With our love, we could save the world.
Value of the Second Chance We are all human and sins are in our nature. The thing that we can only do is to stay away from these sins as much as possible and try to be a good person to the people around us, to people we communicate and even to people which we encounter on the street whom we do not know. But sometimes people may fail to be true to each other and may gum up the works even they do not intend to do so. In all of the Abrahamic religions, the books of these religions give a place to different kind of sins. Telling people that these are part of us in which we have to resist them to be a good person as well as a good believer.
So, there is a reason why we are telling these to you since somebody you know may make a mistake against you. Every day many people do mistakes but in the event that the person who will make this mistake is someone who you trust, the ratio of the feelings you may feel may be multiplied with two or more. However, you should keep in mind that forgiving people and letting them have the second chance are another good deed that you can have. You must always give another chance to people to let them change, let them understand their mistakes in order to not make the same mistakes to you or to another person.
In this way, the sins will not be spread from the person who will be forgiven may feel bad about the things he or she did which will allow them to be a nicer person. A person who will receive another chance will do his or her best to not shake the confidence of the other person again.
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Third Time Lucky: A Creative Recovery Paperback – February 1, 2013
by Pasha Hogan (Author)
In fairy tales, if the third travail doesn't kill you, magical transformations occur. Third Time Lucky: A Creative Recovery is no fairytale, however. It is the real-life account of a young woman's struggle and triumph over issues that affect every modern woman: sexuality, body image, empowerment, and the journey toward truth. Pasha Hogan's captivating story depicts how the devastating news of a third cancer diagnosis, at age thirty-one, catapults the author into the unknown territory of learning to love herself genuinely and honestly. As she confronts the ravages of cancer, identity and career crises, and depression, Hogan realizes that these challenges present the opportunity to leave behind "normal" life and embrace the longings of her heart and soul-to live a creative, full life as her true self. In Third Time Lucky, she invites readers to transform their own questions from, "Am I enough?" to "Am I enough of who I really am?"