Independend of Christianity, the turn of the year is the most important
holiday in Japan. It is spent in the circle of ones family (all trains and
planes are crowded the days before) and it is usual to also wish each
other peace, prosperity and happiness at the turn of the year.
May be there is a member in this list, who can discribe the magic of new
year in Japan from inside that culture.
At de Lange wrote:
>It may seem strange to you, but the art (theory and practise) of a
>Learning Organisation can be summarised as follows: for every deed of
>hurt, reply to it with a deed of love. By doing so we will experience
>emergences to peace, prosperity and happiness.
Is this the reason why loving people experience the deepest hurt?
A deed of hurt done to a person able to reply with a deed of love
supports the experience of emergence. (I hope, I am not turning your
words in your mouth.)
At, you refer with the "we" in "By doing so we will..." to those who
"reply with a deed of love":
Deed of hurt -> (deed of love -> experience of emergence)
But what if love acts as an umlomo from hurting to emergence?:
(Deed of hurt -> deed of love) -> experience of emergence
(In our christian language, I am heading from Christmas to Easter,
stumble over Good Friday and wonder what the role of Judas was. - Too
much for a short mail. But it is turn of the year, good time for such
thoughts on wholeness.)
Liebe Gruesse,
Winfried Dressler
--"Winfried Dressler" <winfried.dressler@voith.de>
Learning-org -- Hosted by Rick Karash <rkarash@karash.com> Public Dialog on Learning Organizations -- <http://www.learning-org.com>