exception that tests the rule. If your needs for sustenance and
shelter are being met, I will further assume that you are employed. It
may or may not be your ideal job, or you might feel that it is not your
calling
, but you are probably working. You do have an income of
some sort.
Here’s the deal:
If you survived gestation, birth, and childhood,
became educated enough to read, have reliable food and shelter,
and an income that at least minimally meets your needs,
you are
better off than most of the people on the planet
.
Right here we have a good basis to begin to appreciate what we
have.
As a youngster who was heavily influenced by anything and
everything martial arts related, I was in front of the TV every
Saturday around lunchtime for the reruns of the
Kung Fu
television
series. A line stuck with me for many years from an episode where
someone asked Caine about not wanting to be rich.
His reply was
something like, “I have work to do, a place to sleep, food to eat, and
friends. I am already rich.”
I grew up impoverished. I am not joking when I say that we were not
poor, we were broke, and had the
hope
to one day become poor.
Poor would have meant that we did not have enough money. Broke
meant we had none. But I was able to find contentment in what we
did have anyway.
When we had baking powder biscuits for dinner, I was
happy
—
especially when we had gravy to go with them.
The times we had
pancakes for dinner, I felt
lucky
because I knew that my school
friends would be jealous to know that I was eating pancakes while
they were eating meatloaf or pork chops. I grew up in a mobile home
in a trailer park in central Texas. We had no air conditioning. As a
child, it was hard for me to understand how other kids did not notice
the seasons changing sooner than they did. I knew the season was
changing for more than a week before my AC-trained classmates. I
knew when it was not really spring yet and I knew when winter was
really over. They did not. It made me feel smarter than them, which
was a rare thing in my life!
When you are able to reach a level of contentment where you are
confident that other people would trade places with you, it is easy to
not be jealous of what they have. So, this precept is great advice,
and while it is challenging to put into practice, the payoff for the hard
work of putting it into practice is an incredible peace of mind and a
powerful contentment and appreciation of what and who you have in
your life. It is well worth the effort.
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