.
8. Do an extra chore each day.
9. Perform a random act of kindness.
10. Spend more time in prayer.

Prayer:
1. Pray a book of scripture using lectio divina.
2. Attend Mass on a weekday (every day if possible).
3. Pray the rosary each day, alone or with your family.
4. Prayerfully read Abandonment to Divine Providence.
5. Make a special prayer notebook and list all the people in your life who need prayers; pray for them each day. Add someone new every day.
6. Learn to pray the Liturgy of the Hours.
7. Make a commitment to attend Eucharistic Adoration regularly.
8. Commit to examining your conscience each evening.
9. Pray the Jesus Prayer throughout the day.
10. Pray the Angelus each day at noon.


For Those Addicted to Popular Culture:
1. Switch from regular radio to Christian music radio or Catholic talk radio.
2. Avoid shows with gratuitous sex or violence.
3. Give up or limit watching sports on television.
4. Listen to only classical music for the next 40 days.
5. Drive to work in silence each day.
6. Read a work of classic literature.
7. Read a Catholic classic.
8. Read a story to a child.
9. Sit in fifteen minutes of silence each day.
10. Write a letter to God each day.


For Internet Users/Bloggers:
1. Set time limits on overall online time.
2. Limit Facebook time.
3. Limit Myspace time.
4. Resist making or adding to lists that rank people.
5. Share one spiritual video with your online network once a week.
6. Blog about the poor once a week.
7. Add a spiritual blog to your blog reader.
8. Subscribe to a prayer podcast like Pray As You Go or Pray Station Portable.
9. Leave an encouraging or positive comment on a different blog each day.
10. Help a new blogger by sending traffic their way.


For Those Who Need to Be More Grateful:
1. Each week, write a letter of thanks to a different member of the clergy, beginning with your bishop and parish priest.
2. Each week write a thank-you note to your parents.
3. Write a poem of praise for each person in your family.
4. Get a stack of sticky-notes and write one sentence of thanks each day and stick it to the bedroom door of each person in your family so that by Easter they each have 40 sticky-notes.
5. Find the psalms of thanksgiving or praise in the Bible and pray them.
6. Write a list of the ways God has blessed you and add to it each day. This could be done in a notebook or on a big poster hanging on your wall.
7. At dinner each evening ask your family to share one thing for which they are grateful.
8. Make a CD or iPod playlist of praise and worship music and listen to it each day.
9. Make a point of saying “Thank You” a certain number of times per day.
10. Help your children write thank you letters to their teachers.


For Those With Lives Out of Balance:
1. Go for a walk each day with a loved one and talk about life and faith.
2. Take the kids to the park each week for some carefree time.
3. Give up fast food and give the money to charity.
4. Exercise each day.
5. Spend at least half an hour each day in meaningful conversation with your spouse.
6. Go on a Lenten retreat.
7. Pray with Sacred Space each day.
8. Commit to a daily 3 Minute Retreat.
9. Begin the online 34-week Retreat for Everyday Life.
10. Give up your most unhealthy habit.


For Those Who Need Spiritual Nourishment:
1. Read the documents of Vatican II, especially Gaudium et Spes.
2. Read The Cathechism of the Catholic Church or The United States Catholic Catechism for Adults.
3. Sign up for adult formation classes at a local parish.
4. Join a Bible study.
5. Attend Stations of the Cross at a local parish.
6. Find a spiritual director.
7. Read The Imitation of Christ.
8. Listen to a free Catholic audio book from Maria Lectrix.
9. Read Introduction to the Devout Life.
10. Read a spiritual autobiography (i.e., Augustine’s Confessions, Story of a Soul, Journal of a Soul, Witness to Hope)


For Those Who Need to Increase Their Service to the Needy:
1. Volunteer at soup kitchen or other food program.
2. Coordinate a food drive at your parish, school or place of employment.
3. Find out who in your parish is sick and offer to visit them or bring them food.
4. Call your local Catholic Charities office and volunteer.
5. Begin making visits to a nursing home.
6. Help an elderly or disabled person in your neighborhood with yard work or other difficult chores.
7. Become a hospital volunteer.
8. Become part of a prison ministry team.
9. Coordinate a clothing drive.
10. Make rosaries and give them away.


For Those Who Need to Be More Active in Their Parish:
1. Become a lector.
2. Volunteer to become an Extraordinary Minister of the Eucharist
3. Volunteer to help with the parish youth group.
4. After each Mass stay awhile and introduce yourself to someone you don’t know.
5. Join the Knights of Columbus.
6. Offer to be a Confirmation sponsor.
7. Volunteer to be an usher.
8. Offer to help with funeral dinners.
9. Help with the RCIA program.
10. Volunteer to do lawn work, cleaning or other needed maintenance for the parish.


Potpourri:
1. Begin to receive the Sacrament of Penance weekly.
2. Give up foul language.
3. Give up gossiping.
4. Read and study Healing the Culture.
5. Study the life of a different saint each day.
6. Cook dinner each night for your family if someone else normally does.
7. Pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy.
8. Carry extra food in your car, purse or backpack to give to street corner beggars.
9. Begin practicing socially conscious investing.
10. Spend a week meditating on each of the seven principles of Catholic social teaching.
11. Make breakfast each morning for your family.


Conclusion:
Lent is a tremendous opportunity for spiritual growth. I hope these suggestions re-energize you on your spiritual journey. If you try one or more of these ideas, or if you’d like to share your own Lenten practices, please leave a comment. 
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