Finding The Missing Peace

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

To survive you must read!





In Western culture we almost take the ability to read for granted! It is unimaginable failing to educate people to a basic level where they can read and write, among many other skills. The ability to read is such a basic requirement for making your way through life.

The fact you understand what I am talking about in this blog means that you can read! Well, being honest, it means that you can translate the squiggles and strokes on the page or screen into words. If I am incapable of writing well or of expressing my ideas then you may read the words but have no idea what I'm trying to say. So reading with understanding is vital. 
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Monday, January 26, 2026

Robert Burns and all that






During this last week of January many Scots people go out of their way to remember Rabbie Burnsthe 18th century Ayrshire poet, writes Bert Cargill of St Monans Gospel HallHis life and his old Scots poems are remembered fondly on his birthdaywithBurns’ competitions in schools and Burns Suppers in the evenings giving him and hipoems publicity once again. There are hundreds of them - my favourite is “The Cottar’s Saturday Night”, and from “To a Mouse I often quote “The best laid schemes o mice an men gang aft agley”.

 

Other famous writers from previous centuries are of course worth reading and remembering, such as William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, and Sir Walter Scott for example. Some contemporarauthors are also widely read, according to people’s choice. But what you read and how it affects you is important, whether fiction or history, poetry or prose.

 

It's also important to remember that authors write for many different reasons. Some write to entertain and amuse, others to educate, inform and inspirewhile others may write to deceive, mislead and spoilSit is wise to choose your reading carefully!

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Sunday, January 25, 2026

Five areas of your life that need a clean up!





Around the House

It's funny but true that most of us like to get things cleaned up regularly. Maybe some of us leave it a little longer than others but eventually we feel the need to get into action. It might be washing the car, tidying the garden or cleaning the house.
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Friday, January 23, 2026

The world has become a very angry place!









When I read the newspapers, watch the news, or just generally observe the behaviour and reactions of people in society, I become aware, very quickly, that the world is an angry place. I am not saying that this is unjustified, I am just noting what I see.


Beneath the surface in many lives is an irritation, an annoyance at what life is delivering. 


There are a whole host of things that aggravate people: 

  1. how people drive
  2. the response to the pressures of financial commitments
  3. the rising cost of living
  4. the frustration of coping with under-funded and overused public services 
  5. the general pressures of life. 


We live in a world where there are so many reasons to be agitated and angry.


I am sure that psychologically and physically, anger does not have a good outcome in people's lives. There may be some good side effects, such as increased adrenaline empowering you to protect yourself or giving you the motivation to do better and improve your situation, but the side effects of constant agitation and anger have got to negatively affect our health. 

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