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September 7, 2004
Hurricanes,
Holidays and History
I hope you had a great weekend. I really
hope you were one who had a long weekend. It
wasn't exactly the holiday a lot of people
had planned on. If you are in the path of
any hurricanes or have been in the path
recently, I hope you have not and will not
suffer.
I have a couple of friends who got
married the weekend before Labor Day. They
went down to Orlando for their honeymoon.
They have been stuck in Orlando since
Hurricane Frances decided to scream through
their lives. Luckily, they ARE on their
honeymoon and they found plenty to keep them
occupied. ;-)
But seriously, my friends are okay and
are actually on an airplane (finally) to
come home. They've already told me they are
sooooo tired of rain. But at least they have
a honeymoon they'll never forget. They can
be sure of that!
I try to live my life by the principle of
"There is always something good out of
anything bad that happens". It's kind of a
'silver lining' lifestyle I guess. But it
works for me. And if you ask my wife, she'll
tell you it's a little contagious. She finds
herself doing the same thing.
So what's the good that comes from the
destruction and annihilation of a merciless
storm?
LESSONS FROM THE STORM
1. When good people are called on,
they will come running every time... with a
smile. Reach out and lend a hand. What
you may find in the beginning is
apprehension, procrastination and/or dread.
But once you put your whole heart in to
helping others who really need it, your
spirit will be lifted and you will
experience a kind of pride that you will
only experience when you're giving. Giving
is a gift. But you receive the greatest gift
when you give the gift of giving. Got
that?!?!
2. Things are never as bad as they
seem. No matter what happens to you, you
can always look down the way and see someone
who is worse off than you are. Chances are
you at least know someone who knows someone
that is struggling with a part of life that
you never dream. And deep inside, you pray
you never have to.
[Refer to #1]
3. There's always work to be done.
Work is a blessing. Did you know that
keeping busy with a goal in mind can work
your mind is such a way that it helps keep
you from becoming depressed? When the mind
is at work with a purpose, it is not dormant
enough to become depressed. Not to mention,
you can earn a bunch of money doing it.
There will be a lot of people with
opportunity for work in Florida.
[Another silver-lining
life moment.]
4. Thankfulness always follows
destruction. If you were to take a poll
of those who were hit the hardest in these
last couple of storms, you would find people
who are thankful. No. They're not
necessarily thankful that they got hit. But
most everyone you would find thankful, would
be thankful that their most precious
possession was unscathed. You would find
those who were most thankful were those who
still had their friends and family to hold
them up, to help them through.
[Refer to #1]
5 If you absolutely have to be in
the middle of a hurricane, do it on your
honeymoon! [Another
silver-lining life moment.]
So what next? That's right. Another
hurricane... possibly. But it doesn't
matter. Even if the next one reaches the
shores of America, it will eventually have
to pass through. Then history will repeat
itself. People will help people, we will
refocus on what we're thankful for, and
then, we will get up brush ourselves off and
get back to work.
Always, focus your life on what really
matters. If you don't, you will. Devastation
has a way of making you. It did me.
Keep looking and living forward.
Mark Thompson
"America's Most Insightful
Guide To
Success and Inner Strength"
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