A candle loses nothing by lighting another candle.
Generosity
The mathematics of the soul where giving multiplies what remains
If you are more fortunate than others, build a longer table rather than a taller fence.
Generosity is the only investment that never fails - it compounds in invisible currencies.
The river becomes great not by hoarding its waters but by continuously giving them away.
True generosity requires no audience - it is the private conversation between your soul and your actions.
We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.
The most precious gifts are not what we give, but the spaces we create for others to receive.
Generosity is not about the size of the gift, but the depth of the attention behind it.
The hand that gives gathers the true wealth - not in possessions, but in connection.
What we give to others, we give to ourselves in another form.
Generosity is the heart's intelligence recognizing that another's need is as important as our own.
The breath must be released to be received again - such is the rhythm of generosity.
In the economy of the spirit, the only thing that multiplies when divided is love.
Generosity transforms scarcity into abundance by changing the measurement from quantity to meaning.
The most radical act of generosity is to see someone's potential when they cannot see it themselves.
What we withhold from others, we ultimately withhold from ourselves.
Generosity is the quiet revolution against the tyranny of "mine."
The gift that costs nothing is worth nothing; the gift that costs everything is priceless.
We are most like the sun when we shine without expectation of anything in return.
Generosity is not in the service of others; it is the recognition that there are no others.
The empty hand can receive; the full hand can give - but the wise hand knows when to do which.
What we give to the world comes back to us, but never in the form we expect.
Generosity is the courage to be vulnerable enough to need nothing while having enough to share everything.
The greatest generosity is to give without remembering and receive without forgetting.
We don't give because we have enough; we discover we have enough because we give.
Generosity is the soul's native language, spoken long before words were invented.
The measure of a life is not what it accumulates, but what it distributes.
In giving, we acknowledge that nothing was ever truly ours to begin with.