Monday, December 26, 2011

Be a Seeker of Life


Lengthening Daylight

Be a Seeker of Life
I always look forward to the twenty-first of December.  It’s the shortest day of the year; if you’re like me, winter darkness begins to feel all encompassing by then and I start to lose hope.  But now that we’re a few days past this annual milestone I am filled with hope once more!

Lengthening days remind me that spring is on its way.  Expanding sunlight also reminds me that increase is always the result of active living; whatever lives must live more and more or it will die!  The cycle of the seasons is such a great reminder of this natural principle!  I hope you’ll make a commitment with me to apply this principle more fully this coming year.

Here is my principle statement for 2012:  My thoughts are determined by my faith, and the results of my life depend upon making personal application of my faith.

In other words, I will remember that I can have all the faith in the world, I can have only good thoughts, but if I don’t go out into the world and take action to make my thoughts and faith a reality then I am not truly living.  A person must express and externalize thought in their outward life by acting the same way that they think or they are not living by natural principle.

I’m looking out at my garden spot right now and I know that the seeds I’ve purchased and set aside will not grow in that garden if I don’t go out at the appropriate time and put them in the soil.  When I put them in the soil they become active, and at once begin to gather to themselves from the surrounding substance and build plants that will cause such increase that one seed head will produce perhaps hundreds of seeds, each having as much life as the first.  Life, by living, increases!

Increase your life by planning for abundance now and then acting on your plan every day.  Act on your fundamental impulse of life to live; go out and chase your dreams in the real world so you can see the results of the life your living.  Continuously advance into more life and keep progressing toward your vision of perfect life.  Be a seeker of life!

Monday, December 19, 2011

Any Person May Become Great


“It will make an immense difference with your faith and spirit whether you look upon civilization as a good thing which is becoming better or as a bad and evil thing which is decaying.  One viewpoint gives you a descending and decreasing mind.  One viewpoint will make you grow greater and the other will inevitably cause you to grow smaller.”
- Wallace D. Wattles

Any Person May Become Great
I don’t have the chance to have my whole family together very much anymore.  But, I have them around me right now, for a brief time, and it has shown me that we have followed the natural order of life.  My wife and I began a new family when we got married and we were lucky enough to have children.  I say lucky for two reasons.

The first reason is that having children has pushed us way beyond our individual abilities and the second is that it has shown us a path to achieving greatness that we would otherwise have never seen.
Something almost magical happens when an individual chooses to be responsible for the care and nurturing of another person.  It completely changes a person by forcing them to look past their own needs by focusing on the needs of another.  To focus means to place another person at the center of attention.

It is this shift of attention that is transforming.  It literally makes us into a new person.  I like to call this process, “the getting of new eyes.”  One sees the world in a new and different way; through the eyes of another.  It causes a person to see the world anew.  It opens the door to rediscovery and wonder.  It lets one see the “same old stuff” as something new and exciting.  It takes what has become mundane and routine and allows a new kind of joy enter the heart.  Perhaps more importantly it reveals the path of developing greatness.

This path is plain.  One must become great at doing small things or they will never be great at doing large things.  As a child takes her first steps we can see that she must take her fist steps before she can become a great runner, trekker or explorer.  One must learn to take care of herself before she can assist  others who may have missed a lesson or two in the art of living a great life.

The purpose of life is growth.  I hope you will embrace this purpose as your own and make the choice to focus on small things so you can become great at them.  As you do so, you will see that others will take note of your wisdom and will begin to come to you for counsel.  You will see that they will then ask you to perform larger and greater tasks.  When they do, make sure you do them in the same way as you performed the small tasks; the great way.  It is already within you.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Give From Your Heart


“Don’t lend your service; give your service.”
- Justin Miller Cole
There were thousands of lights all around.  The air was cold so I was especially happy to have a daughter on each arm as we walked through the town square.  There were so many people.  Everywhere we turned there were faces; smiling faces.

Then, in an instant, I was face to face with one of the strangers.  Just before our noses were about to collide I saw the gleam of his smile and heard, “Merry Christmas!”

“Yes,” I thought.  “It’s still cold outside.  I can see the fog of my breath lofting up through the surrounding lights.  But, my heart is much warmer now.”  It was enjoyable to be with people who were not just trying to purchase a memorable holiday season.  They were giving a memorable holiday season from their heart.

My friend Justin Miller Cole once said, “Don’t lend your service; give your service.”
As soon as he said it, I tilted my head to the right and said, “That’s one of the most profound things I’ve ever heard!”

There is a difference between giving for the sole purpose of getting something in return and the act of giving a heart-felt gift.  There is a difference between giving because of a perceived obligation and giving freely from the heart.  The challenge for each one of us is to take a long, deep look into our heart and determine what our true motives are.

When we lend something we expect to get it back.  Giving a gift means we make an offering without any expectation; we have no desire to receive anything in return.  It is the most meaningful form of giving.  There is nothing more powerful than freedom of choice.

Freedom of choice also means freedom of external expectation.  A person who is truly free understands that all people are free to do as they will.  I learned this truth while sitting at the feet of a former prisoner of war.  He said, “My captors took everything from me; my clothes, food, friends, family, warmth, and communication, but they could never take my freedom to choose!  They could never take my will unless I chose to give it to them.”

A gift from the heart, given freely, is a powerful and wonderful tool.  I hope you’ll make a choice to be a giver from the heart.  The twinkling lights of this season and those who were admiring them with me reminded me of this.

Never a lender be; give from your heart without expectation.  It will change your life as well as the world.

Monday, December 5, 2011


“He said if they couldn’t solve the problem themselves then he would solve it for them.”
- Brent Nay

Accumulated Life
My friend Brent is always talking about becoming a farmer.  It has been his lifelong dream.  He was telling me about it a couple of days ago.  I listened intently wondering what was so appealing to him.  But as I listened to his enthusiastically delivered stories it soon became clear to me.

“My friend had to milk the family cow every morning and every night until he went away to college.” He said.

As Brent continued on I could see the sparkle in his eyes and his passion was radiating from his entire face.

“He had two younger sisters who took over the milking chore when he went away.  Once, when he came home for a visit, his sisters were arguing at the dinner table over whose turn it was to milk.”

 When their father had had enough of the squabbling he simply looked up and said, “If you two can’t solve the problem I’ll solve it for you!” 

When Brent had finished this part of the story, my mind began to run through scenarios of how this father was going to solve the problem.  I quickly came up with three or four options and then waited in silence to hear how this father fulfilled his promise.  

“He went out the next day and bought another milk cow!” Brent finished.

I broke out laughing.  What a perfect solution!  It was nothing like the solutions I came up with!  What a man!  It caused my mind to reflect on another beloved ranching.

A rancher’s daughter went away to college and married a biologist.  The ranch was near Yellowstone National Park so there are hot streams that flow into the river there.  The new son-in-law would come every summer with his family and spend the entire time out in the streams and river taking measurements.  After years and years the father, rancher finally asked his son-in-law what he had been doing all these years.

The young man sat up proudly and said, “I’ve been taking water samples and studying what happens when the warm water runs into the cold river.”

The rough-leather-faced man stared back with disbelief as he heard the words escape the boy’s mouth.  “You’ve spent all these years trying to find that answer?” he finally replied.

“It makes the river water warmer!  All you had to do is ask me.  I would have told you!” 

Then the older man got up and walked away from the table shaking his head.

Yes.  I understand my friend Brent’s desire to be a farmer or rancher!  Nothing is better that good old down-to-earth common sense.  I like to think of it as earned wisdom.  It’s a valuable trait that we can develop over time; perhaps it’s compensation to those of us who have dimming vision, evaporating hair and sagging skin.  

Now that I think about it, I have way too much wisdom in my life now.  But, you’re not as old and worn out as I am, so please use all the time you have left to give the rest of us all the best guidance and insight you have.  I know I could use it!