Blog

  • Today’s Shot 431

    Today’s Shot 431

    Happy Saturday!

    Baby Turtle

    ~ Have a beautiful weekend! ~


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  • Today’s Shot 100

    Today’s Shot 100

    Mighty

    Throwback Thursday

    First published on the 13th day of April, 2020.


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  • Today’s Shot 430

    Today’s Shot 430

    Wordless Wednesday

    The Red Shoes


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  • Today’s Shot 429

    Today’s Shot 429

    Morning moon – 70% Waning Gibbous


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  • Today’s Shot 427

    Today’s Shot 427

    Silent Sunday

    ~ Have a Great Week ~

    Happy Easter!


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  • Today’s Shot 426

    Today’s Shot 426

    Pickleball Buddies

    I have never played pickleball, but these two seem very at ease on the court!

    Weekend Sky #95

    ~ Have a Great Weekend ~


    ©️ Pilgrimage Studio
  • Compassion

    Compassion

    What is the Earliest Sign of Civilization?

    Image from: Pinterest.com


    What might come to mind first is clay pottery, weapons, grinding stones, or fishhooks. Yet when the anthropologist, Margaret Mead, was asked by a student, “What is the earliest sign of civilization?” her answer was, “A healed femur.”

    The longest bone in the body is the femur. It connects the hip to the knee, and takes many weeks to heal. In the animal world, if you break your leg, you die. You aren’t able to hunt, go to your water source, or protect yourself from danger. It is difficult so survive long enough for the injury to heal. In their world, where the code is: “survival of the fittest”, there aren’t healed femurs found.

    A healed femur is a sign of care. Someone has set and bound the broken limb and stayed to tend, feed and nurture the wounded. They have been taken to a safe place to rest where they are protected.


    The first sign of civilization, is care and compassion.

    We are our highest selves when we are serving others.


    “Helping someone else through difficulty is where civilization starts,” Margaret Mead said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can’t change the world; For, indeed, that’s all who ever have.”

    Image from: Pinterest.com


    Image from: Pinterest.com


    Throwback Thursday

    First published on the 6th day of April, 2020.

    Cover Photo by Wikimedia.org

    Source: Forbes

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  • Today’s Shot 425

    Today’s Shot 425

    Merry Hare Moon

    Also known as the “Pink Moon”


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