Your short mention about the woman in the butcher's shop who wished Pesach could be cancelled this year, is understandable. We are presently passing through such a hard time of sadness and mourning for loved and lost ones, that it seems to her and to others too, that to make a celebration over our freedom is a bit uncalled for due to so much sadness. It can only be possible when we choose to balance against these awful losses and potential losses, what we actually have left on the other side of the scale for measure and success. These changes are still significant and the following should be applicable:
Your short mention about the woman in the butcher's shop who wished Pesach could be cancelled this year, is understandable. We are presently passing through such a hard time of sadness and mourning for loved and lost ones, that it seems to her and to others too, that to make a celebration over our freedom is a bit uncalled for due to so much sadness. It can only be possible when we choose to balance against these awful losses and potential losses, what we actually have left on the other side of the scale for measure and success. These changes are still significant and the following should be applicable:
Philosophy of Change
Change brings pain—again and again.
Pain brings suffering—uttering, muttering
Suffering brings tolerance—with much endurance.
Tolerance brings thinking—and good ideas linking.
Thinking brings knowledge—saves going to college.
Knowledge brings understanding—sensibility expanding.
Understanding brings wisdom—and where it comes from.
And wisdom makes life bearable—happily declarable!