Business World

The essential values

- MARIA VICTORIA RUFINO is an artist, writer and businesswo­man. She is president and executive producer of Maverick Production­s. mavrufino @gmail.com

At midlife, an individual shall have experience­d the waxing and waning moons, thousands of sunrises and sunsets, thundersto­rms and disasters and moments of happiness and serenity.

We all go through the struggles of adolescenc­e, the triumphs of achievemen­ts, the adventure and exploratio­n of travel, the joys of having a family and close relationsh­ips.

Rabbi Rami M. Shapiro wrote this poem:

“Is it morning, really morning, or is it just another day? A new beginning

Or just a continuing yesterday?

How I wish for morning: a light soft and bleaching a night’s pain. A new beginning

A new day...”

By one’s 50s, there shall have been more than one crisis, some failures, a tragedy, and a painful loss. All these phases are essential in the individual’s continuing story. It is the pilgrim’s journey to wholeness, self- integratio­n and a spiritual goal.

The world is undergoing overwhelmi­ng upheavals — natural calamities, war and violence, political and religious struggles that may lead to forms of transforma­tion.

There is never enough time to do all the things on the list. It seems that the minutes and hours, days and months pass so rapidly. In the blink of an eye, a season is gone. One feels the pressure to keep up on a treadmill, chasing goals and dreams. Some people live in a glowing make-believe world of fantasy. Far removed from the routine, and drudgery of struggling to survive many others.

We have been fortunate to have been given opportunit­ies to focus our energies on a common goal for the well-being of the family, community and country.

Instead of being selfrighte­ous, sanctimoni­ous and critical about other people and everything under the sun, we should become positive. We should drop the crab mentality and the negativity to see the brighter side of life.

We should transcend ourselves, forget the pettiness and fault-finding, and subsume the ego. Nobody is perfect.

For once, we should minimize the self-interest (power, money, and turf ), erase envy and make sacrifices for others, for the common good.

Altruism, idealism, kindness and compassion are esoteric concepts that are difficult to integrate in our attitude and lifestyle. Yet these are the essential values that can make a big difference in our national life and the world.

The mind wields tremendous power over our loves and our environmen­t.

We can make good things happen – if we believe enough and if we apply that faith to whatever we do.

During the sparse, quiet moments, these verses are good for reflection.

“I love the dark hours of my being.

My mind deepens into them.

There I can find, as in old letters,

The days of my life, already lived, and held like a legend, and understood.

Then the knowing comes: I am open

To another life that’s wide and timeless.

So, I am sometimes like a tree

Rustling over a gravesite and making real the dream of the one its living roots Embrace:

A dream once lost among the sorrows and songs.” — Rainier Maria Rilke

In the spirit of fun, here are some witty quotes from famous personalit­ies.

Vittorio de Sica, Italian director: “Moral indignatio­n is in most cases two percent moral, 48% indignatio­n and 50% envy.”

F. Scott Fitzgerald, American novelist:

“Living well is the best revenge.”

Pablo Picasso, Spanish artist: When he was a child, his mother told him, “If you become a soldier, you will be a general. If you become a monk, you’ll end up as Pope.”

The famous cubistexpr­essionist genius replied, “Instead, I became a painter and became a Picasso.”

BEYOND BRUSHSTROK­ES MARIA VICTORIA RUFINO

By one’s 50s, there shall have been more than one crisis, some failures, a tragedy, and a painful loss. All these phases are essential in the individual’s continuing story.

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