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Thought for today!

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    Votes: 44 88.0%
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I am curious to know what is the browser and/or font type/size that is being used to create your post. I mostly use IE browser, which displays your 'Thought for the day' in small-sized font, but if I switch to Firefox browser, I get a bigger display. Strangely this happens only with your thread and not with any one else. I am posting a screen-print of the display from each browser, so you can observe the peculiarity.

Maybe, this can constitute a 'Thought for the day' ?
Which Font.webp
 
"The evil you do remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!" .. Read the story ahead ....
~ Contributed by Shri C V Sathya Narayan ji.

A woman baked bread for members of her family and an extra one for a hungry passerby. She kept the extra Bread on the window sill, for whosoever would take it away.

Every day, a hunchback came and took away the Bread.

Instead of expressing gratitude, he muttered the following words as he went his way: “The evil you do remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!"

This went on, day after day. Every day, the hunchback came, picked up the bread and uttered the words: "The evil you do, remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!"

The woman felt irritated. "Not a word of gratitude," she said to herself... “Everyday this hunchback utters this jingle! What does he mean?"

One day, she was very annoyed and decided to do away with him. "I shall get rid of this hunchback, “she said. And what did she do? She added poison to the bread she prepared for him!

As she was about to keep it on the window sill, her hands trembled. "What is this I am doing?" she said. Immediately, she threw the Bread into the fire, prepared another one and kept it on the window sill.

As usual, the hunchback came, picked up the Bread and muttered the words: "The evil you do, remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!"

The hunchback proceeded on his way, blissfully unaware of the war raging in the mind of the woman.

Every day, as the woman placed the Bread on the window sill, she offered a prayer for her son who had gone to a distant place to seek his fortune. For many months, she had no news of him... She prayed for his safe return.

That evening, there was a knock on the door. As she opened it, she was surprised to find her son standing in the doorway.

He had grown thin and lean. His garments were tattered and torn. He was hungry, starved and weak.

As he saw his mother, he said, “Mom, it's a miracle I'm here. While I was but a mile away, I was so famished that I collapsed. I would have died, but just then an old hunchback passed by. I begged of him for a morsel of food, and he was kind enough to give me whole Bread.

As he gave it to me, he said, “This is what I eat everyday: today, I shall give it to you, for your need is greater than mine!"

As the mother heard those words, her face turned pale. She leaned against the door for support. She remembered the poisoned bread that she had made that morning.

Had she not burnt it in the fire, it would have been eaten by her own son, and he would have lost his life! It was then that she realized the significance of the words: "The evil you do remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!"

Moral: Do Good and don’t ever stop doing good, even if it is not appreciated at that time.
 
As one enters enlightenment, one discovers the illusion of wealth and its value, one discovers the illusion of relationships, affinity to one's land, and affinity to others.

The life is full of illusions, and if one succumbs to the demands of the illusion, one's morality can be compromised.

The higher value one can give is to follow morality as they have experienced morality. To be detached while being compassionate, to choose to do what is right regardless of affinity or wealth.

After all, you are one with the infinite.
 
A true bhakta never quarrels about the nature of God. The name or form
that you assign to God is of no consequence to him, for he knows that
name or form is not his essence but is accepted or assumed only temporarily
for the sake of a particular bhakta.


Shankaracharya
 
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Every living being longs to be perpetually happy, without any misery. Since in everyone
the highest love is alone felt for oneself, and since happiness alone is the cause of love,
in order to attain that happiness, which is one's real nature and which is experienced daily
in the mindless state of deep sleep, it is necessary to know oneself. To achieve that, enquiry
in the form 'Who am I?' is the foremost means
 
If a person judiciously use the thought process for a common well being,
then automatically the society will benefit and also one can save the time,
energy as well as unnecessary rift as a result of its implementation.

Balasubramanian
 

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