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Weekly Soul: Week 22 - The Present Moment (Craigie)

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  Today's meditation from Weekly Soul: Fifty-two Meditations on Meaningful, Joyful, and Peaceful Living by Dr. Frederic Craigie. -20-   The quality of one's life depends on the quality of attention. Whatever you pay attention to will grow more important in your life. Deepak Chopra   Achieving artistic and financial success by the early 1890s, Claude Monet purchased his home in Giverny, France and set to work developing a landscape that would inspire his painting in the last 30 years of his life. He received permission from local authorities to divert water from the Epte River to create a pond for cultivating water lilies. Monet spent long hours in his gardens, tending to them, and joyfully observing the constant unfolding of light, colors, and texture. He commented on his attention to his lily pond:   It took me a while to understand my water lilies. I cultivated them without thinking about painting them. A landscape doesn’t captivate you in just one day. And then, ...

How Weak Leaders and Strong Leaders Use SWOT Analysis Differently

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  SWOT analysis—Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats—is a mirror. What it reveals depends on who’s looking. Weak Leaders: The Defensive Mirror Weak leaders use SWOT to justify their status quo. They treat it as a ritual of reassurance, not discovery. Strengths become self‑promotion. They inflate what’s working to avoid scrutiny. Weaknesses are minimized or reframed as “external factors.” Admitting them feels unsafe. Opportunities are filtered through fear—“What if it fails?” Threats dominate the conversation, reinforcing caution and control. Their SWOT becomes a shield against change. It protects ego, not strategy. Strong Leaders: The Reflective Compass Strong leaders use SWOT to navigate reality. They treat it as a living map, not a static chart. Strengths are leveraged, not glorified. They ask, “How can we use this to help others?” Weaknesses are mined for growth. They ask, “What systems make this weakness possible?” Opportunities are pursued with courage an...

How My Cat Made Me a Better Neighbor

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  My cat has no concept of boundaries — emotional, geographic, or social. Naturally, this has improved my standing on the block. He introduced me to everyone. Not by choice. He simply walked into their yards, porches, garages, and once, their SUV. I had to follow with apologies and small talk. Boom: instant community. He forced me to be observant. If a neighbor’s window is open, he’s in it. If their door is ajar, he’s halfway through. I now notice things like “Your gate latch is loose” or “Your Amazon package has been sitting out since Tuesday.” He taught me diplomacy. Nothing builds negotiation skills like retrieving a cat who has decided he lives with the people across the street now. He made me generous. When your cat eats a neighbor’s plants, you show up with muffins. It’s the law. He softened the block. People who never spoke now wave at me because they know my cat. Some even ask about him by name. I’m basically the cat’s plus-one in my own neighborhood. My cat ...