Model a Child - Day-13-101 Day Reading Challenge-Who will cry when you die
Day-13-101 day Reading Challenge- a Mine2Shine initiative-9789186428
Model a Child
A while ago, I took my
four – years – old son Colby to an Italian restaurant for lunch. It was a
beautiful autumn day and, as usual,
my young son was full of energy and joy. We both ordered pasta for our main
course and then started to enjoy the
freshly baked bread our waiter had brought. Little did I know that Colby was
about to teach his father yet another
lesson in the art of living.
Rather than eating the bread while as most adults do, Colby took a different, far more creative approach.
He began to scoop out
the warm, soft part of the bread and left the crust intact. In other words, he
had the wisdom to focus on the best
part of the bread and leave the rest. Someone once said to me at a seminar, “Children come to us more highly evolved
than adults to teach us the lessons we need to learn.” And on that fine day, my little boy reminded me that
as so – called grown – ups, we spend too much time focusing on the “crust of life” rather than on all the
good things that flow in and out of our days. We focus on our challenges at work, the pile of bills we have to pay and
the lack of time to do all those things we need to do. But our thoughts do form our world and what we think
about does grow in our lives. What we focus on will determine our destiny
and so we must start
focusing on the good
stuff.
In the weeks ahead,
make the time to connect to your more playful side, the child within you. Take
the time to study the positive
qualities of children and model their ability to stay energized, imaginative
and completely in the moment no
matter what might be going on around them. And as you do, remember the powerful
words of Leo Rosten, who observed:
You can understand and relate the most
people better
if you look at them – no matter how impressive
they may be – as if
they are children. For most of us never
really grow up or mature all that much – we simply
grow taller. Oh, to be sure, we laugh less and
play less and wear uncomfortable disguises like adults, but beneath the costume is the child we always are, whose needs are simple, whose daily life
is still best described by fairy tales.
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