Are there things you try to practice daily to live a more sustainable lifestyle?
ye they are, just like to live the real me not the fake me,, it is very hard to live the life that’ is not yours , what do I mean? If you can not afford, it’s no, to pretend as if you can ,
i also do what I love the most, running, singing, content curating, singing, drawing etc
https://nas.io/prospera_omniumhub
—The Priest and the Scorpion: Choosing Kindness in a World of StingsIn the quiet moments of reflection, it’s often simple stories that echo the loudest truths. One such tale—the parable of The Priest and the Scorpion—reminds us of the steady fire of compassion that can burn even in the coldest circumstances.A priest, gentle-hearted and anchored in empathy, sees a scorpion drowning. Without hesitation, he reaches out to save it. The scorpion, true to its nature, stings him. Still, the priest persists—bearing pain, yet pulling the creature to safety. When asked why he would help something that harmed him, he answers with grace: “It is the nature of the scorpion to sting, but it is my nature to help.”This simple exchange is far more than folklore—it’s a mirror. It challenges us to ask ourselves: In a world where hurt sometimes begets hurt, can we choose to remain kind? Can we act according to our character, even when others don’t?There’s something quietly radical about staying true to compassion in the face of cruelty. The priest’s response isn’t about naïveté or martyrdom—it’s about unwavering principle. He recognizes that not every good deed will be met with gratitude. But he also knows that acting with integrity is not about outcomes—it’s about identity.This parable touches something universal: we’ve all met “scorpions.” People who, despite our kindness, sting us with bitterness, betrayal, or indifference. And yet, what defines us isn’t how we are treated—it’s how we respond. To help, to forgive, to love—these are strengths, not weaknesses.So the next time you’re faced with someone difficult or feel discouraged by the thanklessness of a good deed, remember the priest by the river. He didn’t help because the scorpion deserved it. He helped because kindness was who he chose to be.Because the world doesn’t change when we reflect the worst in others. It changes when we reflect the best in ourselves.—https://nas.io/prospera_omniumhub
