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Archive for March 17, 2026

The Mother Who Sat at the Edge

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 17, 2026

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News That Inspires
Mar 17, 2026
The Mother Who Sat at the Edge
“We don’t see things as they are, we see them as we are.”

— Anaïs Nin

The Mother Who Sat at the Edge

A mother sits at the edge of every dining chair, never settled, always ready to rise and serve. Her son used to find it annoying—just sit down, he’d plead. Now it’s the most defining image he carries of her. Gautam John writes about learning what his therapist already knew: that we tell the stories we want others to hear, not the ones that shaped us. He traces his journey from a man who could devour an entire cake in one sitting—not from hunger but from a childhood scarcity he didn’t know still lived in him—to a father who learned that “just sit here with me” wasn’t a rejection of his usefulness, but an invitation into relationship. The shift wasn’t from brokenness to wholeness, but from engineering outcomes to allowing emergence. What he discovered: rock bottom is the only place you can build a new foundation.

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Be The Change

Think of someone you’ve been trying to fix or advise. Send them a message asking if you can simply sit with them—over tea, on a call, in silence—without offering solutions. Practice the harder art of receiving their presence rather than giving your expertise.

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Secret To A Happy Marriage?

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Mar 16, 2026

Secret To A Happy Marriage?

–Ajahn Brahm

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69b848db21b67-2641.jpgWhy is it that many priests and monks perform marriage rites when they themselves are celibate? I have conducted many marriage ceremonies in my time. Once I even performed a celebrity wedding and had my photo appear in the Malaysian edition of the gossip magazine Hello!

During the ceremony, I have to give the dewy- eyed young couple some wise words of advice. So at the ceremony I tell them “The Secret” to a happy marriage.

At the right moment in the proceedings, usually after the rings have been exchanged, I look into the eyes of the new bride and tell her, “You are a married woman now. From this moment on, you must never think of yourself.” She immediately nods and smiles sweetly. Then I look at the groom and say, “You are now a married man. You also must not think of yourself anymore.” I don’t know what it is about guys, but the groom usually pauses for a few seconds before saying “Yes.”

Still looking at the groom, I continue, “And from this time on, you must never think of your wife.” Then quickly turning to the bride, I say to her, “And you must not think of your husband from now on.”

I enjoy watching the confused expressions appear on the couple’s faces. You don’t have to be a mind reader to know what they are thinking: “What is this crazy monk on about!”

Confusion is a very effective teaching device. Once people are engaged in trying to solve a riddle, then you can teach them the answer and they pay attention.

“Once you are married,” I explain, “you should not think of yourselves; otherwise you will be making no contribution to your marriage.” Also, once you are married, you should not always think of your partner; otherwise you will only be giving, giving, giving, until there’s nothing left in your marriage.

“Instead, once you are married, think only of ‘us.’ You are in this together.” The couple then turn to each other and smile.

They get it straight away. Marriage is about “us,” not about me, not about him, not about her. To make sure they understand “The Secret,” I ask them, “When any problem arises in your marriage, whose problem is it?” “Our problem,” they answer together. 🙂

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How do you relate to the notion that true partnership means thinking of “us” rather than oscillating between “me” and “you” – that it’s about being “in this together” rather than either self-focus or endless self-sacrifice? Can you share a personal story that reflects a time when focusing less on yourself or others led to surprising clarity or happiness in a relationship? What helps you cultivate the habit of letting go of self-centered thoughts and expectations to nurture a more harmonious and joyous connection with those you love?

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