Kimberley Jaeger finds Common Ground
http://www.townonline.com/northshoresunday/homepage/x1741049373
By Joe Viglione
Fri Apr 27, 2007, 11:28 AM EDT
It’s 7 a.m. Sunday morning and the familiar voice of Hamilton’s Kimberley Jaeger is on the air at 100.7 FM, WZLX, Boston’s classic rock station. But Jaeger isn’t playing cuts from albums by aging rockers.
Instead, she is talking with Steven R. Covey, the controversial author known for his bestseller, “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,” published back in 1989.
In Jaeger’s second interview of the morning with Indian author Deepak Chopra, she tackles another weighty subject — peace, and the possibility of achieving it.
“If there are more of us who believe in peace than those focusing on war, it is going to make a
difference,” she notes. “How do we deal with the skeptics in regards to this?”
Chopra says not to worry about the skeptics.
“A man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still,” he says. “The ancient poem says I wouldn’t worry about that — you are now. By talking on the radio, you have 50,000 watts — lots of
people are listening, a few will be transformed. And if we keep doing that, and if we keep doing our own thing and not worrying about the skeptics. Nature will take care of the rest. I wouldn’t worry about these people.”
http://www.townonline.com/northshoresunday/homepage/x1741049373
By Joe Viglione
Fri Apr 27, 2007, 11:28 AM EDT
It’s 7 a.m. Sunday morning and the familiar voice of Hamilton’s Kimberley Jaeger is on the air at 100.7 FM, WZLX, Boston’s classic rock station. But Jaeger isn’t playing cuts from albums by aging rockers.
Instead, she is talking with Steven R. Covey, the controversial author known for his bestseller, “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,” published back in 1989.
In Jaeger’s second interview of the morning with Indian author Deepak Chopra, she tackles another weighty subject — peace, and the possibility of achieving it.
“If there are more of us who believe in peace than those focusing on war, it is going to make a
difference,” she notes. “How do we deal with the skeptics in regards to this?”
Chopra says not to worry about the skeptics.
“A man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still,” he says. “The ancient poem says I wouldn’t worry about that — you are now. By talking on the radio, you have 50,000 watts — lots of
people are listening, a few will be transformed. And if we keep doing that, and if we keep doing our own thing and not worrying about the skeptics. Nature will take care of the rest. I wouldn’t worry about these people.”