User:Shavaiz Shams

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Helping peoples always make you Smile[edit]

PROPHET MUHAMMAD (P.B.U.H) The Famous Personality of the Universe.

Say about helping other a some quotes are given below :

"Kindness is not to be found in anything but that it adds to its beauty and it is not withdrawn from anything but it makes it defective"

"The one who looks after and works for a widow and for a poor person, is like a warrior fighting for Allah's cause or like a person who fasts during the day and prays all the night"

Those quotes are heavier than any quotes.

Other Personalities[edit]

“The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson

“No one has ever become poor by giving.” ― Anne Frank, diary of Anne Frank

“No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another.” ― Charles Dickens

“There is no exercise better for the heart than reaching down and lifting people up.” ― John Holmes

“The best antidote I know for worry is work. The best cure for weariness is the challenge of helping someone who is even more tired. One of the great ironies of life is this: He or she who serves almost always benefits more than he or she who is served.” ― Gordon B. Hinckley, Standing for Something: 10 Neglected Virtues That Will Heal Our Hearts and Homes

“When we give cheerfully and accept gratefully, everyone is blessed.” ― Maya Angelou

“A kind gesture can reach a wound that only compassion can heal.” ― Steve Maraboli, Life, the Truth, and Being Free

“I don't want to live in the kind of world where we don't look out for each other. Not just the people that are close to us, but anybody who needs a helping hand. I cant change the way anybody else thinks, or what they choose to do, but I can do my bit.” ― Charles de Lint



Something IS Better Than Nothing[edit]

It is just a funny story which guiding us that something is better than nothing.

You don’t have time for a five-mile run anymore because you got trapped at work and left fifteen minutes late, so you don’t exercise at all. You don’t want to get trapped in a 45-minute conversation, so you let the call go to voicemail, which turns into yet another thing you have to do later. You want to blog, but you don’t have a 3 hour block to write, so you don’t write at all.

You don’t have time to do the ideal, so you don’t do anything.

But here’s what I’ve learned: Something is better than nothing.

Take a ten-minute run on the treadmill or a ten-minute walk around the parking lot at work (hint: bring your running shoes to work).

Answer your phone and talk for five minutes, then be done. When I actually do this, I feel so much better than having the voicemails stack up. And let’s be honest: no one actually wants to talk on the phone for 45 minutes, not even to you.

I write in spurts. I write a little bit at night, a lot during larger chunks every few weeks, and a little bit in the morning. I write paragraphs, not pages, at a time. If I had to have large blocks of time in order to write a sentence, nothing would ever get written.

As a pastor, people often ask to meet with me to talk, and if it seems appropriate, I ask them to join me on a run or a walk instead.

Some of you want to start a spiritual practice like praying or journaling or reading your bible but you keep doing nothing, because you think that for it to be legit, it has to be at least 45 minutes of spiritual intensity that results in a completely altered state of consciousness, every time. Start with five minutes. You can pray, or read some Scriptures in five minutes. Five minutes of turning yourself toward God every day would be incredible.

My experience is that the momentum of my life changes for the better when I quit pretending I have to do the enormous things for it to “count,” and I start doing the embarrassingly small things; the things I actually can do.