Showing posts with label peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peace. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Christmas Truce of 1914

 

"If men must hate, perhaps its just as well that they make no Christmas Truce."

So said the New Yorker just before Christmas, 1914. The recently elected Pope Benedict XV had appealed to Europeean leaders for a Christmas Truce, so that “that the guns may fall silent at least upon the night the
angels sang.” World leaders unanimously rejected that idea. The commander of the British Second Corps, General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien, issued a memo prohibiting any friendly interactions with German soldiers, fearing the close proximity to the enemy could lead to a live and let live attitude, endangering morale. In some places, the no man’s land between enemy trenches spanned less than 100 feet. Enemy troops were sometimes so close they could hear each other and even smell their cooking.
 
A severe frost swept across the Western Front on December 24th. In some places, snow fell. Water froze in the trenches around soldiers' feet. Leutnant Walther Stennes of the German 16th Infantry Regiment and his companions opened letters and parcels sent from home, all the while amazed by the quiet:
“We opened the parcels and tried to be a little like at home— write letters. Of course it was unusual that the opposite side also ceased fire, because they always maintained sparse rifle fire. … The night passed, [and] not a single shot was fired.”

On the other side of the barbed wire strewn no man's land seperating the warring sides, Allied soldiers were also opening letters and parcels from home. Private William Quinton, of the 2nd Bedfordshire Regiment, noted:
“Here and there, showing just above their parapet, we could see very faintly what looked like very small colored lights.… Suddenly, across the snow-clad no man’s land, a strong clear voice rang out, singing the opening lines of “Annie Laurie.” It was sung in perfect English, and we were spellbound.…As the last notes died away, a spontaneous outburst of clapping arose from our trenches. Encore! Good old Fritz!”

The sounds of rifle fire and exploding shells ceased. The sheer misery of daily life in the cold, wet, dull trenches was enough to motivate troops to initiate a truce on their own. Small white flags fluttered above the trenches. Germans held up signs reading “You no shoot, we no shoot.”

 The signs of a thaw in relations gave men the courage to test the waters despite the obvious risks involved in climbing out of their trenches. Imagine the bravery it took for the first man to lift his head and step out of the relative safety of the trench onto the No Man's Land littered with days or weeks worth of dead bodies. Cautiously at first, by ones and twos, and then by the thousands, soldiers from both sides put down their rifles and crawled out of their trenches to greet one another. Men whose bullets and bayonets had been ripping each other apart for weeks now exchanged handshakes and words of kindness. The soldiers traded songs, tobacco and wine with men like themselves, not the monstrous creations of propaganda.
 

The unplanned truce spread organically. Not everyone on the Western Front took part in the truce. Firing continued in many places. One soldier who did not agree with any kind of truce was a young German corporal named Adolf Hitler. Although Hitler’s unit was not on the front lines that Christmas, the future Nazi leader and instigator of the second world war derided the truce, saying,
“Such a thing should not happen in wartime. Have you no German sense of honor left at all?”

Still an estimated two-thirds of the troops on all sides engaged in the once in a lifetime truce. While it lasted, the truce was magical, leading even the Wall Street Journal to observe: “What appears from the winter fog and misery is a Christmas story, a fine Christmas story that is, in truth, the most faded and tattered of adjectives: inspiring.”
 
Descriptions of the Christmas Truce appear in numerous diaries and letters of soldiers from both sides. A British rifleman named J. Reading wrote a letter home to his wife describing the experience: “And our chaps went out to meet them…I shook hands with some of them, and they gave us cigarettes and cigars. We did not fire that day, and everything was so quiet it seemed like a dream.” Another soldier, named John Ferguson, recalled the event with the words: “Here we were laughing and chatting to men whom only a few hours before we were trying to kill!” A German infantryman described how a British soldier set up a makeshift barbershop, charging Germans a few cigarettes each for a haircut.
 
In an interview recorded in the 1960s, German Lieutenant Johannes Niemann, of the Saxon 133rd Regiment told of a soccer game played no man’s land:
A Scottish soldier appeared with a football, which seemed to come from nowhere, and a few minutes later a real football match got underway.… A great many of the passes went wide, but all the amateur footballers, although they must have been very tired, played with huge enthusiasm.… The game finished with a score of three goals to two in favor of “Fritz” against “Tommy.”

In some parts of the Front, the truce only lasted for Christmas Eve or Christmas Day itself. Elsewhere it continued for several days, extending to New Years day. The truce enabled soldiers to celebrate Christmas in a freer, more jovial and above all safer environment. It felt like a dream, gave the men much needed rest, and allowed them to satisfy their natural curiosity about one another. Members of both sides seized the opportunity to work on improving conditions in their trenches, which were, in a word, horrendous. The truce also allowed both sides to bury dead comrades whose bodies had been left exposed for days or even weeks out in the no mans land between enemy trenches.
 
For Captain Charles Stockwell, of the 2nd Royal Welsh Fusiliers, the truce ended early on Boxing Day, (the day after Christmas). The transition from peace back to war was handled with courtesy.
At 8:30am I fired three shots in the air and put up a flag with “Merry Christmas” on it, and I climbed on the parapet. He put up a sheet with, “Thank you” on it, and the German captain appeared on the parapet. We both bowed and saluted and got down into our respective trenches— he fired two shots in the air, and the war was on again!
 
The 1914 Christmas truce did not mark some deep flowering of the human spirit rising up against the war. It was a break from reality, not the dawn of a brave new peaceful world. There have been tales of pauses in the middle of even the most violent conflicts, of truces to allow the dead to be buried, ever since the Iliad and the war against Troy. None has been as famous, as earth shattering, as real as the truce that occurred on the wester Front in France and Belgium in the first year of the so-called Great War. The war that actually did nothing to end all wars.


The peace, short-lived as it was, did something that still resonates today, more than a century later. The event has been immortalized and fictionalized in children’s novels like Michael Foreman’s War Game, in films such as Joyeux Noel and Oh, What a Lovely War! and even a 1960's song called Christmas Bells featuring Snoopy, the Beagle in the "Peanuts" comic strip, battling the German Red Baron.

To see a video of the song, click:
 
In the hundred plus years since that time, the event has been seen as a kind of miracle, a rare moment of peace just a few months into a war that would eventually claim over 15 million lives. It was only a truce, not peace or moral epiphany. Troops willingly went back to war against people they had just broken bread with and exchanged presents with. Even after meeting and putting a face to their enemies, the average soldier remained ready to accept orders to kill without hesitation.
 
Worse still the Great War wreaked such destruction and devastation that soldiers soon grew hardened to brutality. There were scattered burial parties and brief cease-fires at Christmas in 1915. By 1916, the animosity on both sides and the utter brutality of the war quashed any chance of another holiday humanitarian initiative. As far as we know, this kind of organic truce has never happened in a war before, or since.
 


Today, a memorial stands in England’s National Memorial Arboretum commemorating the Christmas Truce: a metal frame representing a soccer ball, with two hands clasped inside it. It was dedicated by Prince William of England on December 12, 2014. On the 100 anniversary in 2014, the English and German national soccer teams staged a friendly match in remembrance of the soldiers’ impromptu soccer games in 1914. 

By the way, England won that 2014 game,  1-0.

Monday, July 26, 2021

FULL CIRCLE

 by Courtney Pierce

Ah . .. the 60s.  When I was ten, back in 1969, everyone seemed to be protesting about something: Vietnam, women's rights, the environment, bloated government, corruption, and the right to free love. Nothing escaped the bobbing signs and chants. The nightly newscasters made us believe everything they said about the unrest was the truth.

Most people bought into the propaganda, but I had questions. Like most kids, I had a knack for stating the obvious when I blurted out a challenge to the narrative. And I assumed my parents had all the answers. 

"So . . . why would anyone want to burn the flag?" I asked my mother.

She drew in a breath, a film reel of information and possible responses clattering behind her eyes. The edge of my seat became thin as I, too, inhaled. All Mom could muster was, "It's complicated."

A completely unsatisfying answer. I was on my own to pull it apart.

I recently poked through some of our faded Polaroid family photos. I dug out one that showed an image of me, a young Dutch-looking girl, holding up two fingers. Peace and feeling groovy.

I had no idea what peace meant. I only hung on the words of the Herman’s Hermits, The Beatles, and Paul Revere and the Raiders. Oh . . . and The Cowsills.

Back then, some things were sacred, especially the summer and winter Olympics. The Games represented those who were proud of their countries and heritage. Anything else would have been unthinkable. Every American was supposed to enjoy a place on the team. I wanted to spin and spin like Dorothy Hamill, to be the best and captivate the world, just like she did. How dare an athlete shake a fist in the air from the medals podium! The thought of not being inspired by patriotism in a global competition seemed like treason to me.

As a family, we erected our American flag on the front of the house for Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and the Fourth of July. I don’t remember what we pledged out loud, but we paid homage to our country. We respected the flag by not ever letting it touch the ground and taking it down at sunset. A proper ceremony on those three holidays required us to fold the flag properly, edges of the stars all nicely tucked to make a perfect triangle.

We of the United States were the good guys. We had to be, because according to the news, all those other countries were the bad guys. The Vietnam War made no sense to me. Nixon made no sense to me. Watergate made no sense to me, either.

As it will all eventually come out, Nixon was a good guy in the wrong place in political time. He couldn’t fight what was really going on at levels we didn’t understand, and still don’t to this day. At the time, all I cared about was what the United States stood for: freedom, liberty, personal rights, and my ability to be a unique individual. 

I rode my bike to imagine what I could do with the life ahead of me. All I needed was to dream big and work hard to make anything happen.

I rode my bike everywhere. My father travelled for work during the week and my mother kept up the house as she never learned to drive. Thank God we lived in the small fishing village of Cohasset, Massachusetts. I could go anywhere I wanted, on foot or on two wheels, the only limit being the endurance of my legs. Mom never worried as long as I got home for dinner.

Oh, what a different world we lived in back then. War and strife around the world were contained in a television, black and white, with rabbit ears and tin foil.

It wasn’t until I entered college at San Jose State University in the late seventies that I realized there were government leaders that didn’t want peace. Free societies were purposely upended to create chaos. The Middle East became a hotbed of hate and division. I turned my back on all the campus protesting and shouts of "Down with the Shah!". I had my dreams to attend to. Plus, I had just gotten married. Betrothed students were a different kind of college attendee. . . outsiders.

I used to laugh when I watched the Miss America Pageant. Most contestants stated they wanted “world peace” as their top goal. What did that mean? We’ve never had it, so how could they know about something they’ve never experienced? The response came off as a throw-away line to the judges who were inspecting the curves of their swimsuits.

It wasn’t until I was steeped in a corporate career that I realized a stealthy war was taking place under my nose. It wasn’t “out there” but all around me: corruption and greed. I watched it in real time over 25 years of takeovers, mergers and acquisitions. Tow the line and make the new owners look good. The only things that changed was the stationary and the percentage of my salary to be contributed to a Political Action Committee, whether I agreed with the principals or not. Play or be forced to the back of the bus.

The whole scenario didn't define me, so I plotted my escape. It took 28 years to achieve that goal, but I did it. I chose to follow my heart. It wasn’t without pain, though. Everything I had dreamed about from those days of riding my bike came true, but the reality of the achievement wasn’t what I thought it would be. I lost a 37-year marriage in the process, gained a soul mate and stepdaughter for life, and now live in the paradise Montana.

It’s ironic, but now that I’m approaching retirement, I’ve come full circle. I’m going back to my original definition of peace: an inner connection to what I personally want to be. I still have the ability to work hard to make goals happen, but the quest has expanded. What I we do that will result in a better world? It's not about me and my personal goals anymore. I guess I've entered the life-stage of what we boomers refer to as wisdom.

A new bike is in the garage. I'd better get riding to plot out the new chapters of humanity. 

Co
urtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Kalispell, Montana with her husband and stepdaughter. She writes for the baby boomer audience. She spent 28 years as an executive in the entertainment industry and used her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor, and mystery. She studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, Courtney is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and Authors of the Flathead. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal.

Print and E-books are available through most major online retailers, including Amazon.com.
Check out all of Courtney's books: 


New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says, "Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love, unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure Delight."

Coming in 2022!


When Aubrey Cenderon moves to Montana after the death of her father, the peace and quiet of Big Sky Country becomes complicated with a knock on the door from the sheriff. An injured grizzly bear is on the loose and it must be eliminated before it kills again. The sheriff's insistence that she buy a gun for protection will present Aubrey with some serious soul-searching, because the grizzly-on-the-run is hunting her too . . . for a different reason.




Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Peace and Love Out of Conflict – the Heart of a Romance Novel ...... by Delsora Lowe

In the United States, July is a symbol of freedom and peace, as it is when we celebrate the signing of the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America. But that freedom came at a cost, as does most everything we do in life. 

Life isn’t filled with parades and marching bands and fireworks and speeches / proclamations about peace and freedom. It is filled with toil and dedication to a cause and brokering consensus and treating all fairly / equally…and conflict. It is all those things mentioned above that make this country stronger, and each individual in this country stronger.

Peace after conflict is vital. As is partnering or negotiating with those who might not agree with you, or be in the same space as you, an important step toward unity and peace.

As in our own lives, and in our hopes and dreams for a peaceful and functioning nation, as romance writers we also want our characters to find peace and joy and that all important and sometimes elusive happily-ever-after or happily-for-now.

But no person or character can find a satisfying end without some heavy-duty work toward achieving happiness along with the angst that is a natural part of any journey.

For me personally, the months of May and June have been filled with work and angst and conflict.

No, it’s not what you think 😊

In the last 6 weeks, I have taken three writing workshops on Conflict, each with a different approach. And each giving me more writer tools to effectively “torture” my characters before they finally conclude they cannot do without the partner I have aligned them with in my story. I put torture in parentheses because I write mainstream contemporary sweet and saucy romance. So, my torture of characters is only enough to make them work for the reward of finding that special person meant just for them.

How do we build enough conflict for our characters to learn, grow, and fall in love? In each workshop I learned many ways of making my stories more exciting for a reader.

In a month-long workshop, where the presenter “tortured” the writers with tons of wonderful information and assignments, I had many AHA moments on things I already knew I must do - things I had been doing - but with a makes-sense, step-by-step way of rooting out the core emotional wounds that make our characters who they are. Whether that internal wound comes from something that happened as a child or as an adult, it guides our character’s way of thinking and therefore reacting. They are the issues that both cause conflict for our characters and force them to overcome deep-seated stressors to find happiness. And in a good romance, the hero or heroine are our primary characters who will be paired up with the ones who will help the other overcome those burdens and move forward to embrace that happily-ever-after.

Internal wounds of a character fighting to resolve themselves and move on.

In another workshop, the presenter talks about the outside forces and / or the internal wounds each character brings to the story. Those are the pieces that generate conflict between the characters, as each individual may react differently to the same root cause. Facing and resolving those triggers individually and then together as the characters grow in the story, helps the characters overcome and open themselves to the happily-ever-after that is a prerequisite for the romance genre. Resolving the genesis of that internal conflict leads to peace and joy for the characters.

In the third workshop, we learned how to make peace with ourselves as a romance writer, while we “torture” our characters by throwing conflict in their paths, when all we really want to do is get to that wonderful, happy ending. The more conflict we throw at our characters, the more chances they have to work hard to overcome challenges. And having to struggle and fight all odds to find love makes it all the sweeter when our characters find love and peace in their lives.

So, celebrate peace while knowing that finding peace may, at times, include a lot of conflict and take a ton of work to overcome struggles. 

Happy July and Peace and Love Be With You!

Book Two of The Cowboys of Mineral Springs

Amazon 
Books2Read   

~ cottages to cabins ~ keep the home fires burning ~

Delsora Lowe writes small town sweet and spicy romances and contemporary westerns from the mountains of Colorado to the shores of Maine.

Author of the Starlight Grille series, Serenity Harbor Maine novellas, and the Cowboys of Mineral Springs series, Lowe has also authored short romances for Woman’s World magazine. Her new novella, The Love Left Behind, released in October, 2020. 

Goodreads Author Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16045986.Delsora_Lowe 
Instagram: #delsoralowe / https://www.instagram.com/delsoralowe/

Saturday, July 17, 2021

The Peaceful Path

by M. L. Buchman

THE WANDERING PATH

I often think that there is little stranger in the world that a writer’s journey. We set out to write one thing but create another. We begin in a favorite genre, yet eventually discover that our voice lies somewhere else. A story begins with a clear picture of a character in the writer’s head, however the character has other ideas and takes stories in unexpected directions. A writer is often the last person to know quite what they’ve written (honestly).

Writing isn’t just a creative path, it is also often a blind one with a hundred curves that the writer can’t see around until they get there. There’s a certain faith that’s required to believe that the road (or sometimes the narrow dusty path that is barely an animal track) continues around the curve—though it always does.

THE CHOSEN PATH

I’m a very peaceful person. Had I been drafted, I’d have been a conscientious objector. I got my black belt so that I could teach my kid how to defend herself in an aggressive world. My writing motto is “To Champion the Human Spirit” which is exemplified in every story I’ve written because I believe that is the path to a more peaceful future. If we can treat each other well, with respect and openness to new ideas, we will be living in a better world.

Sure, I’m saddened by the world’s news (both the human tragedies and the political idiocies), but I choose my own battle in my own way. If people feel uplifted by what I write and try to help, then I have achieved a life’s work. (That I get to make a living doing this is just a crazy bonus.)

THE UNCHOSEN PATH

And yet I write primarily military (military romantic suspense, retired military romance, and, most recently, military/political technothriller). I never served. I don’t come from a military family. (Dad did two years in WWII, mostly to avoid flunking out of college the way his old roommate tells it. But he never spoke about those times working as an anchorman on minesweeper barge that ranged up and down the US East Coast.) Note that I didn’t say I wrote “about the military.” I don’t have the expertise to do that. But I definitely write in the military; a very curious place for a pacifist to land.

I came to it by a curious path. In my second novel, a science fiction space opera that will never again see the light of day, I wrote a “general of the opposing troops.” He was laughed out of the critique room. After far too many revisions, it was acceded that he was finally “at least male.” Knowing this was a weakness in my writing (I write mostly from the viewpoint of strong women), I began to research “men.” I decided that the best place to begin was with elite forces memoir—straight from the “man’s mouth” so to speak. I was specifically interested in those who had chosen the military as a career, not just in for a few tours but rather as a life’s path.

I began with US Navy Seal Chuck Pfarrer’s autobiography Warrior Soul and went on from there. The more I read, the more I came to understand these men (invariably) and their choices. (When female warrior memoir emerged, Shoot Like a Girl, Ashley’s War, Soldier Girls… I certainly plunged into those as well.)

Several interesting things came to light for me. Some obvious, some less so. Not one of these people had joined the military because they liked to fight. Not one of these people thought that war was in any way a good thing. “For God and Country” was not a major theme for the warriors who chose to make a career of the military. Trying to make the world a better place, however, was a major theme. To stop the horror that others were perpetrating on the innocent was also important. The true core? The team. People who stayed in for ten, twenty, thirty years, were doing it because they had made a family of their team. 

THE HIGHER CAUSE & THE TEAM

This is the theme that captured my attention as a writer, and it is a story I’ve been writing ever since. Whether it is a light contemporary romance like my Where Dreams series, an action-adventure political technothriller like my Miranda Chase series, or a military romantic suspense like my Night Stalkers, there is always the higher cause and the team.


The higher cause is invariably: a better world. A better, happier, more peaceful place to be. And whether the team is a romantic couple of two people or an entire company in the military, that “team” strives for that better world with all of their heart and passion.

So, as we celebrate Independence Day (25 countries place their Independence Day in July and, while Canada never declared independence, July includes Canada Day to celebrate the forming of the dominion, so call it 26), I look to so many militaries fighting for peace.

It may sound incongruous, but it isn’t. One only needs to read the news on any day of the year to see that it isn’t. There are so many empires based upon ego and repression and “us versus them” that it is heart-rending. And if someone doesn’t fight back against such avarice and greed, it will dominate.

THE CHOICE

So, as a writer, I curiously found my path to touting peace lies through the eyes of the military. It can be a force to help rather than hinder. I wish we could live in a world where there was no need for the military. Curiously, every warrior biography I’ve read and every service person I’ve spoken with agrees.

Until we can, I found my voice for peace in my writings of the military.

What choice do you make? What story do you try to tell with your writing, with your day job, with what books you recommend to others, with your interaction with every person you come in contact with? Every day is your opportunity to change the world for the better. It doesn’t matter how small the action. Millions of people all taking tiny actions toward a more peaceful world is the vision I hold. Please ask yourself how you do that. I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below.

 

BIO

USA Today and Amazon #1 Bestseller M. L. "Matt" Buchman has 70+ contemporary and military romance novels, and action-adventure thrillers. Also 100+ short stories and lotsa audiobooks. Booklist says: 3x “Top 10 Romance of the Year” and among “The 20 Best Romantic Suspense Novels: Modern Masterpieces.” NPR and B&N say: “Best 5 Romance of the Year.” PW declares: “Tom Clancy fans open to a strong female lead will clamor for more.” A project manager with a geophysics degree, he’s designed and built houses, flown and jumped out of planes, solo-sailed a 50’ sailboat, and bicycled solo around the world…and he quilts. 

More at: www.mlbuchman.com. 

Monday, July 12, 2021

Just Give Peace a Chance!

By: Marcia King-Gamble

www.lovemarcia.com

I’ve decided to take this month’s topic in a totally different direction, because peace really means different things to different people.  

Let’s look at some of the expressions associated with peace.

Peace Out or “goodbye,” is said to originate from the Beastie Boys and the world of hip hop.

Then there’s “Peace be with you.” This is most likely taken from the Hebrew greeting “shalom” and a common Catholic ritual in chirch.  Both Shalom and Peace be with you were said to be used by Jesus after his resurrection.

Then there’s “Peace and Love” originating in the hippie era when the mood of the day was caring, kindness, and freedom. Oh for those days!

But what does peace mean to a writer?

The same applies. It means different things to different writers.

There are writers who need complete silence to write the first word. Other writers require soft music and others rock n roll.  

Some writers book into a cabin or hotel.   Some leave the country. Others employ people to care for their children while they focus on getting that book done.     

 Me? I thrive on chaos, and maybe that’s because I’ve always had a day job, and a demanding one at that.

 I’ve learned to write at airports and in busy hotel lobbies. I’ve learned to write in trains, planes and automobiles.  I can proudly say I can tune everything and everyone out. I write when there is loud conversation around me.  I write under stress. I can even write and converse with you. I’ve had many years of practice to do just that.

Peace to me comes from a safe place within. It’s the tranquility you find when you are truly happy. It’s the ability to find a certain inner calm, and to tune everything out, and focus on producing good work. It’s getting into the zone.

Peace can be achieved through meditation, yoga, and even exercise. Some find it through prayers, chanting and drumming. Others find it while reading and listening to classic music. In any lamguage it means contentment.

However you find it, as John Lennon so aptly put it, just give peace a chance.

Namaste!  I am bowing to you.




About Marcia King-Gamble

Romance writer, Marcia King-Gamble originally hails from a sunny Caribbean island where the sky and ocean are the same mesmerizing shade of blue. This former travel industry executive has spent most of life in the United States. A National Bestselling author, Marcia has penned over 34 books and 8 novellas. She has contributed to Michael Fiore’s DigitalRomanceInc and served as a moderator on the now defunct eHarmony advice boards.  Having witnessed the bad, the ugly, and the not so good in relationships, she still prefers to write about happily ever after. Caring for her animal family keeps her grounded and sane.

Visit Marcia at www.lovemarcia.com or “friend” her on Facebook: http://bit.ly/1MlnrIS

Be sure to join her newsletter mailing list.

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Saturday, July 10, 2021

Inner Peace, Justice and Peace on Earth

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         Hi, I'm Sarah Raplee, author of surprising and uplifting stories.

         Whenever I listen to the song that begins, “Let there be Peace on Earth, and let it begin with me,” I wonder, How? How do we as individuals incorporate peace in our lives? How do we work toward peace in the world?

          For this post, I collected quotes from around the world that helped me to understand what I can do to find peace, to spread peace in my daily life and to support world peace.

Finding Peace

  • “Peace begins with a smile.” ~ Mother Theresa
  • “When you make peace with yourself, you make peace with the world.” ~ Maha Ghosananda
  • “Do not let the behavior of others destroy your inner peace.” ~ Dalai Lama
  • “In everything, do unto others what you would have them do unto you. For this sums up the Law and the Prophets.” ~ Christianity, Matthew 3:12
  • “Do not offend others as you would not want to be offended.” Buddhism, Udunavarga 5:18
  • “None of you are true believers until you love for your brother what you love for yourself.” ~ Prophet Mohammed
  • “Do your little bit of good where you are; it’s those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.” ~ Desmond Tutu

Understanding, Justice and Love

  • “Not one of us can rest, be happy, be at home, be at peace with ourselves, until we end hatred and division.” ~ John Lewis
  • “It isn’t enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn’t enough to believe in it. One must work at it.” ~ Eleanor Roosevelt
  • “Peace cannot be kept by force. It can only be achieved by understanding.” ~ Albert Einstein
  • “Cleanse ye your eyes, so that ye behold no man as different from yourselves. See ye no strangers; rather see all men as friends. For love and unity come hard when ye fix your gaze on otherness…we must be at one with every people…for each of the creatures is a sign from God, and it was by the grace of the Lord and His power that each did step into the world; therefore, they are not strangers but in the family; not aliens, but friends, and to be treated as such.” ~ Abdu’l-Baha’
  • “When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will have peace.” ~ Jimi Hendrix

One World, One Human Race

  • Peace is not the absence of conflict. It is the ability to handle conflict by peaceful means. ~ Ronald Reagan
  • “Peace is not merely the absence of war, but the presence of justice, of law, of order—in short, of government.” ~ Albert Einstein
  • “It is incumbent upon the sovereigns of the world…to convene an all-inclusive assembly, which either they themselves or their ministers will attend, and to enforce whatever measures are required to establish unity and concord amongst men. They must put away the weapons of war, and turn to the instruments of universal reconstruction. Should one king rise up against another, all the other kings must arise to deter him. Arms and armaments will then be no more needed, beyond that which is necessary to ensure the internal security of their respective countries.” ~ Baha’u’llah

 I will end by sharing with you a poem and a prayer that help me to find inner peace.

From a Sanskrit Poem:

Look to this day!
For it is life, the very life of life.
In its brief course lie all the verities and realities of your existence:
The bliss of growth,
The glory of action,
The splendor of beauty.
For yesterday is but a dream
and tomorrow only a vision.
But today, well lived, makes
Every yesterday a dream of happiness,
And every tomorrow a vision of hope.
Look well, therefore, to this day.
Such is the salutation of the dawn.

The Serenity Prayer

God, grant me the serenity to accept
the things I cannot change,
courage to change the things I can,
and the wisdom to know the difference.

Happy Peacemaking!!! ~Sarah

Friday, July 9, 2021

I've found peace!!!

by Diana McCollum

 

Since my husband and I decided in April 2021 to move to CA to be closer to family my life has been in constant turmoil! 

 

We spent the month of April in CA looking around to see what area we wanted to move to. We managed to narrow it down to two areas. Both with things we liked and didn’t like.

 

We came home to OR on May 1, 2021, and listed our house on the market three days later. After that came the whirlwind of packing all personal items, things off dressers or cupboards with glass doors. All photos and art work off the walls. The realtor wanted all items off the kitchen counters, end tables in living and bedrooms and bathroom counters. Next came pictures by a professional photographer.

 

Meanwhile, it was like living in a warehouse. The area rugs had all been rolled up and put in the garage. Walking into the living room everything echoed. The house had lost its personality!!!

 

We went back to CA and found a house in a mountain town. Where we live in OR the population has grown to 134,000 people. Small town life what we like. The house we bought is at  2,200 ft elevation so no deep snow and above the fog line in the valley. Plus, we’ll be going from 1.1 acre to ½ acre. Is bigger than the one we have now. It has a sunroom, koi pond, four fruit trees and landscaped beautifully. We are very excited!! Peace for me today!

The OR realtor knew what he was doing. Our house sold 3 weeks to the day of being listed. 

 

Now the garage has 200 Costco black with yellow lid storage boxes stacked up inside with our belongings. Our first trip back to CA will be to take those boxes. Then sign papers for the new house, and come back to OR to load up the furniture and the last of our stuff, then ‘Adios!’.

 

We’ve been smarter about this move and have hired help on both ends of the move to load and unload the rental truck.

 

I can truthfully say I am now at peace for the first time in 3 ½ months! 

 

My writing life has been put on hold during this time. Our new place has several options for writing room/areas and even in the sun room off the living room. I have options!!

 

In my whole life and through two marriages I’ve moved 21 times. How many times have you moved?

 

May you all have a peaceful and blissful summer!





 



Thursday, July 8, 2021

Finding Peace by Lynn Lovegreen

 This month’s RTG theme is peace. In our current world, it can be hard to find peace of mind. It’s easy to get overwhelmed by the news or the negative things in our lives. But it’s essential for our mental and physical health to take a step back and find peace. Here are a few ideas in case you need some to get you started.

 

Find one beautiful thing and focus on that for a minute or two. Maybe you have a plant or picture in your home, or there are lovely clouds out your window. Just enjoy the beauty and breathe.




Spend time with someone you love. You might live with a person your love, or have a friend or family member you can be with in person or call on the phone. Whoever it is, carve out a little time with them. Or if it’s not a person, maybe there’s a pet you love—that can count, too.

 

Give yourself some “me” time. Maybe you’re stretched thin from all the obligations others place on you, or you place on yourself. In that case, be the friend to yourself that you are for others. Take time to do something for yourself. Take a walk, read a book, whatever you need to recharge. 


Take a deep breath and do what you need to do. Find some peace. You are worth it.

 

Lynn Lovegreen has lived in Alaska for over fifty years. After twenty years in the classroom, she retired to make more time for writing. She enjoys her friends and family, reading, and volunteering at her local library. Her young adult historical fiction is set in Alaska, a great place for drama, romance, and independent characters. See her website at www.lynnlovegreen.com. You can also find her on Facebook and Instagram.



Tuesday, July 6, 2021

My personal peace...

According to the online Oxford Dictionary of English, peace can mean freedom from disturbance and/or tranquillity; or, mental or emotional calm; or, a state or period in which there is no war or a war has ended.

In no particular order, here are five things that bring me personal peace, i.e. tranquility and mental calm:

Baking – I’ve only recently come to realize that baking for family and friends is my love language. Hey, I’m a slow learner. Not only does time spent in the kitchen with flour, sugar, butter, and eggs fill me with a sense of peace, but it also brings me joy when the fruits of my labours are enjoyed by those I care for. 

 


Knitting – An excuse to sit and let my thoughts wander while being productive. Like day dreaming with permission, hehe. Particularly calming are dish cloths knitted with a pattern I make up on the fly. Quick, easy, and if I purl when I should have knit, no one will care about the goof because the dish cloth will still do its job. No pressure.

Photo by Margarida Afonso on Unsplash

Camping – What I’ve called communing with nature is what some now call forest bathing. I’ve been reaping the benefits of camping under the stars, far away from civilization, for years. Sure I miss the flush toilet, sure I curse the biting bugs, but watching the moon glimmer on the lake whilst I’m serenaded by loons and owls is worth the primitive conditions and the occasional itchy bite. And waking to the sounds of birds tweeting, squirrels chattering, and frogs practicing their diving is something I treasure. Even the astoundingly loud patter of rain on the tent is calming.

Kayaking – Exercise whilst sitting, surrounded by the mysterious depths of ocean, lake, or stream. Though the streams I’ve explored aren’t terribly deep, so there’s not much mystery, unless the flash of a fish catches my eye and makes me wonder what species it is. The lake is a bit more mysterious, but I’m pretty sure the dark water is hiding only fish, diving turtles, and slimy weeds. I find the ocean a bit scary so I tend to not think about what lies in wait beneath the surface. (Particularly in recent years when Great White Sharks have been spotted in my area.) I’ll happily sit and let the tide or wind carry me where it will whilst I watch the Ospreys fish, wait for the Great Blue Heron to catch something, and pray the seagull doesn’t poop on my head.

Pulling weeds – Another mindless and productive activity that allows for wandering thoughts, and gives me something to show for the time spent outdoors in the sun. I’m striving for a meadow rather than a lawn and so am judicious in the weeds I pull. They are just misplaced wildflowers after all. I have a large planting of what is called bog thistle that I’ve decided needs to go – it’s in the way of foot traffic to and from the hen house. But I’ll wait until late fall to dig it up so the goldfinches will have time to feast on the seeds.

Photo by Gary Fultz on Unsplash

What all these activities have in common is they give me time and space for my thoughts to wander. I can’t tell you what I’m contemplating as I sift flour or wind yarn, not because it’s a scandalous secret (I wish! Wouldn’t it be fun to hold a scandalous secret?) but because it’s ho-hum stuff like “I wonder what that bug is” or “the neighbour’s dog WILL NOT SHUT UP!” or “I wish I had pre-cut parchment paper for my round cake tins”. After a while, even those thoughts fade and I’m left with a feeling of tranquility, a large pile of weeds added to the compost pile, or a few dozen ginger snaps.


Luanna Stewart has been creating adventures for her imaginary friends since childhood. She spends her days writing spicy romance ranging from contemporary to paranormal. When not torturing her heroes and heroines, she’s in her kitchen baking something delicious. She lives in Nova Scotia with her patient husband, two spoiled cats, and five hens.

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Saturday, July 3, 2021

Peace in Images


FIND  PEACE IN NATURE



 







FIND  PEACE IN RELATIONSHIPS












FIND  PEACE IN REST










FIND  PEACE IN CREATIVITY



What are your ways to find peace in daily life?

Please share in the comments.