To all my women friends, and men folks to share with the women in your life.
On this occasion of International Women's day, I wish each one of you a Happy
Women Day. The women many admire and who has been an inspiration to both men
and women and who is my role model is Mother Teresa. A single women made a
difference to the world and given a chance we too can be like her although it
is not easy as it seems but we can if we try to implement her ways of living in
our lives. An article I would like to share on how to be like Mother Teresa.
Mother Teresa is a known person all over the world, known for her being humble,
noble and loving, Her empathy skills are worth emulating. However, the process
of evolution of simple girl Agnes into Mother Teresa is a lesser known data.
Given below is an article, written by Pat & Ruth Williams (with Michael Mink)
In this context. I fervently hope that you all will like it.
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1. Do what you love.
Agnes felt that God was calling her to the sisterhood to serve the poor. She
consulted experts and the priests at her church to help understand her
feelings. “If you are happy with the idea that God calls you to serve him and
your neighbor,” Agnes recalled being told by a priest, “this will be the proof
of your vocation. Profound joy of the heart is like a magnet that indicates
the path of life.”
2. Read constantly.
Reading helped Agnes understand the plight of India ’s poor. Her constant
efforts to learn gave her greater depth and wisdom.
3. Accept no limitations for your life.
sister Teresa had a desire to serve the poor more fully than the Catholic
Church would permit. It seems certain she would have left the Church had she
not been granted the privilege of exclaustration and permission to form a new
order. “I again experienced a call to renounce everything and to follow Christ
into the slums, to serve the poorest of the poor,” she wrote. “I understood
that God wanted something from me…the message was quite clear: I was to leave
the convent and help the poor whilst living among them. It was an order. I
knew where I belonged.”
4. Don’t be afraid to ask for what you need.
Starting alone, Mother Teresa built the Missionaries of Charity into a
worldwide organization through organization through persistent fund-raising
efforts. She boldly asked for money and medical supplies to help the poor.
5. Clearly define what you want to accomplish.
Mother Teresa added a fourth vow to be taken by the Missionaries of Charity:
“To give wholehearted and free service to the poorest of the poor. . . . If
you don’t have the zeal to help the poor, to take good care of the lepers, then
[you] should pack up and go home. . . . no need to stay.”
6. Set an example.
The most effective way to lead is by example. Mother Teresa asked her sisters
to take their vow of poverty farther than those in the convent to help them
understand the “poorest of the poor.” She said: “If we really want to know the
poor, we must know what poverty is. . . . It is why in our society, poverty is
our freedom and our strength.”
7. Be cheerful even if you don’t feel like it.
Even if you have problems in your life that make you unhappy, present a
cheerful demeanor to the outside world. That doesn’t mean you are ignoring
your problems. Rather, you are putting yourself in the best possible frame
of mind to solve them. One of Mother Teresa’s conditions in accepting a
prospective sister into her order was that she have a “cheerful disposition.”
Mother Teresa said, “A cheerful giver is a great giver.” Mother Teresa was
known for her warm greeting and powerful smile that conveyed her great love and
caring. “Let us always greet each other with a smile, for a smile is the
beginning of love,” she said.
8. Care about those in need.
Mother Teresa became, in the words of United Nations General Secretary Javier
Perez de Cuellar, “the most powerful woman in the world,” because she cared for
those in need. “The biggest disease today is not leprosy or cancer or
tuberculosis,” Mother Teresa said, “but rather the feeling of being unwanted,
uncared for, deserted by everybody. The greatest evil is the lack of love and
charity, the terrible indifference towards one’s neighbor….”
9. Learn by experience.
Mother Teresa said to her helpers and volunteers: “ Disco ver ... through
direct contact. Go to Kalighat, the Home for the Dying, and learn your lessons,
not out of a book, but in the rough and tumble of life, among real people….”
10. Write letters.
Written communications, especially thank-you notes, are a powerful way to make
a lasting impression. Florence Nightingale , Clara Barton, Eleanor Roosevelt
and Margaret Thatcher were all great letter writers. Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher :“I have always believed in the impact of a personal handwritten
letter—even from someone you barely know.”
11. Don’t let age slow you down.
Mother Teresa had suffered three serious heart attacks by the time she was
eighty-five and had a pacemaker, but she refused to slow down. “I’ve never
said no to Jesus,” she said, “and I’m not going to begin now. Every day you
have to say yes.”
12. Speak from your heart.
“I make a little cross on my lips with my thumb; then I look straight forward
above the audience and deliver my message,” Mother Teresa told Father Le Joly
about her speaking style.
13. Stay humble.
A world figure and the recipient of a Nobel Peace Prize, Mother Teresa didn’t
get carried away with herself. She credited God and Jesus for what she and
the Missionaries of Charity accomplished, and saw herself as God’s vessel. “I
am surer of this than of my own life,” she said.
Hope you have a wonderful day.
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