HAVE YOUR SAY
Volume 18 Number 1
How Do You Recharge Your Batteries?
01 February 2005

Human batteries are like a stream of water. If the water doesn’t move then it becomes stagnant. If the water flows out and nourishes other people then the batteries will work well and will be spontaneously recharged.

The first step is to find out that my batteries need to be recharged! Sometimes I can’t function properly and I do not really know the reason and consequently can’t find out the solution. This needs an honest check up. I might be physically not well and need to give more attention to my health, some rest and some treatment.

Any normal person needs a certain amount of spirituality to feel well. If this is missing I feel very disturbed. Then, giving more time to prayer and meditation, spiritual readings and meetings can really charge the batteries. Asking the Holy Spirit to fill up my mind and soul will never fail.

My batteries could be empty due to spending so much on bad feelings, relationships that need mending, or lack of honesty between me and others. All this needs to be fixed to recharge the batteries.Human batteries are like a stream of water. If the water doesn’t move then it becomes stagnant. If the water flows out and nourishes other people then the batteries will work well and will be spontaneously recharged.
Hoda Amin, Cairo, Egypt



CURRENTLY ENGAGED in writing a PhD thesis, I need to take time out to allow my thoughts and the material I am working with to reconfigure and generate new ideas. An elderly friend recently taught me the craft of tapestry weaving, and I have found this a wonderfully restorative activity to balance my academic work. Weaving a picture out of many colours and textures of wool feels like bringing together the many strands of thought into a coherent whole. I emerge feeling not only rested but also rewarded with the sight of a creation taking shape, and often with new ideas for my writing, even though I have not been consciously seeking them.
Jane Cooper, Christchurch, New Zealand



I AM a woman approaching 77, whose batteries quickly get flat—partly because I involve myself in too many issues too often! When they need recharging, I sometimes sit completely still on the sofa in our living room, gazing at the trees outside, the hills beyond, and the sky. Or I just sit still. Many times I sing the lines from the hymn, ‘Let the healing streams abound...’. It is important for me to be still enough long enough, until balance is reasonably regained.

At other times there is a great deal of fun and relaxation in trying out new, exotic though simple recipes for our daily dinners. Apart from that, one brilliant and effective way to chase stress out of the body is a crossword puzzle—the more complicated, the better. That also works wonders!
Aagot Engebretsen, Sande, Norway



QUITE YOUNG, with my father, I discovered the mountains. Then it was North Wales; now I live in sight of the Alps. ‘Great things are done when men and mountains meet,’ wrote William Blake. ‘This is not done by jostling in the street.’

There is such power in nature; there’s a time that is not ours. And there’s a humility that we’re driven to that takes us out of our little lives and quarrels, our likes and dislikes. I recall a TV journalist badgering the chief safety officer of the Valais Canton about what he was going to do about an abnormally massive snowfall. ‘Wait until the Spring,’ was his memorable reply.
Andrew Stallybrass, Geneva, Switzerland


Please send your contribution for the next 'Since You Ask':
Are you a rebel or a conformist?
Up to 200 words, by 4 April 2005.




For A Change is an interactive magazine for building trust across the world's divides. It is published by Initiatives of Change - International