Friday, August 31, 2007

Day by Day

Many exciting things have been happening lately... and i have been busy trying to savor the moment... and have not written...

First came an email from Delia Radhu from the BBC and an invitation to feature as a woman blogger on her program... it was a great honor and interesting experience... a gratification of sorts... an official recognition... and as quickly and unexpectantly as that came in, it was soon submerged by other news too...

I am taking my first official vacation in 2 years, and i can't wait for it to start...my body is in overdrive, colds and runny stomachs...headaches... all shout: STOOOPPPP... pls take a break... and for once, i'm obliging...

I'm also at a crossroad at my career, many interesting things pulling me in different directions... a compass is looking really good right now...

But i am following a new philosophy of Living Day by Day... keeping the guidelines and the planning, but not the anxiety and the worrying and the over-analysis... because a recent experience taught me that even though you spend so much time worrying and planning, something you never saw coming can arrive and disrupt your life, and without warning cause havoc... and most of your planning would be in vain...

So, after this post, i am going to delve into the fun part in me, dust it off, and let it soar, and sail... admiring a warm sunset on blue water, and hidden Turkish bays...

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Celebrating the Scouting Centenary in Lebanon

I will never again visit our Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa and feel the same, because the events it witnessed and which I helped organize will be forever engraved in my memory.

On the 1st of August 2007 at the break of dawn, over 1200 active and retired leaders of the Scouts du Liban association gathered in Harissa to celebrate along with 28 million scouts across the world, the passing of 100 years since the first camp took place in Brownsea with the founder Baden Powell.

Gathered around an alter built amidst the cedars and under the loving gaze of Our Lady, we celebrated mass together and ended with a ceremony to renew our promise and commitment to a better world, to an education for peace, and to creating bonds of friendship that transcend race, religion, age, and creed. It was also an occasion to meet with scout leaders that had paved the way for us to be here...

It is such an honor to be part of this worldwide event and I can hardly grasp its implications... how lucky I am to have participated, and how my actions and those of my fellow members will help define scouting for the next 100 years. It is simply overwhelming...

The ceremony ended with the Scouts Oath Song, and my eyes became watery, as if singing it for the first time:

Devant tous je m'engage
Sur mon honneur,
Et je te fais hommage
De moi, Seigneur !

Je veux t'aimer sans cesse
De plus en plus.
Protège ma promesse,
Seigneur Jésus !


... I just want to keep in my heart the joy of the cubs, the energy of the scouts, and the service of the Rovers and to live to the utmost the message in Baden Powell's last letter, which said:

"But the real way to get happiness is by giving out happiness to other people. Try and leave this world a little better than you found it and when your turn comes to die, you can die happy in feeling that at any rate you have not wasted your time but have done your best. "Be Prepared" in this way, to live happy and to die happy - stick to your Scout promise always - even after you have ceased to be a boy - and God help you to do it."