Thank you for the blessing of your lives Tomas and Kimberly. Thank you for your shared wisdom, laughter, guided meditation and authentic sharing....great way to begin the day. Grateful💙
The road to hell is paved with good intentions, what that means. That's a very old saying. Basically it's talking about breaking your word. So for instance, you say you will be somewhere at a certain time to help someone and they're counting on you? And you're late or you don't show up? Then you say, but I meant to? Like that makes it all better? The road to hell is paved with good intentions. What you meant to do doesn't mean as much as what you actually do in a circumstance like that. It's a character flaw.
the inner adversary tries to pull us off from intentions but we grow when we face it and take the power back and actually do what our heart, soul, intention and integrity calls us to do.
@TomPinkson I understand the point you're trying to make but the idiom that you're referring to, talks about character, not inner peace or anything like that. It's about how you treat people.
Thank you for the blessing of your lives Tomas and Kimberly. Thank you for your shared wisdom, laughter, guided meditation and authentic sharing....great way to begin the day. Grateful💙
The road to hell is paved with good intentions, what that means. That's a very old saying. Basically it's talking about breaking your word. So for instance, you say you will be somewhere at a certain time to help someone and they're counting on you? And you're late or you don't show up? Then you say, but I meant to? Like that makes it all better? The road to hell is paved with good intentions. What you meant to do doesn't mean as much as what you actually do in a circumstance like that. It's a character flaw.
the inner adversary tries to pull us off from intentions but we grow when we face it and take the power back and actually do what our heart, soul, intention and integrity calls us to do.
@TomPinkson I understand the point you're trying to make but the idiom that you're referring to, talks about character, not inner peace or anything like that. It's about how you treat people.