Relating With Enemies

Henepola Gunaratana writes in Mindfulness in Plain English, For all practical purposes, if all of your enemies are well, happy and peaceful, they would not be your enemies. If they are free from problems, pain, suffering, affliction, neurosis, psychosis, paranoia, fear, tension, anxiety, etc., they would not be your enemies. Your practical solution towards your […]

Being Thankful for Small Blessings

Dharma teacher Pamela Gayle White writes in Skunked by Gratitude, So many factors demand our attention; isn’t it awesome that we have at least some influence over what we choose to focus on? And if there is power in acknowledging and being thankful for even small blessings, the power of finding meaning in the face […]

W. B. Yeats’s Praise of Tagore’s Gitanjali

The Irish poet W. B. Yeats wrote the introduction to the second edition of Rabindranath Tagore’s Gitanjali (Song Offerings): Flowers and rivers, the blowing of conch-shells, the heavy rain of the Indian July, or the parching heat, are images of the moods of that heart in union or in separation; and a man sitting in […]

Quality Leadership: The Key to Quality Management

According to American-Romanian quality pioneer Joseph M. Juran, the significant factors that have aided first-rate organizations realize their top-quality positions are all leadership related: The chief executives personally led the quality initiative. They trained the entire managerial hierarchy in managing for quality. They enlarged the business plan to include strategic quality goals. The goals included […]

Don’t Follow Your Passion, Follow Your Talent

In the bestselling The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google, New York University-academic and business analyst Scott Galloway offers a amendment to the cliched follow-your-passion career advice: Don’t follow your passion, follow your talent. Determine what you are good at (early), and commit to becoming great at it. You don’t have […]

Kids Who Are Different

“Kids Who Are Different”—A poem by English-born actor Digby Wolfe: Here’s to the kids who are different,The kids who don’t always get A’sThe kids who have ears twice the size of their peers,And noses that go on for days … Here’s to the kids who are different,The kids they call crazy or dumb,The kids who don’t […]

Unchangeables and Changeables of Human Nature

Few leaders have exemplified and towered over their countries as Lee Kuan Yew did in Singapore. The city-state’s founder and long-time leader stated at his 60th birthday dinner in 1983, What have I learned since 1973? Some more basic unchangeables about human beings and human societies, the ways in which they can be made to […]

Management by Objectives

Peter Drucker introduced the idea of Management by Objectives and Self-Control (MbO) as all encompassing management concept, which he set in context in The Practice of Management: The word ‘philosophy’ is tossed around with happy abandon these days in management circles [to create effect to mask the lack of substance]. But management by objectives and […]

G. K. Chesterton on George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw, the most influential 20th-century playwright, indisputably can claim the distinction as the best English dramatist ever since Shakespeare. The English writer, poet, and philosopher G. K. Chesterton wrote about Bernard Shaw in his essays Shaw the Puritan, He is a daring pilgrim who set out from the grave to find the cradle. […]

How We Lose Our High Aspirations

John Stuart Mill in his celebrated book Utilitarianism, Capacity for the nobler feelings is in most natures a very tender plant, easily killed, not only by hostile influences, but by mere want of sustenance; and in the majority of young persons it speedily dies away if the occupations to which their position in life has […]