|
INSPIRING WORDS
Five simple rules to be happy
Once upon a time a farmer's donkey fell down into a well. The animal cried piteously for hours as the
farmer tried to figure out what to do. Finally, he decided the animal was old, and the well needed to
be covered up anyway; it just wasn't worth it to retrieve the donkey. He invited all his neighbors to
come over and help him. They all grabbed a shovel and began to shovel dirt into the well.
At first, the donkey realized what was happening and cried horribly. Then, to everyone's amazement he
quieted down. A few shovel loads later, the farmer finally looked down the well. He was astonished at
what he saw. With each shovel of dirt that hit his back, the donkey was doing something amazing. He
would shake it off and take a step up. As the farmer's neighbors continued to shovel dirt on top of
the animal, he would shake it off and take a step up. Pretty soon, everyone was amazed as the donkey
stepped up over the edge of the well and happily trotted off!
Life is going to shovel dirt on you, all kinds of dirt. The trick to getting out of the well is to
shake it off and take a step up. Each of our troubles is a steppingstone. We can get out of the
deepest wells just by not stopping, never giving up! Shake it off and take a step up.
Remember the five simple rules to be happy:
1. Free your heart from hatred - Forgive.
2. Free your mind from worries - Most never happen.
3. Live simply and appreciate what you have.
4. Give more.
5. Expect less NOW -------- Enough of that - you didn't really think I'd be sending round any of that
life affirming stuff did you?
The donkey later came back and righteously bit the farmer who had tried to bury him. The gash from
the bite got infected, and the farmer eventually died in agony from septic shock.
MORAL FROM TODAY'S LESSON: When you do something wrong and try to cover your ass, it always
comes back to bite you.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
If one looks at all closely at the middle of our own century, the events that occupy us, our customs,
our achievements and even our topics of conversation, it is difficult not to see that a very remarkable
change in several respects has come into our ideas; a change which, by its rapidity, seems to us to foreshadow
another still greater. Time alone will tell the aim, the nature and limits of this revolution, whose
inconveniences and advantages our posterity will recognize better than we can.
- Jean le Rond d'Alembert
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
He who leads
Must then be strong and hopeful as the dawn
That rises unafraid and full of joy
Above the blackness of the darkest night.
He must be kind to every living thing;
Kind as the Krishna, Buddha and the Christ,
And full of love for all created life.
Oh, not in war shall his great prowess lie,
Nor shall he find his pleasure in the chase.
Too great for slaughter, friend of man and beast,
Touching the borders of the Unseen Realms
And bringing down to earth their mystic fires
To light our troubled pathways, wise and kind
And human to the core, so shall he be,
The coming leader of the coming time
- Ella Wheeler Wilcox, "from "The Leader to Be"
^back to the top
|
|