Monday Pick Me Up – The Best Dad

Shared By Carla

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Years ago I heard a story of a dad named Paul who gave his young son a small chalkboard to practice writing on.  One evening his son called out from the bedroom, “Dad, how do you spell best?” Paul answered him. Moments later, the boy hollered, “How do you spell kid?” Finally he asked, “How do you spell ever?” When the boy showed him what he’d written on the chalkboard, Paul expected to see  “I’m the best kid ever.”

Instead, the boy beamed as Paul read the message: “You’re the best dad a kid can ever have.”

Paul recalled that it was one of the best days of his life.  In fact, he had to buy his son another chalkboard because he wanted to save this message forever and hang it on his wall.  It’s still there.

Feeling appreciated is enormously important to adults as well as children.  So much so that we often don’t think enough about what we’d most like to be appreciated for. Being appreciated at work is a big deal.  Who doesn’t want approval and respect from one’s boss and coworkers? Beyond the economic value of raises, promotions, and commendations, praise can be gratifying and motivating.

That’s why good employers look for opportunities to acknowledge and thank employees for their contributions. Yet as meaningful as work recognition is, if you could choose between winning your child’s “Best Mom/Dad A Kid Can Ever Have” award and being named “Best Employee,” which would you choose?

The point is not to belittle the pursuit of approval in your business life but to remind you how much more meaningful it is to know you’re important to and appreciated by the people who love and need you the most.  Your most important job in life is to be worthy of that appreciation.  Being the “best ever” mom or dad, husband or wife, or friend – it doesn’t get any better than that.

Michael Josephson
www.charactercounts.org

Monday Pick Me Up – A Beautiful Scar

Shared By Carla
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A great story to read on a monday morning!

Rebecca sailed through childhood with a minimum of fuss, the usual scrapes, few illnesses and wonderful academics. Michael didn’t sail. He skipped, ran, hopped, rolled, teetered and bounced. The only things he liked about school were recess, lunch and sports. Mike loved to climb trees, the higher the better.

Afraid of scaring him and causing him to fall, I have calmly talked him down, while my heart was in my throat and my knees felt like jelly. No scolding, spanking, or any other punishment kept him from climbing. (No, spanking wasn’t illegal in those days.)

When Michael was fourteen, his dad bought him a Honda dirt bike, a purchase that caused me to consider divorce or murder. I had always stated that a motorcycle would take up residence on my property over my dead body. It was inconceivable that one of those deathtraps was going to carry my son all over the countryside and with his father’s approval! Somehow, the boy survived.

He grew up, married a beautiful, dark-eyed young woman, and fathered two children, a son and a daughter.
Michael became a partner in his dad’s business, a dangerous occupation that he grew to love: select cutting of timber. Safety measures are stressed above all else; and most of the time, Michael follows them. Shortcuts, no pun intended, are deadly in the timber. Two things especially are not done: “You never cut down trees alone” and “you cut smart and don’t try to outrun a falling tree.”

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Monday Pick Me Up – Not Just Another Town

Shared by Carla

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Fred Everhart read the mail and felt sick.

What would the kids do?

Fred, head of the recreation commission, experienced what many American towns and committees felt loss of funds.

Greenfield, Ohio, population 5000, just another town reliant on the auto industry.

Five hundred jobs (70% of the town’s industrial employment) would be gone by October 2009.

In Willington, the nearest town, DHL Express announced it was pulling out, leaving another 8,000 employees without work.  Due to the economic downturn, Greenfield lost fifty percent of the money budgeted to run the city.

The economy didn’t factor in people like Fred Everhart.

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Monday Pick Me Up – Habits, They Play An Important Role In Your Life

Shared By Carla

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Some time ago I did a show on habits. They play an important role in your life. Like many aspects of your life, habits can be considered both a blessing and a curse. Robert Russell in his magnificent little book “You Try It” wrote that habit was God’s way of making good automatic in your life. I had a wonderful friend in Atlanta, the late Dr. Jay Dishman, who wrote an excellent article about habit in his monthly newsletter dated February 1985.

I have shared Dr. Dishman’s article with thousands of people around the world.

Today I want to share it with you.

Recently I visited Alcatraz prison.  Once it housed the most hardened of criminals. Today it is open to tourists under the direction of the United States Parks Department.  Many men have tried to escape Alcatraz, no one is known to have succeeded. As I listened to the tour guide explain the impossibility of escape, I thought of other prisons equally confining but where the doors are never locked, no guards walk the halls, and escape is encouraged and possible. That prison is habit.  Our habit of thinking about ourselves and our environment as a jail or a paradise. We need but to look around us to see people who are rich emotionally and materially because they think and feel rich.

We also see people who are laden with emotional and material debt because they think lack. Some are inspired with vision, others are encumbered with doubt. Some are moved by ambition, others feel safer in monotony. Some reach for the mountain tops, others huddle in the pits.  Some seek opportunity, others wait for it to knock.

The sad fact is that more people are confined by their thoughts than are fed by them. Negative thinking shuts us in a prison, but there is a way out. The apostle Paul said, “Be transformed by the renewal of your mind.” Paul knew a lot about prisons, both physical and mental.

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You renew your life by renewing your mind. You renew your mind when you change your habit of thinking.

Dr. Jay Dishman helped thousands change their habit of thinking in his lifetime. Now hopefully, he has helped you.

Bob Proctor

Monday Pick Me Up – A Dream World

Shared By Carla

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“I look at that family, that car, that house and that job and I think, what a dream…”

I confess that years ago I gazed longingly at luxury cars. I dreamed of owning one, brand didn’t matter, I wasn’t picky, any one would do. I continued living in this dream world until one day I came to a simple yet powerful realization; that at one point in time a luxury car was a dream for the person who now drives it.

With few exceptions, he or she didn’t always have the skill or education to earn the money to buy that lavish ride. It was a dream for them, one that came to fruition through hard work and focus.

I guess one could say that today, they are living a dream world?

Over time I thought more about ‘living a dream world’ and bringing dreams to reality, until finally I arrived at a staggering yet unmistakable conclusion that it is all a dream. In the past I glanced at a Lexus or Mercedes and thought that person is ‘living in a dream world.’

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