Sitting behind me on the bus the other day were two men having a discussion about how they gave up the habit of smoking. One said that he had tried various types - pipe, rolling his own and the usual cigarette. He had smoked since being a very young teenager but just decided one day that he wasn't going to smoke any more - and he hasn't. The other gentleman had also smoked for many years but gave up because of health reasons. The conversation went on to discuss their surprise that now neither of them liked being around people who were smoking. They could even smell on their clothes if they had just smoked a cigarette. The mere thought of smoking now just churned them up. Their sense of smell and taste had improved beyond expectation and generally they felt better in their health with more energy and less coughs and wheezing. Strange how the environment they thrived in had now become something they avoided whenever possible. Their ideas about smoking had changed their outlook almost to the complete opposite way of thinking.
Just the other day I received an email from a friend explaining just how people should treat a dog for the blind that is in working mode. Normally if a friend is out with his or her dog and we meet up, the immediate reaction is to greet the friend, sometimes with a hug or handshake, and also to make a fuss of the dog. But in the case of a dog accompanying a blind person, you should never get hold of the person's hand or arm in case the dog reacts in defense of his owner. A dog for the blind also has special times when he is given fuss and attention and that is not when he is working. Then his full attention is on the directions of his owner. Different situations need different responses.
Looking back over my life, although I have never smoked, I can agree with the two men who see things differently now. How I have changed my thinking on many issues over the years! Life experiences have taught me many lessons to the point that some things I see in a different way from how I used to see them. I like to think that this has made me a better person, more tolerant and accepting. There is the old saying about not criticizing someone unless we have walked in the other person's shoes. Although the two gentlemen preferred now not to smoke, they fully understood those who still do and how difficult some find it to relinquish the habit. They have been there and understand but now see things differently. Again as with the working dog, there are situations when what works with one doesn't work with another. In life there is no one size fits all solution. Situations are different and people are different. We need not only to empathize with others but see them as unique and different. Many religious people seem to think that obeying the rules, the 'do's and don'ts' is how you become affiliated to God. There is no set formula, no specially worded prayer that saves. Each must come to God as we are and he deals with us as we need. That is different for everyone. Some might find a church building inspiring where they want to worship while for others the silence and beauty of a walk in the country is where they meet and talk with God. There was a time when I considered that part of being a Christian is going to a place of worship but now I know that anywhere can be a place of worship and that's how I now prefer to live. What works for one does not necessarily work for someone else.
Different people, different situations, different ways of thinking but God is one and loves all equally and is happy to meet with us anywhere, anytime and in any circumstance in which we find ourselves.

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