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» Uncategorized » Reading: "How Can We Change Our World?"
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| How Can We Change Our World? |
By:
NITIN AHUJA |
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Women can change the world. Let’s face the truth. Innately we are nurturers, protectors and caregivers. Aren’t all of us, even though we are now adult women, aren’t we still seeking someone to understand, to accept, to reach out, to simply care enough to listen and to love us. Yes, we need to discover and embrace self love but many times we need other women to embrace us and reach out to us to help us and yes, we have to want to help ourselves. No one can do it for us. There are many women who honestly want to become something more, working in the home-based industry. Many of us have teamed up, locked arms and are creating a life by design while creating an income from the comfort of our homes. We are blossoming into the woman we were meant to be, healing from our pasts and reaching our full potential together.
Have you ever heard of the old Mother Goose Nursery Rhyme, originated in the early nineteenth century that describes “little girls”? First, it asks, “What are little girls made of?” Then it answers “Sugar and spice and everything nice. That’s what little girls are made of.” Most women start their lives this way, full of sugar and spice and everything nice. We begin young, happy and accepting of ourselves and of others. If you were raised in the United States, most likely you jumped rope to this nursery rhyme. While doing so, if the other girls in the neighborhood came out to play, they were not turned away. In fact, everyone played together and encouraged one another to do their best. So, what happened to us while we grew into adulthood? It seems many of us changed from sugar and spice and everything nice to sugar and spice and cold as ice, especially towards one another as women.
Recently, at a local mall, two women were witnessed, sitting on a bench engaging in what is often referred to as people watching. Every time another woman walked by, they had a derogatory comment to share about her with the other and then they would giggle. Some of the women who walked past hadn’t a clue they were being ridiculed but others did notice and as they became aware of what was happening, their smiles would fade. Often, the bounce in their walk would diminish as they realized they were being spoken about. Their raised heads would lower and their shoulders slouch, as they would hurry away from the women on the bench. Another reaction was to become angry with the two women and glare back at them with anger and disgust in their eyes.
Do you remember that quiet, scared little girl in elementary school who felt so very different from everyone else? Some of us only saw her day to day and others of us lived as her. We weren’t wearing the right clothes or shoes. We had other things on our minds. Some of us were being abused and were too afraid to tell anyone. We could not risk the “mean girls” or even our best friend finding out such things about us. Maybe our parents were alcoholics or drug addicts. Maybe we didn’t have the money other families had. Whatever we were living in, something caused us to be silent and frozen from the inside out and that “something” set us apart from others. We were different and unfortunately there was no hiding the insecurities. Sadly, when the other girls noticed we were struggling, they did not gather around us like the good old jump rope days. Instead they taunted and teased and deepened the emotional pain we were already carrying.
Now that we are women instead of sitting in school, we sit in the back of our church. Maybe we stay close to our little cubical at work. We still aren’t wearing the right clothes or shoes and for that alone we remain unaccepted by other women. Obviously we are aware of the secrets, the gossip and the ridicule and are very often left isolated and alone. We don’t want to tell anyone of the anger and hate we have towards our self, and the world, and to God for fear we will be judged. In fact, we already know and feel that we are judged without any of them truly knowing anything about us. So we remain alone and are unable to dream about or even begin to reach our personal potential.
Lift your head up if you are reading this. There may be a solution for you! Many women have joined network marketing and have been embraced by a team that is assisting us to accomplish our goals and dreams. A place where we are not judged and a place where we are encouraged to grow, not only a lucrative business, but to grow personally and become all we were meant to be. The statics show that 80% of network marketers are women. If we continue to believe, we can achieve our goals and become financially free. Come on and join us now! |
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