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jorr lundstrom
2nd March 2011, 02:26
Have you met Guidion?

Talesien was a wellknown bard in the early Arthurian myth.

He had an uncle named Guideon.

Guideon was a wizard, his speciality was to turn humans into animals.

One full moon night Guideon was out in a forrest walking along a path.

Suddenly he heard someone whining a short distance from the path.

He went towards the sound.

He found a wolf-pit, and in the pit stood a boy looking to be about seven years.

Guidion watch him silently.

Mister could you help me up from his pit, the boy said.

Guideon watched the boy for a couple of seconds, turned around and went his way.

modwiz
2nd March 2011, 03:08
Good one Jorr. I had to run it through my fingers to appreciate the depth of the message.
I am loving this one, and you too my friend.
Love and carrots for you and raw meat for the boy.

Maria Stade
2nd March 2011, 03:21
Yes we do fall in the pit many times in life !

And hopefully we learn how to get out of it or how to not fall in it again !

I have seen so many parents fixing all for their children here in Sweden and they are helpless in life later on.

Are we developing or...

Thank you for the reminder !

All LOVE :luv:

jorr lundstrom
2nd March 2011, 03:24
Yeah Modwiz Guideon is one of my most beloved friends.

Totally impossible to appreciate if one is programmed with an obession to "help" everybody all the time

and projects need into every selfcreated difficulty. Could we please stop torture each other with christian

church programming. :biggrin:

Icecold
2nd March 2011, 03:32
Jesus spoke a lot about false goodness, about how many leaders of the faith are putting on Oscar-worthy performances of their own goodness in front of an audience of God or their community. (This is true for both 'moral' goodness and good-naturedness or helpfulness.) God's not impressed. And "fake it 'til you make it" doesn't make it before God. Mark Twain once wrote that it is "very wearying to be good". It takes work to be consistently good, because it's so thoroughly against our natural inclinations.