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Tuesday, March 12, 2019

A person I would like to become

Everybody goes about life being whatever he is or doing whatever he is supposed to be, but in the essence of hearts, every maven has a longing a longing to be someone else early(a) than being himself.What do you want to be is an often-asked question. If I were to be asked whom I want to be, at least for as brief a cartridge clip as one day, my answer would be pay off Teresa.Mother Teresas life is what I would call a perfect life. To leave ones own country and people and go to a in all alien county at a tender age to serve the disadvantaged people requires tremendous strength and faith. Mother Teresa was an embodiment of purity, love, and selflessness.Mother Teresa, as everyone knows, had to endure a lot of tribulations because she started from absolutely nothing. Yet her love and benevolence for the poor and neglected made her stick to her task. Nobody can theorise the strength and determination housed in the fragile body. She was a blessed mortal with a vision, and it was her faith in God and humanity that kept her passing play ahead with her noble task. It is a boon to even know her. So, if in that respect is one person who I would want to be, then without any doubt, it would be Mother Teresa.Even at the peak of her popularity, Mother Teresa was simple and modest. That a person can still be so simple in the midst of all the popularity baffles me. Her life had a purpose. Mother Teresa has made the lives of unmeasured people worth living. Known also as Saint of the Gutters, Mother Teresa started an order of nuns, the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta and the strength grew from 12 sisters to over 3000 in just 50 years.To see God in all His creation, peculiarly the poor, the underprivileged, the neglected, is something very rare, and it is this rarity in her which inspired me all the more, and I would overlay any opportunity to be Mother Teresa, at least for a brief period.ReferenceThe Mother Teresa of Calcutta Memorial page, Electronic Version R etrieved on June 4, 2005, from http//www.catholic.net

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