Showing posts with label positivity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label positivity. Show all posts

Friday, April 19, 2013

Had a Bad Day? Smell a Rose!



 

Helloo0O Ladies and Gentlemen!

Welcome to Graceland Ontario, your one stop location for success advice from the greats. Today, we’re going to talk about appreciation.

It’s also my Mum’s birthday, so this one goes out to her.

When, I was young, my Mum and I had very different opinions on certain things. She liked looking at pretty things in shops, I liked buying toys. She liked gardening, I liked watching television. She liked walking for exercise, I liked gluing the rug (no joke).

She’d say, “isn’t that a beautiful flower?” and I’d nod my head before quickly going on to play. I didn’t understand how you could be happy by watching a flower.

But, as years go by, though we still have disagreements once in a while, I’ve come to understand and live by her perspective.

Everything’s beautiful, even in ways we wouldn’t maybe see at first. Everything’s strong, but tender; colourful, sometimes while looking bland; wonderful while coming across as normal.

And, the more I learn about people, that they like to be liked, that they fancy someone who listens and cares about what they say, that they are, in general, inherently good, the more I thank my Mother. You see, she taught me something most people never learn. She taught me how to appreciate good things and, by not much of a stretch, other people.

Now, before you stop reading because this is either sounding way too new age-y for you or just “soft”, wait a sec.

When you appreciate life, others and yourself, you develop true kindness. You honestly enjoy seeing the best in others. Now, I’m not saying you aren’t already like that. But I am saying we’re all a work in progress and that it never hurts to put in a bit more to up your skills. Through appreciation, it becomes hard for us to be put down and hurt for, as Albert Schweitzer said, “Constant kindness can accomplish much. As the sun makes ice melt, kindness causes misunderstanding, mistrust, and hostility to evaporate”. It helps us become stronger and more likely to go out there and live a full life because we realize at a deep level how good everything is, even the bad. You’ve gotta be part of a world like that. Sitting out is wasting all the beauty and opportunity. When you have that mindset, you realize the bounty open to everyone and, with your deep appreciation of others, it makes it that much easier to persuade and work with other people to fulfill your goals.

I don’t know how you live, but I’m sure you make a similar choice to me in the morning. You decide to have a good day, no matter what, a so-so day, no matter what, or a bad day, no matter what. Chances are, your day will turn out that way simply because you’ll only focus on the information that makes something a “good”, a “so-so” or a “bad” day. You can go, “wow, she’s looking great for eighty” or you can think, “she’s a week away from the grave”. You can breathe deeply and savour the gift of air or you can complain about pollution.

I tell you, whenever I choose the more positive, more appreciative viewpoint, take what my mother taught me and thank God for the smell of roses on a mid-August day, I always, always feel better.

And, from experience, I’ve learnt it’s not just me.

Happy Birthday Mum and talk to you all next week!

Alex H.

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Friday, February 1, 2013

The Only Disability


Welcome back, Graceland Ontarians!

Check out this video:

This video was sent to me this morning, it was posted yesterday and now I’m paying it forward.

With all the hype about the upcoming Super Bowl, for some of you this may be a timely post.
 
Coach John Harbaugh of the Baltimore Ravens received an email from a fan the other day entitled “A Reason to Win”. Inside, he read about Mathew Jeffers − a senior acting major at Townsend State University and Ravens supporter.
 
Mathew, at 21, is 4’2”, has enduring over twenty surgeries and has a mother with a stage four brain tumour. He realizes life isn’t fair.
 
But despite all the pain he’s gone through, he also realizes that life doesn’t care how sorry you feel about yourself. It only responds to a positive attitude, to pushing forward even when you feel you’ve had enough, even when you’ve lost your last couple games − even when your mother’s dieing.

His message: The Only Disability in Life is a Bad Attitude.

Instead of the Ravens focusing on how bad things have gone, he encourages them to look on the bright side, like him, and keep pushing to win.
 
I don’t know what you’re going through, I don’t know the pain you’ve suffered, I can’t understand where you are in your life but one thing’s for sure − Mathew’s advice is good. It is solid. And you’d be wise to take it.
 
Good luck to the Ravens, good fortune to Mathew Jeffers and his message and good will to you… keep thinking positive.
 
See you next week!
 
Alex H.
 
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