Insight Stories
|
|
|
|
|
|
A
Page to Rest -
Breathing Space |
|
Free Downloads |
An elderly Carpenter was ready to retire. He told his Employer-Contractor
of his plans to leave the house building business and live a more
leisurely life with his wife enjoying
The Contractor was sorry to see his good worker go and asked if
he could build just one more house as a personal favor. The
Carpenter
When the Carpenter finished his work and the builder came to inspect
the house, the Contractor handed the front-door key to the Carpenter.
What a shock! What a shame! If he had only known he
was building his own house, he would have done it all so differently.
Now he had to
So it is with us. We build our lives in a distracted way,
reacting rather than acting, willing to put up less than the best.
Think of yourself as the Carpenter. Think about your house.
Each day you hammer a nail, place a board, or erect a wall. Build wisely.
It
Who could say it more clearly? Your life today is the result
of your attitudes and choices in the past. Your life tomorrow will
be the
|
When my son was a young teenager, he and his friend
set out on a
A branch of our bank was nearby, so they decided
to go in and take
We found out later that this wonderful man lent the
boys his own
My son and his friend hopped on the bus the very
next morning.
|
from Chicken Soup for the Soul at Work Copyright 1996 by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Maida Rogerson, Martin Rutte & Tim Clauss |
A number of years ago (1983-1987), I had the opportunity
to play the character of Ronald McDonald for the McDonald’s Corporation.
My marketplace covered most of Arizona and a
One of our standard events was "Ronald Day." One
day each month, we visited as many of the community hospitals as possible,
There were two restrictions placed on me during a
visit. First I could not go anywhere in the hospital without McDonald’s
personnel (my handlers) as well as hospital personnel. That way, if
Breaking either of these rules, I was told, meant I could lose my job. Toward the end of my fourth year of "Ronald Days," as I was heading down a hallway after a long day in grease paint and on my way home, I heard a little voice. "Ronald, Ronald." I stopped. The soft little voice was coming through
a half-opened door. I pushed the door open and saw a young boy, about five
years
I knew by the feeling in the room that the situation
was grave. I asked the little boy his name - he told me it was Billy -
and I did a few simple magic tricks for him. As I stepped back to say
"Ronald, would you hold me?" Such a simple request. But what ran through my mind
was that if I touched him, I could lose my job. So I told Billy I could
not do that
This second time that Billy asked me, I had to ponder
why I could not grant the simple request of a little boy who probably would
not be going home. I asked myself why was I being logically and
"Hold me." It was such a simple request, and yet... I searched for any reasonable response that would allow me to leave. I could not come up with a single one. It took me a moment to realize that in this situation, losing my job may not be the disaster I feared. Was losing my job the worst thing in the world? Did I have enough self-belief that if I did lost my job, I would be able to pick up and start again? The answer was a loud, bold, affirming "yes!" I could pick up and start again. So what was the risk? Just that if I lost my job, it probably would not
be long before I would lost first my car, then my home...and to be honest
with you, I
I sent Mom, Dad, Grandma and Grandpa out of the room,
and my two McDonald’s escorts out to the van. The nurse tending the medical
equipment stayed, but Billy asked her to stand and face the
Billy was afraid that his little brother might get
lost coming home from kindergarten next year, without Billy to show him
the way. He worried that his dog wouldn’t get another bone because Billy
had
These are problems to a little boy who knows he is not going home. On my way out of the room, with tear-streaked makeup
running down my neck, I gave Mom and Dad my real name and phone number
(another automatic dismissal for a Ronald McDonald, but I
Billy’s mom told me that shortly after I left the room, Billy looked at her and said, "Momma, I don’t care anymore if I see Santa this year because I was held by Ronald McDonald." Sometimes we must do what is right for the moment,
regardless of the perceived risk. Only experiences have value, and the
one biggest reason people limit their experiences is because of the risk
For the record, McDonald’s did find out about Billy
and me, but given the circumstances, permitted me to retain my job. I continued
as Ronald for another year before leaving the corporation to share
|
from Chicken Soup for the Soul at Work Copyright 1996 by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Maida Rogerson, Martin Rutte & Tim Clauss |
|
|
|
|
|
|
A
Page to Rest -
Breathing Space |
|
Free Downloads |