Have you looked around at the world today? It is full of problems, of course, but it is also full of inspiration…
Tag: compassion
The art of learning to give your bounties to this society can change this world altogether. The love for humankind and our fellow human beings is the one that will stay with us forever. It doesn’t have nothingness and it is not temporary. It will stay with us for as long as we live.
Many people are terrific when it comes to giving credit to someone. Such people, even when they do any great work, give all the credit to others. They are unaware that in reality, they are giving the credit of success to other people. People who only helped or motivated them.
Today’s world is filled with distress, poverty, hunger, and war. That is why it needs a revolution! To bring a change in this world, we need this strong bond of “empathy”, “love” and “enthusiasm”. All of these forces, when working together, can create wonders in this world! And that is what’s required to bring a change in this world and put an end of all physical and mental wars!
SMART is an acronym for how the successful entrepreneur of the 21st century will manage their interactions with their customers, their suppliers, their employees, their potential clients, and with their own business integrity. Broken down, the acronym stands for: S: Sincere; M: Modern; A: Ambitious; R: Real; T: Trained
Covid-19 lockdown are challenging days that force us to revert to our humble nature and show more proof of the traits that define it, such as kindness, generosity, compassion, love, social intelligence – in one word ‘Empathy’.
Empathy allows us to build stronger social connections with people. This allows us to respond in the correct way in social situations, as well as gain more insight into those around us by understanding better what they are thinking and feeling.
Empathy is not an all-encompassing term that describes every person’s reaction to every situation. Instead it is an overarching ‘parent’ with multiple children that each describe different parameters within that construct that define specific stimuli and responses.
Even though the word empathy was “absent from most dictionaries”, in the early 20th century, it gradually started gaining prominence after the Great Depression of 1929. Rebcca West, British author and journalist, said that a certain exhilarating feeling of being in flight with the dove was empathy defined, in her words “entering into the experience of objects outside themselves.”
Empathy cannot be understated as a skill. Empathy allows us to understand our fellow people, build our relationships with them, and ultimately collaborate to solve our mutual problems.