Showing posts with label pride. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pride. Show all posts

Friday, February 8, 2013

Hanging Around



One day, a mountaineer was going up a very high mountain.

He was so proud, he was climbing all by himself.

It was very dangerous to climb up a snowy mountain all alone, but he was so proud, he believed he didn’t need anyone.

By nightfall, common sense dictated that he set up camp. But he kept climbing because he wanted to reach the summit quickly.

But in his exhaustion, his foot slipped.

And he found himself free falling through the air. He closed his eyes and saw flashbacks of his life.

All of a sudden, he felt a jolt—and violent pull around his waist. The rope tied around his belt saved him!

In total darkness, he was now hanging onto his rope.

And he shouted, “God, if you’re up there, save me!”

Suddenly, he heard a voice say, “If you believe that I can save you, do what I tell you to do…”

He answered, “What should I do?”

The voice said, “Cut your rope.”
“Wha…what?” he said.

“Cut the rope and let go,” the voice said.

After a few moments, he shouted again, “Is there anyone else up there?”

The next day, mountain climbers saw his limp body, hanging by the rope, frozen to death. The curious thing about what they saw? He was hanging only 2 feet from the ground.

Author Unknown

 “As for God, his way is perfect; the word of the LORD is tried:
he is a buckler to all them that trust in him.”
2 Samuel 22:31


 

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

I Am





I know not whence I came,
I know not whither I go
But the fact stands clear that I am here
In this world of pleasure and woe.
And out of the mist and murk,
Another truth shines plain.
It is in my power each day and hour
To add to its joy or its pain.

I know that the earth exists,
It is none of my business why.
I cannot find out what it's all about,
I would but waste time to try.
My life is a brief, brief thing,
I am here for a little space.
And while I stay I would like, if I may,
To brighten and better the place.

The trouble, I think, with us all
Is the lack of a high conceit.
If each man thought he was sent to this spot
To make it a bit more sweet,
How soon we could gladden the world,
How easily right all wrong.
If nobody shirked, and each one worked
To help his fellows along.

Cease wondering why you came--
Stop looking for faults and flaws.
Rise up to day in your pride and say,
"I am part of the First Great Cause!
However full the world
There is room for an earnest man.
It had need of me or I would not be,
I am here to strengthen the plan."
Ella Wheeler Wilcox

For I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord. They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. In those days when you pray, I will listen. If you look for me wholeheartedly, you will find me.
Jeremiah 29:11

Friday, November 11, 2011

My Favorite Veteran--My Dad



This is a piece I wrote originally for Memorial Day. I wanted to share it again on this Veteran's Day, for my favorite veteran. To all of my family--uncles, cousins, and friends-- who have served our country, THANK YOU!


On this Veteran's Day, I'd like to remember all of my family members who have served in the armed forces, starting with my dad. He never talks much about his time in Korea. It was before me and my brothers and sister were thought of. It was before he met my mother. He was a young man, the oldest still living at home (seven before him were grown and married, four still at home). His father had died from a heart attack while he was driving home from town and was killed instantly. He had started college. He wanted to be a coach. He was an athlete, a good one. Then he was called to Korea.

I have heard him talk about the trip over...not the way most of us want to travel. I have heard him talk about the cold (he's never been so cold as he was there), and hot (you just can't imagine--and he grew up in the plains of Kansas). I've heard him talk about building roads--spending days building roads for the troops to use and finally getting them done, only to have them blown up overnight, so they built the roads again. I've heard him talk, once, about standing watching a ship unloading all the men -- thousands and thousands of men, when a tidal wave came in and they were all gone. All of them, just like that. There one minute, gone the next.

He is beginning to share more of his time in Korea with us but only in bits and pieces. For most of my life, we've seen the uniform hanging in the closet. We've seen a few pictures. When I was younger he still kept in touch with some friends from the army who lived in Arizona. I don't know whatever happened to them.

Several years ago, my son and I visited Washington, D.C. and while we were there we visited the Korean War Memorial, along with all the other memorials. Instantly, both my son and I knew this was something my dad had to see, in person. Fortunately, a couple of years ago, my brother and his son took my parents to see it. It moved my dad to tears. They went back again, at night. He said it looked just like it was...dark, rainy, and cold.

He has spent the majority of his time, the last 30 years, as commander of the American Legion post in his community. He has made it his job to make certain the flags are flying at every cemetery in the county on this and every Memorial Day. He has performed military ceremonies at funerals for countless veterans and handed flags to wives, children and family members for years.

To say that I am proud of this man, my father, is a vast understatement. Of course, there is much more to my father than just this piece, but today, on Veteran's Day, I want to honor this piece. I'm proud to tell people that my father is who he is...proud, strong, brave, true, and loving. He's my dad.

Thanks, Dad, for all that you do and have done for our family, our town, our state, and our nation!
I love you!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Seven Powers for Self Control

Lesson 4:  The Power of Free Will

The only person you can make change is you.

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I once worked with a person who spent the greatest part of her life trying to change everyone around her.  No one could do things the way she thought they should be done.  When anyone tried to help her, they were greeted with all the reasons they couldn’t do it and she shoved them aside.  It didn’t matter whether we were talking about her personal life or her professional life, if someone wanted to work with her or to help her, they had to change to meet her specifications and those specs were unattainable.  I think we all have someone in our lives that is like this.  They complain and complain that no one ever helps them and there is a reason for that.  No one wants to be in the line of fire.  No one wants to feel inadequate or unable. 

“One key to successful leadership is continuous personal change. Personal change is a reflection of our inner growth and empowerment."

Robert E. Quinn

 I would like to suggest here that if you want other people to change, you should look at yourself first.  Whether they are children or adults, you can never force someone to change.  You can try, but you will fail.  Children may attempt to do what you want, for a time, but there will come a point when you are no longer the center of their universe and pleasing you will not be a priority.  They will become what they choose, regardless of what you think.  If you have spent years trying to make them be what you want, they will just rebel and you won’t understand why they’re different.  The change was never really about them, it was about you.

 When you change yourself, when you change your behaviors, others around you will change theirs as well.  This won’t happen overnight.  They will test you to see if the changes you are making are permanent, if they’re for real, but in time, if you hold true to yourself and the changes you have made in yourself, they will want to change to be better, like you.  Instead of changing to make you happy, they will change because you are happier, and they want to be happier too.

 You will lead by example.  In lesson two, we talked about my friend who told me that we always see in others what we don’t like in ourselves.  Take a look at those things that bother you about your child or your spouse or your co-worker.  Really look at them.  What is it that really bothers you?  Instead of thinking about what the other person should do to make it better, what can you do to change it?  What do you need to change about yourself to make it different, to make it better?  There is something that you need to do better than you are.  What is it?

"Only the wisest and stupidest of men never change."

Confucius

Karen Kaiser Clark, in her book Grow Deep Not Just Tall, says, “If April showers bring May flowers, they also bring the worms.  Those wiggling, slithering creatures are the tillers of the soil.  Perhaps to us not pretty, but their mothers claim they are….Not all that we face can be changed or accepted.  But few fears are released…until we change them.”  The task of looking inward, instead of outward to everyone else is not an easy one, but remember, what you see when you do this  is what your children, your spouse, or your co-workers see whenever they look at you.  It may not be pretty, it may surprise you, but it is well worth taking a look at.  I assure you that you will find things there that you do like, that you’re proud of.  Hang on to those!  But keep looking into the darker places, the places that make you feel uncomfortable.  You will be surprised what is hidden in there!  We all have them, those places that we think are just better left alone, in the dark.  The problem is, they don’t stay in the dark.  They will always come out and they’ll do it when you least expect it. 

 I recently had this happen to me.  I had some old family business that I thought was long over.  I thought that I had cared for it and had moved beyond it.  Then I moved closer to my family, closer than I have lived in years, and I was surprised one day to find that this old, familiar, not-so-great ‘friend’ had come back.  I was allowing my old feelings and hurts to determine my current path.  I have no idea what my family really thought or thinks, I only know my feelings about what I thought they were thinking.  See the fallacy in this?  First of all, it was all in my head, my own thoughts.  I convinced myself, no one convinced me.  No one even talked to me about it.  It was a conversation I had all by myself.  And I believed every word of it!  Until a friend not so mildly reminded me of who I really was, and what I had spent years changing in myself.  When I examined what she said, I was shocked to see the person in the mirror.  It wasn’t the world around me that needed to change, it was me! 

 Ms. Clark says, “Growth never completes itself.  Nor does love.  Nor do we.  In our reaching toward completeness we affirm our imperfection.  Time pushes us to grow beyond momentary arrivals.  Life presses toward greater meanings.”  We are never fully grown.  We are never perfect.   If we think that we are, we will be sadly reminded of this fact over and over again.  Life is about change.  It’s about facing who we have been, who we are now, and who we want to be.  It is about loving ourselves first, not in a selfish way, but in a way that accepts us and cherishes us for who we are and understands that who we are is not what we could be.  We can be better.  We will be better and when we are, the world will be better with us.


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