Monday, November 1, 2010

Letter Of Apology To Boss

A fable about kindness

Student @ s blog. I hope that college life is treating you well. Respectable future lawyers, philologists or any profession you have chosen, always fought for what you want and you can not discouragement of this crisis which, without doubt, we will.
I had not entered the blog and I checked with the nostalgia of the teachers who have had such good students, the dramatic changes hicistéis. A few blogs have been so nice. And lest we miss the good habits there is a fable about goodness. Because the world needs people that lights up, not put tripping.

A Jewish belief, reflected in the Talmud, says that over time the world has at least thirty-six men righteous. Nobody knows, because it confused with ordinary people. Even they are aware of their tremendous work and the silent mission entrusted to them, which is none other than holding the world with the power of his mercy. When you finally die, these men are so cold just for having taken up the grief of those whom God has their heads in their hands and having them there for a thousand years, in order to instill a bit of heat.
Borges has a poem entitled "The righteous" which represents an update of this beautiful legend. It is naming the actions of some men humble anonymous: The typographer who sets a good page, who strokes a sleeping animal, who justifies, or wishes to have a bad fact, he carefully counts the syllables of his verses, the gardener pruning and fertilizing your plants. And Borges tells us that it is those actions that support the world. Are the new fair, none acts with apathy or indifference. They want to make something beautiful and useful at a time. For them it is something as simple as rocking a cradle for a child to sleep. All of them, in their own way, are artists. Work, as requested by Scott Fitzgerald, so we can "seize the light and shine the world."

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