• Home
  • About
    • Thought for the Day
    • Gratitude Journal
    • My Inspiration
    • My Intentions
    • My Joy Journal
    • Inspiritual Song of the Week
    • Inspiritual Reflections
    • The Zenful Kitchen
    • Stirring My Spiritual Waters
    • 28 week Spiritual Cleansing
    • Love & Inspiration
    • Meditation & Prayer Garden
    • Spiritual Partnership
  • Calendar
  • Donations
  • Referral Appreciation
  • Affirmation Cards
  • Inspiritual Products
  • Photo Gallery
    • About the Kindness Project
    • Examples of Acts of Kindness
    • Your Kindness Stories
    • The Story Behind A Complaint Free World
    • What Is A Complaint?
    • Why Do We Complain
    • Complaining Damages our Physical Health
    • Complaining Damages our Emotional Health
    • Complaining Damages Careers
    • Why People Complain
    • How to Become Complaint Free
  • Testimonials
  • Prayer Requests
  • Gift Certificates
  • Contact
    • VA Health Care of Upstate New York
    • Cancer Center at Unity Park Ridge
Menu

Inspiritual

25 Bernie Lane
Rochester, NY 14624
585-729-6113
A space for spiritual evolution and transformation

Your Custom Text Goes HEre​

Inspiritual

  • Home
  • About
  • Daily Inspiration
    • Thought for the Day
    • Gratitude Journal
    • My Inspiration
    • My Intentions
    • My Joy Journal
    • Inspiritual Song of the Week
  • Poems/Blogs
    • Inspiritual Reflections
    • The Zenful Kitchen
    • Stirring My Spiritual Waters
  • Healing & Energy
    • 28 week Spiritual Cleansing
    • Love & Inspiration
    • Meditation & Prayer Garden
    • Spiritual Partnership
  • Calendar
  • Donations
  • Referral Appreciation
  • Affirmation Cards
  • Inspiritual Products
  • Photo Gallery
  • Kindness Project
    • About the Kindness Project
    • Examples of Acts of Kindness
    • Your Kindness Stories
  • Complaint Free World
    • The Story Behind A Complaint Free World
    • What Is A Complaint?
    • Why Do We Complain
    • Complaining Damages our Physical Health
    • Complaining Damages our Emotional Health
    • Complaining Damages Careers
    • Why People Complain
    • How to Become Complaint Free
  • Testimonials
  • Prayer Requests
  • Gift Certificates
  • Contact
  • Of Service
    • VA Health Care of Upstate New York
    • Cancer Center at Unity Park Ridge

Lessons from the Desert Dweller

January 19, 2016 Sharon Jacobson

One of my favorite places to go for nourishment and inspiration is the Spiritual Literacy library on YouTube. This week I was pulled in by a one-minute story about the hospitality of a person known as nothing more than the Desert Dweller. According to the story, this person has lived in the desert most, if not all, of his life. At the end of each day, the Desert Dweller leaves a lit lantern by the side of the road and a now worn out note in a plastic sheet protector letting people know how to find his cottage should they be in need. This story comes from a book by Howard Thurman, Meditations of the Heart.

For me this story is about the attitude we have about our willingness to open our hearts and homes to others. It is not about whether or not people accept our invitation. Rather, it is about our willingness to extend the invitation in the first place. So often, people ask me if it bothers me when I offer a group and nobody comes and the answer is always no. The invitation is just that, an invitation. If people accept it, that is great and if they do not, that is great as well. It does not effect what it was in the first place; it was an invitation. It was an invitation into our hearts and homes.

Hospitality then is not about quantity, but about intention. Are we being intentional about letting others in, or have we forgotten to put the welcome map out?  To borrow a line from a Carol King song, have we let people know all they have to do is call, or have we changed the number and made it hard for people to connect with us even if they want to.

Recently, someone told me, she would begin welcoming people into her space again once she gets it presentable. While on one hand I understand that fear of being judged, what my friends taught me long ago is that they are coming to be with me, not my home. What makes people feel hospitable and welcomed is not the neatness of a space, but the loving attitude with which all are welcomed.

So this week, maybe we need to think about the lesson to be learned from the Desert Dweller.  How are we putting out a lantern and note for others to let them know they are welcomed?  

 

Donate
Tags howard thurman, hospitality, desert dweller, welcome, instructions, intention, light
← Is the universe a friendly place or not?Hospitality and Hostility →

Nullam id dolor elit

Donec sed odio dui. Etiam porta sem malesuada magna mollis euismod. Maecenas sed diam eget risus varius blandit sit amet non magna. Cras justo odio, dapibus ac facilisis in, egestas eget quam. Integer posuere erat a ante venenatis dapibus posuere velit aliquet. Maecenas sed diam eget risus varius blandit sit amet non magna.

Integer posuere erat

Nullam quis risus eget urna mollis ornare vel eu leo. Vivamus sagittis lacus vel augue laoreet rutrum faucibus dolor auctor. Maecenas sed diam eget risus varius blandit sit amet non magna. Morbi leo risus, porta ac consectetur ac, vestibulum at eros.

​

Inspiritual

Communicate With Us

Where We are located

25 Bernie Lane -- Rochester, NY 14624