Skip to main content

#WisdomWednesday




I found some brief thoughts that, in my opinion, are really good about honesty - speaking in honesty and behaving in honesty. When someone rebuffs honesty (the truth) they are giving evidence to a lack of wisdom in their life. Wisdom is embracing honesty even when it stings personally or when it crumbles a foundational part of your current worldview. 

This is a symptom of someone living without wisdom in their life.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Call it a Day

The literal use of this phrase hails from 1838 when the phrase originally was "call it half a day" to mean leaving work early. (source) The modern use of the phrase is to indicate ending something due to false sense of accomplishment. 

More bang for your buck

This phrase was used a lot in 1953 but an earlier citation puts it at 1940 in a Metals and Plastics Publications advertisement. Read about it here . The phrase means you get more for your money.

Butter someone up

There are two probable origins for this idiom and I think both are equally plausible. The first one is that when you spread butter on bread you are buttering it up like one would do when trying to flatter someone. The second is in ancient India there was a practice of throwing balls of butter at statues to ask for favor, i.e. buttering them up. ( source ) When we use the phrase today we generally mean that extreme flattery is used to gain information or favor. It's not always necessarily a compliment.