Showing posts with label Dr. Seuss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Seuss. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Freedom to CHANGE and GROW

Book the Second


In Pursuit of Change, Growth, and Freedom:
An Introduction to Self-Action Leadership



Dedicated to...

Men and women of conscience and character everywhere who have dedicated their educations, careers, and sometimes their lives to upholding the liberties and expanding the freedoms of nations, states, communities, families, and individuals—including themselves.  



"Freedom is not something that anybody can be given. 
Freedom is something people take [earn], and people are as free as they want to be."

James Baldwin


Chapter 1


Freedom to CHANGE and GROW

 




"You have brains in your head.
You have feet in your shoes.
You can steer yourself
any direction you choose."


Theodore Geisel
         aka Dr. Seuss


I can change.

These three words express one of the greatest powers that YOU, I, and everyone else on the planet possesses as human beings. This remarkable human endowment fundamentally separates us from the rest of the animal kingdom. 

Unlike an ant, bird, dog, fish, horse, lion, or lizard, you and I possess higher-level cerebral capacities and spiritually-oriented hearts and wills that empower us to reason, plan, behave, persist, love, and endure in ways that rise above our natural inclinations and base desires.

Members of the animal kingdom cannot begin to compete with human beings in this regard. However beautiful, curious, and magnificent a praying mantis, eagle, cheetah, marlin, or shark might be, an indisputable primal fact remains: insects, birds, amphibians, reptiles, and all other mammals are different from human beings in a fundamentally existential and metaphysical manner. 

Despite our remarkable retinue of human endowments, which theoretically grant us such a significant advantage over the rest of the animal kingdom, our natural desires and base inclinations are surprisingly similar to animals. What are some of these inclinations and desires? 

Food,
   Drink,
      Sleep,
         Sex,
            Sociality,
               Variety,
                  Action/indolence,
                     Power,
                        Popularity,
                           Gain,
                              Defiance/rebellion,
                                 Superiority,
                                    Revenge,
                                       Escaping reality through artificially induced "highs"
And...

You get the picture. 

To the "better angels of our nature," (1) this list may seem sad—even pathetic. But let's face it: our base natures are programmed to operate under the same basic operating system as animals, meaning...

If it feels good in the moment, do it.

        If someone crosses you, seek revenge.

                Do whatever it takes to satisfy your ego and other innate urges, regardless what those urges are,

And...

When others disagree with you and/or your group, hurl vicious verbal epithets upon them and then shun them from the herd.  

Sometimes it is good—and quite necessary—to satisfy natural desires. Other times it is wiser—and certainly more mature—to discipline, regulate, and in some cases, deny them entirely.

Not all natural inclinations are bad. Some, like the instinct of a parent to love and care for one's children, are thoroughly good. But most of the time, most of us are not naturally motivated to exemplify the higher characteristics and ideals of humanity; we usually have to pay a price in time, effort, and sacrifice to practice and develop them until they do feel natural.  

What, then, are some of humanity's higher and nobler characteristics? 

SAL is about developing the
nobler, royal characteristics
of which human beings are 
capable of developing.

Humility,
   Discipline,
      Perseverance,
         Honesty,
            Integrity,
         Hard work,
      Patience,
   Courage,
Self-awareness,
   Self-control,
      Moderation,
         Tolerance,
            Compassion,
         Forgiveness,
     Cleanliness,
  Magnanimity,
Empathy, etc.

The purpose of SAL is to assist and motivate us to eschew our baser inclinations and develop the higher and nobler characteristics of which we are capable. The message and miracle of SAL is that if you really want to change; if you genuinely seek liberation from self-defeating inclinations and damning desires, then it is possible to do so. 

I know this is true because I've experienced real, lasting changes in my own mind, heart, and soul over time throughout my life. In other words, I have experienced my thoughts, speech, actions, attitudes—even my very being—fundamentally transformed over time. I therefore speak literally when I say: I am not the same person I was five, ten, fifteen, twenty, or thirty years ago.

I'm a different person than I used to be.

        I'm a better person than I used to be.

Over the course of my life, I have been continually and gradually evolving into a greater being than I was before. Such changes rarely came quickly or easily; but through determination, persistence, and the grace and mercies of Serendipity, they eventually came... and continue to come.    

And I'm not the only one. I have both observed and studied similar changes in the minds, hearts, and souls of many other people as well. While such changes may not always be scientifically visible or empirically measurable, they can always be practically observed, enjoyed, and appreciated in the experiences of real life. Such real life testimonies and anecdotes are proof enough that human change is not only possible, but highly desirable.

CHANGE is, in part, the very purpose of life itself.   

There are many voices in the world that will tell you otherwise—that you are who you are and there is nothing you can do about it. These voices will try to convince you that you were simply born this or that way—that the makeup of your soul was already set in immovable concrete at your birth—and that there is nothing you can do to alter any of the variables that accompanied you upon your entrance into this world. 

Don't listen to those voices; they are NOT telling you the truth.

        Moreover, what a boring lie! 

The truth is this: as an independent human being with a mind, heart, and spiritual essence of your own, you possess both the liberty and capacity to change—if change is what you sincerely seek. And how do you know if you sincerely desire to change? The answer to that question is: if you are willing to pay the price in time, effort, and self-sacrifice that change always demands.

Talk is always cheap unless backed up by action. 

        Thus, it is your ACTIONS that ultimately determine your destiny.  

If, on the other hand, you do not want to change, you also possess the liberty to remain as you are. This text was not written to try and brainwash you into thinking, saying, doing, or being something or someone against your will. 

Quite to the contrary, nothing is more sacred to us at Freedom Focused than FREE WILL—our own and yours. Rest assured, I—and we—will always honor and respect your liberty to choose. Personal agency (freedom of choice) is absolutely sacrosanct to us. At Freedom Focused, we consider it to be fundamentally inviolable. After all, we don't want anyone else telling us what to think about, say, do, or be against our will.

I want everyone to respect my agency

        And you can be certain that I will always respect your agency.

Nor were these books written to try and convince you that you have to change. You don't have to change. You do have to deal with the consequences of your choices—whatever they may be—but you are always free to choose what you will or will not think about, say, or do. 

But, if you sincerely want to change more than you desire to remain as you are, the message of this book is that you can. Just as importantly, this textbook is filled with principles and practices you can readily apply to begin making change real in your life and career.  

This book was not written to coerce or force you—or anyone else—to think about, say, do, or be anything you don't want to be. They were written to expand your vision of your own personal, professional, and existential potential and then invite you to pursue a pathway that promotes the highest realization of that potential. 

They were written to help you to help yourself—but only if you want to help yourself. And when I use the word want, I am not talking about a mere passing whim or passive wish to change. I am talking about a deep and authentic desire backed up by the will to devote whatever amount of time and energy that authentic change may require. After all, the price for real change is rarely small; but the rewards are big—and incredibly worth it.

What a privilege it is to be a member of the most advanced species on the planet—the only species capable of authentic, existential change. This textbook outlines a way to exercise this unique, personal power to transcend potentially destructive desires and inclinations.


Facts vs. Feelings

Typically, the exercise of noble and royal characteristics does not feel natural. You must pay a price in time, effort, and self-sacrifice to practice them until they do feel natural. The miracle of being human is that you possess the power to align your desires with deeply help values, goals, and beliefs—even when they may deviate significantly from natural predilections with which you were born. 

Unlike animals, YOU have an existentially advanced brain that allows you to reason logically. Animals can feel and respond to situations according to natural instinct, but they cannot critically analyze their past or consciously plan their future in the same way that human beings can; nor can they develop strategic existential goals or otherwise make concrete plans to change and grow in a long-term, existential sense. 

This means that YOU—unlike an animal—are not predetermined to act merely according to how you feel. You possess the power to transcend natural feelings and respond in deference to consciously determined values, facts, beliefs, and goals. 

This is good news because no matter how important or meaningful feelings may be, facts must usually trump feelings if we are to act strategically and successfully in pursuit of worthy targeted objectives.  

This is not to say that you should disregard or steamroll your feelings (or someone else's) just because you are in possession of the facts. A wise man once taught me that in most practical cases, it is better—and certainly wiser—to be easy to live with than it is to be right.


"There are times in life when it is important to be right.
But most of the time it is more important to be easy to live with."

Christoffel Golden


With this in mind, I do not encourage you to stomp on other people's feelings (or your own) with facts—even if you can prove that you are right. Efforts at persuasion should always be accompanied by compassion and love, including a sincere interest in—and tender regard for—another person's feelings (including your own). 

Nevertheless, when viewed through a lens of your own long-term growth and development, it is absolutely essential that YOU do not let your own feelings blind you from facts, reality, and consequences. It is better to suffer through the short-term emotional pain from delaying gratification or admitting wrongdoing than it is to endure the long-term agony that usually results from allowing your feelings to trump facts and otherwise react emotionally based strictly on your feelings in the heat of the moment.

It's not that feelings don't matter; they do—a great deal, in fact. After all, I believe our ultimate purpose as human beings involves becoming the recipients of lavish and lasting feelings of satisfaction, pleasure, joy, love, and fulfilment. Without feelings, life would be an insipid and meaningless journey to nowhere. 

On the other hand, without the guidance of facts, feelings alone my influence you to engage in baggage-laded behaviors that carry devastating long-term consequences, which, in-turn, produce some of the most unpleasant feelings of all—the very thing you were trying to avoid by caving to your feelings in the first place. 

The purpose of focusing on facts is not to obscure, diminish, or deny feelings. The purpose of focusing on facts is to motivate and empower your will to channel the powerful energy of feelings into the positive production of lasting achievements, success, and states of mind marked by happiness and inner peace. Facts must therefore inform your feelings in order for feelings to flourish to their fullest and most positive potential. 

The surest way to maximize positive feelings in the long-run is to control and regulate your behavior in the short-run. Thus, the willingness to sacrifice what you want now for what you want most is the essence of wisdom and character. 


SAL Mantra


The willingness to sacrifice what you want now
for what you want most is the essence of character and wisdom.


Note: This is the first of many SAL Mantras to come. Dr. JJ encourages you to commit these mantras to memory as a means of empowering your mind with positive affirmations and helpful reminders of the core material contained in this Life Leadership handbook. We also encourage you to record each SAL Mantra and reflect upon it in your SAL Journal.  


A Culture of Complacency and Victimization

Think about the last time you heard someone say:

"This is just who I am."

    "I can't change." 
        
        "I was born this way." 

            "I am who I am because of 'so-and-so' or 'such-and-such.'" 

                "It's someone or something else's fault." 

                    "The fault is in my stars and there is nothing I can do about it." 

                        "I blame the universe for my lot in life." 

                            "I am a victim of my ancestry, parenting, background, social status, economic stratification, race, culture, poor choices, destructive habits, bad luck, etc." 

There are many manifestations of the culture of complacency and victimization, but all of them are ultimately rooted in choices to embrace short-sighted desires and inclinations instead of treading the higher pathways of principle and personal responsibility. 

Instead of rising up to their true potential and choosing their own way as a capable member of a superior species (the Human Race), those cruising around in the complacency crowd or van of victimization choose to view their value as being severely limited and perhaps even pre-determined by forces beyond their control. 

As human beings, we are potential royalty—rulers of the
animal kingdom and guardians and protectors of a planet

in possession of unlimited innate worth and potential.
The TRUTH is that none of us are bound by whatever tendencies we have towards laziness, lust, immaturity, dishonesty, gossip, addiction, malice, revenge, ill-temperament and ill-will, bigotry, intolerance, etc. 

Each of us possesses the power of choice

This power grants us the potential to change, to become better, to rise beyond the status of mere animals in human form to rise above negativity and tragedy and live up to our extraordinary potential for ontological achievement and Existential Growth.  

Yes, I can change; and you can change.

        That is the miracle of being human.

It is what makes all human beings potential royalty—rulers of the animal kingdom and guardian- protectors of a planet—in possession of unlimited worth and potential.

Our personal power to elevate ourselves begins in our capacity to think and reason on a higher plane than the rest of the animal kingdom. Our thoughts then lead to concrete actions, which, in-turn influence our self-determined habits.  Over time, our habits begin to shape our character, which, in-turn carves out our destiny. 

As Ralph Waldo Emerson so eloquently put it: You become what you think about all day long. Sow a thought and you reap an action; sow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny.


1803-1882
"You become what you think about all day long
."

Ralph Waldo Emerson

"Sow a thought and you reap an action; sow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny."

Ralph Waldo Emerson


This comprehensive life leadership textbook has THREE (3) fundamental purposes:
  1. Proclaim the good news that personal change and Existential Growth are possible.
  2. Provide a toolbox full of knowledge and skills to aid you in successfully initiating change and growth processes.
  3. Inspire you to animate change and growth on an on-going basis throughout your life and career.
The possibility of—and freedom to—initiate personal changes will create opportunities for some of your life's greatest adventures, challenges, fulfillments, and rewards. SAL provides a vehicle whereby you may proactively pursue and successfully embrace these adventures and challenges to become a happy, successful, and full-actualized human being. 

Self-Action Leadership and Education

Making SAL real in your life requires that you learn and then do. It starts with education, advances with action, and continues with consistence, persistence, and endurance. But it always begins with the acquisition of knowledge. 

Freedom Focused exists to support a Pedagogy of Personal Leadership and Character Development (PPLCD) in governing bodies, nations, communities, businesses, schools, homes, and individual lives. PPLCD refers to: educational curricula focusing a student's attention and efforts on taking individual responsibility and developing integrity-based character.


PEDAGOGY OF PERSONAL LEADERSHIP
AND CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT  (PPLCD)

Educational curricula focusing a student's attention and efforts
on taking individual responsibility and developing integrity-based character.  


This textbook provides a Pedagogy of Personal Leadership and Character Development (PPLCD) in the form of the SAL Theory and Model, which provides the instruction necessary to successfully change and grow into the person you are capable of becoming as a human being. 

Exercising self-discipline is harder than giving in to what feels natural. Authentic change requires a sincere commitment from your body, mind, heart, and spirit. Making such a commitment is not always easy. As a result, changing can be extremely challenging and time-consuming. Two of the most important variables in your success will be the strength of your desire to change and your will to persist through difficulties along the way. 

As the famous psychiatrist, M. Scott Peck, MD once said, a "patient's will to grow is the one crucial determinant of success or failure in psychotherapy." (2)  The same can be said of any SAL endeavor or personal change initiative.

How much do you really want to change? A sincere answer to this question cannot be fully expressed in words alone. It can only be answered authentically in ACTION. Talk is cheap unless backed up by action
in the same way that paper currency lacks value unless backed up by precious metals and/or a strong and vibrant economy.

How hard are you willing to work to achieve change in your life and/or career? And how patient are you willing to be along the way? Your action-oriented "responses" to these questions will provide the ink that composes the existential tale of your time here on planet Earth. 

The good news is that change is possible. Weak people can become strong. Diffident people can develop confidence. Poor people can grow wealthy—financially or otherwise—over time. Bitter, vengeful people can learn to forgive and let go of the past. The adversities of your personal history do not have to define your present life; nor are they destined to shape your future—unless you let them.

You can choose to change the direction of your life's journey at any given moment along that journey. In so doing, you can write a whole new story for yourself that generations to come will admire, venerate, and even reverence for its grace and nobility. Don't let anyone try to convince you otherwise; and believe me when I say that some will try very hard to do so! 

More will be said about this craven crowd of existential "crabs" later on in this work. In the meantime, always remember that: to err is human; but to repair and change is divine


SAL Mantra


To err is human.  
To repair and change is divine


Taking personal responsibility is often inconvenient and uncomfortable. Human beings are not always naturally inclined to work hard, exercise self-discipline and self-denial or delay gratification and sacrifice for the well-being of others. Our base natures simply do not seek after anything that might be challenging, painful, or selfless. 

Bucking these base trends in our nature requires authentic desire, sincere will power, and significant effort expended consistently over time. But for those who are willing to pay the price, the rewards are rich, wondrous, and wildly worth it!

Whether you know it or like it—or not—we are all members of one mighty interrelated human family, deeply connected to each other in ways that transcend the understanding of even the wisest among us. As such, we carry certain responsibilities towards each other. 

The neglect of these duties we hold and share can bring about devastating consequences for individuals and groups alike. Selfish behavior is ruinous to relationships and can lead to depression and despair. On the flip side, selfless behavior will often fertilize back to life relationships that have atrophied or even died, and, in-turn lead to much happiness and hope. 

Whatever your past and present may be, there is always HOPE for the future. Despite what countless voices may croon to the contrary, I can change and you can change; but only if we really want to change—and only if we prove the sincerity of our desire by our willingness to pay the high price that authentic change often demands. 

This Textbook for Life was written for those who yearn to escape the menacing metaphysical pulls of adversity, temptation, and peer pressure by owning up to the duties they hold to themselves and others around them. YOU are obviously one of these people, or you wouldn't be reading this book right now. I congratulation you for your desire to be a responsible human being. 

NOW is the time to put your desires into ACTION!  



In Your Journal

1. In what areas of your life do you seek to change and grow?

2. Are your desires for change and growth merely passing whims and passive wishes or deep and authentic yearnings?  How do you know?  

3.  What is something you will begin doing TODAY to start putting your desires into action?   


Dr. JJ

Wednesday, December 27, 2023
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, USA


Author's Note: This is the 367th Blog Post Published by Freedom Focused LLC since November 2013 and the 179th consecutive weekly blog published since August 31, 2020.   

Click HERE for a compete listing of the other 366 FF Blog Articles 

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL QUOTES  

Click HERE for a complete listing of Freedom Focused SAL POEMS   

Click HERE to access the FULL TEXT of Dr. JJ's Psalms of Life: A Poetry Collection

Click HERE for a complete listing of Self-Action Leadership Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Fitness, Heath, & Wellness Articles

Click HERE for a complete listing of Biographical & Historical Articles


Click HERE for a complete listing of Dr. JJ's Autobiographical Articles

.........................

Tune in NEXT Wednesday for another article on a Self-Action Leadership related topic.  

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Chapter 1 Notes

1).  The phrase, The Better Angels of our Nature, appears in the final paragraph of Abraham Lincoln's First Inaugural Address delivered in Washington, D.C., on Monday, March 4, 1861.

The full paragraph reads: "I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, by the better angels of our nature."

2).  Peck, M.S. (1978). The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth. New York, NY: Touchstone. Page 299. 

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Life Lessons Learned from Dr. Seuss

 

Few children's authors or illustrators can match Theodore Geisel's (Dr. Suess's) ability to obliquely teach life lessons. His unique pedagogical approach is rarely explicit and never didactic or preachy. Despite this fact, he still manages to compellingly convey storehouses of wisdom to young (and not-so-young) minds with iconic creativity and remarkable cogency.

A few days ago, I read a Dr. Seuss story to my daughter with which I was unfamiliar. It was called Horton Hatches the Egg.

On the surface, this story seemed rather silly and one-dimensional compared to other Suess classics I have come to adore for the richness of their character education and life lessons. You know, like O The Places You'll Go, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, and The Cat in the Hat Comes Back, the latter of which possess an unmistakable Christian redemption motif in my view.

I felt very differently after reading the story of Horton to my daughter, Kara, and was able to add yet another Seuss Classic to my growing list of animated character education treatises.

Horton Hatches the Egg is the story of an elephant named Horton who resumes the responsibility of sitting on (protecting) the egg (offspring) of a lazy and irresponsible bird named Mayzie. Tired of the patience and hard work required by her task, lazy Mayzie abdicates her duty and heads off to Palm Beach where she can escape her responsibilities and relax and goof off for a while. 

Now I've been to Palm Beach a number of times in my life, so I get the draw for Mayzie. The problem is, of course, that she has "Promises to Keep" back home in her nest, which is located in a much less hospitable climate—as one discovers later on in the story. Seeking a path of least resistance without completely abdicating her duty, Mayzie recruits Horton to sit on her egg for her.

At first, Horton thinks it rather silly for Mayzie to suggest that he—an elephant—could possibly take her place in such a role. But Mayzie is insistent and Horton is both willing and creative, so a method is concocted for Horton to accomplish his task without smashing Mayzie's egg.

Then, Horton begins to sit. And he sits, and he sits, and he sits, sits, sits, sits! He sits through a thunder storm. He sits through the burning heat of the summer and early fall. He sits all day and all night—week-after-week and month-after-month.

In the meantime, Mayzie has become so entranced with the ease and pleasures of Palm Beach that she forgets about her egg and decides to stay for good. Horton, on the other hand, keeps to his duty. Day-after-day through the autumn, winter, and spring. Every time he starts to feel tired, bored, frustrated, discouraged, anxious, depressed, or cold (the winter brings much snow) Horton says to himself: 

"I meant what I said
And I said what I meant....
An elephant's faithful
One hundred percent!"

After the frigid winter has passed and springtime finally arrives, the reader hopes that Horton will finally find some reprieve from his troubles. But it is not to be as Horton begins to be hounded by the other animals who come to tease, taunt, and mock him for what they see as a ridiculous quest that is clearly a waste of his time and an embarrassment to himself and his kind. 

"They taunted. They teased him.
They yelled, "How absurd!"
"Old Horton the Elephant
Thinks he's a bird!"

Through it all, Horton remains true to his word and his quest. He was tired. He was lonely. And he was probably very bored. Despite it all, he doggedly demonstrated complete fealty to his task, intention, word, and purpose. Perhaps he was privy to a vision of what could be that others simply could not see. Maybe something deep down inside of him whispered to press-on in pursuit of unseen rewards that awaited him at his journey's end. Whatever his motivations, Horton remains intractable in his pursuit. Come what may, he stands (sits) at his post, true to his duty, and circumspectly fulfills his responsibility.      

Later, Horton is captured by some big-game hunters who, instead of shooting him, decide to transport him across the sea and sell him to a circus. It is an awful journey filled with trials, troubles, humiliations, and seasickness. And if it wasn't enough to have animals jeering at him back in the forest, Horton now has throngs of people gawking and laughing at him in his silly egg-sitting exhibit in the circus. But through it all, Horton never deviates from his intended course. He cares more about what is right (duty and responsibility) than he does about what other people might think or say about him.  

One day, a full year into Horton's egg-sitting commitment, Lazy Mayzie hears the Circus is in town and decides to fly in to see the exhibits herself. In the process, she unexpectedly bumps into Horton! The two are very surprised to see each other. Then, shortly after Mayzie's unexpected arrival, the EGG, which Horton has so faithfully guarded, protected, and loved, starts to crack!  

At that moment, Mayzie becomes more than lazy; she became greedy as well! Growing angry and impatient, Mayzie demands that Horton return what so long ago had once been hers. But to Mayzie's astonishment and dismay, when the egg finally bursts, a little baby elephant emerges in place of a baby bird! And there is no doubt to whom it belongs!

In an instant, Horton the narrow-minded fool becomes Horton the heroic demigod, and the crowd loudly cheers its enthusiastic approval.

"My goodness! My gracious!" they shouted, "MY WORD!

It's something brand new!

IT'S AN ELEPHANT-BIRD!!

          AND it should be, it should be, it SHOULD be like that!

                    Because Horton was faithful! He sat and he sat!"

It is with this exceedingly unexpected conclusion that the story ends, with Horton heading home happy and triumphant—the hero of his own story. What happened to Mayzie, you ask? We don't know; she just sort of fades away into the background and is forgotten while everyone cheers Horton and his new little baby elephant.

On its face, this story is unrealistic and absurd—kind of like most of Dr. Seuss's characters and illustrations. Dig a little deeper, however, and the tale paints a rather precise picture of the way things really are in life in the long-run.   

Paraphrasing The Good Book, there are many people in this world who are "Lovers of pleasures more than lovers of [duty]." Mayzie was that kind of person. Horton was not. He understood the importance of duty and responsibility. As a result, he was richly rewarded for his self-discipline, personal sacrifice, and undying love and devotion to others.  

Each day of our lives we have choices to make. Many of those choices will be between "pleasures" and "responsibilities."  While there is nothing inherently wrong with many pleasurable activities, there is a time, place, and extent to which pleasures ought to be pursued, and whenever they are pursued out of place—or in the place of duty and responsibility—the end result is usually not pretty or happy. In the words of Goethe: "Things which matter most must never be at the mercy of things which matter least."

"Things which matter most must never be at the mercy of things which matter least."

Johann Wolfgang von Geothe

The people I love, respect, and admire the most are the ones who put duty and responsibility before pleasure seeking and other self-serving activities. Such persons are not boorish prudes. Nor are they condescending or self-righteous characters. In fact, they are usually people who enjoy pleasures (properly enjoyed) the most of all! They are the ones who know how to play hard as well as work hard. They understand that the best way to maximize life's pleasures is to first attend to one's duties and responsibilities. By so doing, they actually maximize both their freedom and pleasures (many fold) over the course of their lives. As a result, they live happy, healthy, full lives—just like Horton—lives that are replete with blessings they have rightfully earned as a result of their faithful attendance to their duty.

Those who seek pleasures first and foremost at the expense of duty ironically end up like those sad and sorry souls who, at the end of their lives, come to see that they actually spent most of the their time doing neither what they liked, nor what they ought (Lewis, The Screwtape Letters). Indeed, it is the Hortons of the world who end up not only living rightly, but living well—and pleasurably too!  

In the end, we really do reap more or less precisely what we choose to sow in this life. In the short run, life can be very unfair. But in the long-run, life has a way of sorting things out and righting the score over time. And it has been my ongoing observation—both from my own experiences and from the experiences of others—that those who live positive, productive, conscientious lives in fealty to duty experience the most happiness, success, and inner peace over time. The price required to enjoy such life luxuries may sometimes seem heavy, and I'll be the first to admit that it isn't always easy to pay that price. It was not, after all, easy for Horton to stay faithful to a task so mired in drudgery as to sit on an egg for an entire year! But he earned a BIG reward at the end of his task because he was willing to stick with that task through thick and thin.

The same can be true for each of us.

Just as time is a vital variable in the compounding of interest in one's financial portfolio, time is just as vital a variable in the change, growth, evolution, or achievement of any significant accomplishment in your education, career, relationships, or life. Those who are willing to "put in the time" are the ones who win in the end. Those are aren't, and are continually taking short-cuts and the "easy way out" are the ones who, like lazy Mayzie, fade away into obscurity, loneliness, and eventual despair. That is not a pathway that anyone wants in the end; but for those who choose the path of least resistance—like Mayzie—it will be one's destined lot.  

Don't be like Mayzie.

          Follow Horton's example instead!

Mayzie's pathway was a LOT easier in the short run; but she likely had deep regrets about her decisions later on. Horton, on the other hand, faced a more difficult journey initially, but ended up happy, prosperous, and at peace with himself in the end. As Jerzy Gregorek so succinctly surmised: "Hard choices, easy life. Easy choices, hard life."

"Hard choices, easy life. Easy choices, hard life."

Jerzy Gregorek


Combatting Jealousy by Maintaining Perspective

Another lesson gleaned from this story can give us added perspective to help us combat jealousy in our lives.

It is easy to look at someone who has a desirable circumstance, possession, opportunity, relationship, or talent and say: "Man that guy is lucky! If only I had been born under the right star like he (or she) was, then I'd have it easy too." There were surely some who saw Horton's good fortune at the end of his story and thought, "Wow, what a lucky Elephant"! But those were the people who knew nothing about Horton's 52-week crucible sitting on Mayzie's egg. Look a little closer at any successful person's story and you will almost always find that there is much more to the situation than meets the eye. 

For Example: there are undoubtedly those who look at me and think, "Man, Jordan's got it made in the shade. He struck it rich when he married Lina and now he gets to avoid the hassles of working at a traditional job while he stays at home with his kids pursuing his dream career on the side." 

I will be the first to admit that I am indeed a very blessed man. Moreover, I am one who believes we do not earn everything we get in our lives. Some of our blessings come by virtue of Divine Grace or serendipity.

But in the long-run, it is also true that we do more or less "reap as we sow." 

It is easy to say I got lucky when I married Lina—a brilliant and beautiful mechanical engineer who graduated from a Top-5 University and works for a Fortune 100 Corporation. But what most people didn't see was the journey I had to take that led to Lina. That journey included over 700 dates with 101 different women over the course of 13 long years. 

Along the way, I was rejected 130 times by 80 different women. The emotional and egotistical trauma of those experiences was inexplicably excruciating—and often lasted for months at a time. Only my most severe symptoms of OCD and depression produced deeper and more poignant pain than the anguish I suffered over my seemingly endless episodes of "despised love" (Shakespeare). I never had a girlfriend in high school or college, and it wasn't because I didn't want one; it was because I couldn't get one where the romantic feelings were mutual!

After college, I took a huge personal, social, and financial risk by moving to the other side of the country (two time zones away from my home state) to start a business. It was there (in Georgia) that I met Lina.

Even after I met Lina, the going was rough. Leading up to our exclusive dating relationship, I experienced such extreme anxiety that I lost 13 pounds—and I was already an unusually lanky and skinny fellow. After we started dating, we waded through two heart-shattering breakups and it took an entire year (think Horton) before she agreed to marry me.

Was it worth it? Of course it was! But anyone who claims I merely got lucky in romance and marriage doesn't know my history. 

A similar story has played out with my career. I will be the first one to admit that I currently find myself in an unusually blessed circumstance as a stay-at-home Dad with the freedom and resources to pursue my dream career as a thinker, teacher, and entrepreneur. But if you had to endure the journey I had to face to get to where I am today, I can guarantee that very few people would want to trade places with me. And that's usually the way it is with anyone you may feel jealousy towards. You may passively envy what someone else has, but if you had to actually pay the price that they paid to be where they are, chances are good you would pass on the opportunity; not because you are a weaker person, but because in reality you are almost certainly better suited for (and would actually prefer) to take a different pathway.   

While my journey has been fascinating, fun, and an adventure of a lifetime—and the right journey for me—it has also been fraught with debt (nigh unto bankruptcy), rejection, ignorings, disappointments, disillusionments, temporary failures, anxiety, and even depression. And if anyone thinks being a full-time stay-at-home Dad to three children under the age of eight is easy, then you are either completely inexperienced or a far better parent than me! 

Bottom Line: If you pick up one side of a stick, you pick up the other side right along with it! And unfortunately, the world is filled with people who want only one side of any given stick—a completely untenable option.  

I have taken BIG risks in my personal and professional life, and while my rewards have been (and will yet be) commensurately sizable, they have not come without a heavy price in time, effort, money, and stress. Moreover, while I may appear very talented and successful on the surface, the reality is that my business—which I've been pursuing now for nearly two decades—is still not off the ground. In at least one narrow and superficial sense, one might quite accurately posture me as a profound failure, speaking professionally and not personally or familially.

Fortunately, I understand that the only true failure is to give up on a worthy goal or quest. So in this sense, I feel unusually successful because of how long it is taking to realize my ultimate objectives. I also feel very successful because I have had many smaller publishing and other "victories" along the way. 

I know that someday Freedom Focused will finally leave the ground. I further believe it will grow into a sizable organization of considerable significance and influence throughout the United States and World in the next two decades. But for now, despite tens of thousands of hours of effort, I am still just a stay-at-home Dad trying to make a name for myself as an author and speaker.

Then again, as a Previous Blog Post made clear, no is a "just-a." In truth, the work I am doing as a stay-at-home Dad is even more important than the work I am pursuing with Freedom Focused. But you get the point I am trying to make. 

I have earned much of whatever I have achieved in my life, and have a long back story to prove it. And while I will be the first to admit that my life has been richly blessed by Grace and Mercy (serendipity) all along the way, anyone with the temerity to claim that I just "Got Lucky" in either my personal or professional life better be prepared to hear an earful back about "the rest of the story."

So... the next time you see someone who appears highly successful or unusually lucky, look a little closer and you will almost certainly discover that there are concrete reasons why that person has what she has, or is what he is. You just never know the extent of the price that someone has had to pay to be who and where they are at any given point in time.

To the wise, LUCK doesn't really exist. What does exist are those things that one rightfully EARNS by virtue of one's own hard work, discipline, diligence, and focus—coupled with the serendipitous grace and mercy of Providence—over time.  

And that's just the way things are!


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Friday, October 31, 2014

The Power to Change


You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes.
You can steer yourself any direction you choose.
You’re on your own. And you know what you know.
And YOU are the guy who’ll decide where to go.[1]
– Dr Seuss

I can change.

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Happy 250th Birthday, America!   I am, always have been, and always will be a passionate patriot of my beloved homeland— The United States ....