Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Find the Ultimate Balance

 

 
Find the Ultimate Balance
by Jane Powell
“Finding balance is the key to personal fulfillment.”
If your life was a symphony, all the different parts of it could be represented by the different sections of the orchestra. All the parts would work together to produce beautiful harmonies. Not one section would conflict with the other.
Too often we think in terms of conflicts rather than complements, as though the different roles we play are at odds with one another. We struggle with having a successful career and a fulfilling family life.
Dissolve this conflict and begin to assess your life as a whole with complementary parts, rather than broken fragments competing for your time and attention. Ultimately balance will come from living in full of awareness of yourself not the parts.

 
A CHOICE TO MAKE
I believe that, at least to some degree, we can each exercise
control over our outlook and attitudes. And the problem is - if we
don't control our attitudes, they will surely control us.
One farmer took charge of his outlook. He did it by filling his mind
with awe and gratitude. He found that doing this gave him more
energy to work on problems and to tackle those things that needed
his attention. His neighbor's outlook could not have been more
different.
One summer morning he exclaimed, "Look at the beautiful sky. Did you
ever see such a glorious sunrise?"
She countered. "It'll probably get so hot the crops will scorch."
During an afternoon shower, he commented, "Isn't this wonderful?
Mother Nature is giving the corn a drink today."
"And if it doesn't stop before too long," came the sour reply, "we'll
wish we'd taken out flood insurance on the crops." And so it went.
Convinced that he could instill some awe and wonder in this hardened
woman, he bought a remarkable dog. Not just any mutt, but the most
expensive, highly trained and gifted dog he could find. The animal
was exquisite. It could perform remarkable and impossible feats
that, the farmer thought, would surely amaze even his neighbor. So
he invited her to watch his dog perform.
"Fetch!" he commanded, as he tossed a stick into a lake, where it
bobbed up and down in the rippling water. The dog bounded after the
stick, walked ON the water, and retrieved it. "What do you think of
that?" he smirked.
Her brow wrinkled. "Hmmm. Can't swim, can he?"
Not to sound too Pollyanna, but I agree with newscaster Paul Harvey
when he said that he has never seen a monument erected for a
pessimist. A stubbornly positive attitude can often make the
difference between happiness and misery, between health and illness
and even between life and death.
Viktor Frankl would have agreed. Dr. Frankl chronicled his
experiences as a Holocaust and concentration camp survivor in his
book MAN'S SEARCH FOR MEANING. In it he asserts something really
quite remarkable. He says that everything can be taken from a person
except one thing. What can never be taken away is the power to
choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances.
We can decide to choose our attitudes every day. That may be one of
the most important decisions we will make. I don't want to neglect
making that choice.
Steve Goodier

 
Go ahead and accept the fact that the decisions you make will not always be perfect. Then, go ahead and decide.
Indecisiveness can create enormous spans of wasted time. Indecisiveness encourages procrastination and sows the seeds of despair.
Gather the best information you can, and give it some honest, objective thought. Then, go ahead and decide which way to go.
That way, you can spend your time actually getting it done. You can focus your energy, and begin creating real results.
Sometimes you'll have to change course because you failed to make the best decision. But occasionally having to change your approach is much better than being continually paralyzed by indecision.
Is there something you've been putting off because you can't decide what to do? Now is a great time to show confidence in your own reasoning power, and to go ahead and decide.
 Ralph Marston

 
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