All photos of Unsplash
Finding The Missing Peace
Friday, January 09, 2026
TTNY - ‘This time next year’
All photos of Unsplash
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
The January Blues!
I read the following comment in the ‘The Guardian’ newspaper quite a while ago - ‘The dilemma, I’m 22 years old and going into my fourth year in medical school. I have been using study to escape loneliness, insecurity and anxiety that arose from the stress of the course and my failure to establish friends’.
Another person wrote in The Telegraph “‘Life looks good on the surface - so why are we all so lonely? ‘But you can’t be lonely,’ a friend tells me crossly. ‘You’re out every night.’ The backhanded compliment makes me laugh. But it also makes me sad. On paper my life sounds glamorous. Denying you feel lonely makes no more sense than denying you feel hunger’” These are the comments of a high profile journalist who looks as if she is living the high life but most certainly doesn’t feel as if she is.
A new national commission investigating loneliness in the UK, launched in January 2020, shows that a fifth of the population privately admits they are ‘always or often lonely’. But two-thirds of those people would never confess to having a problem in public. Here is the problem - loneliness is the devastating unseen result of the pressures and emptiness of modern life when people live devoid of real purpose and meaning.
Monday, January 05, 2026
New Year Resolutions
Sunday, January 04, 2026
The raw power of nature
We all get occasions in our lives when we see something that makes us stop and stand in awe. It may be a glorious sunset, or a waterfall or a flock of starlings making patterns in the sky. Some have travelled north into Scandinavia to see the northern lights of gone to Canada to stand at the edge of the Niagara Falls. We can describe such experiences as breathtaking, but often such sights simply are inexpressible.
One of these that I experienced was just over twenty years ago when my wife and I were working together at Murree Christian School in Pakistan. We were house parents to nineteen children, all of whom were aged six to nine years of age. School life followed a fairly regular routine, but, occasionally we would take them out for a special treat. On this occasion it was nearing the end of the school year so we went from Jhika Gali, where the school was sited, to Murree for an “evening out”.