'Just as a spring breeze awakens tender new shoots of green, sincere
encouragement can thaw a frozen heart and instil courage. It is the
most powerful means to rejuvenate the human spirit.'
These and other words of encouragement by Daisaku Ikeda
'Thank you' is a miraculous expression. We feel good when we say it, and
we feel good when we hear it. When we speak or hear the words thank
you, the armour falls from our hearts and we communicate on the deepest
level.
In Japan, the mountain potatoes known as taros are rough and dirty when
harvested, but when they are placed in a basin of running water
together and rolled against each other, the skin peels away, leaving
the potatoes shining clean and ready for cooking. Similarly, the only
way for us to hone and polish our character is through our interactions
with others.
Genuine sincerity opens people's hearts, while manipulation causes them to close.
A Buddhist scripture states that 'the voice does the Buddha's work'.
The voice has the power to convey one's compassion for another. No
matter how much you care, the sentiment alone will not communicate
itself. When your feelings are conveyed in words, your voice will have
the immense power to move another person's heart.
The heart of one person moves another's ... If one's own heart is
closed, then the doors of other people's hearts will also shut tight.
On the other hand, someone who makes all those around him or her into
allies, bathing them in the sunlight of spring, will be treasured by
all.
It is much more valuable to look for the strengths in others - you gain nothing by criticising people's imperfections.
To commiserate with, to feel pity for, another falls short of genuine
compassion. Understanding is key. People manage to draw the strength to
carry on simply knowing that there is someone out there that
understands them unconditionally.
You cannot judge the quality of another's friendship by superficial
appearances, especially when things are going smoothly. It is only when
we have experienced the worst, most crushing of times—when we have
plumbed the depths of life—that we can experience the joys of genuine
friendship. Only a man of principle, a woman of resolve—a person who
stays true to their chosen path—can be a trusted and true friend, and
have real friends in turn.
People who come to your aid in a time of personal crisis are people of
genuine compassion and courage. More often than not, people will try to
act as though nothing is wrong. Others are either afraid or refuse to
get involved, and quietly drift away.
Our voice resonates with life. Because this is so, it can touch the
lives of others. The caring and compassion imbued in your voice finds
passage to the listener's soul, striking his or her heart and causing
it to sing out; the human voice summons something profound from deep
within, and can even compel a person into action.