By By Arthur C. Brooks
Our fears about what other people think of us are overblown and rarely worth fretting over.
Read on www.theatlantic.com
CLEAR ALL
Necessity being the mother of invention, it struck me that contemplation didn’t depend on a particular practice.
“If on the day I die I can say, ‘To the best of my ability—cutting myself some slack for my human flaws and fallibilities—I was faithful to my gifts, to the world’s needs as I saw them,’ then I can take my final breath with a feeling of satisfaction that I showed up on earth with what I had...
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