
Are your undeserving kids or relatives waiting for you to pass so they can collect all that was yours, all that you worked hard for to maintain and keep? You haven’t seen them. They don’t bother to call or write to see if you are dead, alive, or in need of help-they might even be on drugs again. You’ve made excuses for them, for their neglect of you but it is obvious they could care less. Wouldn’t they be surprised, if you left everything to a complete stranger or maybe even someone of a different background-that would really wow them. Someone outside the family like the young couple with kids that always says “Good morning” to you in church, altar boy/girl, or that nice girl in the grocery store who always makes sure your groceries are carried to your car.
There are so many deserving people that would really appreciate a helping hand to a blessing and kind heart. Are your undeserving kids or relatives just waiting for you to pass so they can take over all that was yours?
Then fool them.
Leave your things to someone deserving,
Make sure those undeserving kids or relatives don’t get a dime.
By Phillip Regman, author of Saving the World from Self or Should I Say Selfishness available on Amazon through Regmanbooks and Siskiyou County Library.
Regman’s Saving the World From Self: Or Should I Say Selfishness is a an invitation to intimately converse about the many-colored shades of human nature. Unnoticing, the reader will share a vision focused from a collective self that blurs nonessential differences and rises to a transcending good, to equality in God’s love. This touching dialogue permutes the very terrestrial and colloquial with the heavenly. In all honesty, Regman sits on the edge of eternity and fuses with its flow while offering the reader a thoughtful poetic meditation that tells of a very personal renewal. Saving the World From the Self… is also distinctive because it reveals the plasticity of language in a very special way; in verses that are notorious for their internal cadence, the hidden hues of words lie bare under Regman’s fresh light.
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