Showing posts with label Abraham Lincoln. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abraham Lincoln. Show all posts

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Daily Mood Quotes - November 20, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day 200 – November 20, 2011

“Sometimes the cards we are dealt are not always fair. However you must keep smiling & moving on.”
~Tom Jackson

So we moved. My husband still had some miles in his career and we found a company out on the “Ragged edge of the Rust Belt” that had a position to fill. We gathered our belongings, said our goodbyes and my husband got a “Go in peace” from my mother and father in-law. From my family nothing, just blank stares and a “you're leaving again?” No help packing, no goodbye; just dead air. It was done. Out here we would begin again. We had made good on many debts and fixed all that we could. But there was still much to do and much to learn about ourselves and others. You cannot un-live your past and it makes no sense to hide it. After all, the truth always is there and to deny your past is to not learn a thing from it. Time moves forward regardless of what mathematicians think and we could only hope that things would turn around. Well, that job wasn't as advertised and we learned a bit more about how rare integrity really is in the world. It seems we had still more to learn and the cost has been high, but we think worth it.

All the while, we continued to grow in love, learn about life and raise children that are far better than we could ever be. We have had feast and we have had genuine hardship. We have witnessed the worst of human selfishness and ignorance and also the most noble and selfless behavior that is possible. After each of these experiences we took the time to talk it over, do some soul searching, sometimes console each other and feel great gratitude when life brought us joyful times. All the time trying to understand the lesson that the experience had provided. We sought to not only benefit from our understanding, but to perhaps pass that hard earned wisdom along, so that others, especially our children, may avoid the dangers that we had encountered. That's why we say the things we say and can tell the stories we tell. Life's school has been an exceedingly tough taskmaster and we have paid attention. First, always hold fast to honor and dignity and never surrender integrity for someone else's agenda. They won't care, or stick by you when things get tough. We have seen how that failing has undermined the lives of so many around us. We have not gone down that road despite the enormous pressures of culture, and fair weather friends. Abraham Lincoln said, "adhere to your purpose and you will soon feel as well as you ever did. On the contrary if you falter, and give up, you will lose the power of keeping any resolution, and you will regret it all your life...Stick to your purpose." And for that position the price has been high, but worth it. Better to go through hell with your head held high, than to crawl through life with your spirit defiled.

Briefly, we must acknowledge that we have met some outstanding people (spirits) in our short journey (you know who you are) and they have been shining lights in the darkest points of our lives, to those who have helped us we thank you; you are forever in our thoughts and prayers. They have set the bar high and provide hope for the rest of us, who have long journeys still ahead. We know now that our past was inevitable and the future is still unwritten, and from here we continue to learn, grow and pass along that which we have found to be true and good, regardless of source. Read if you will, so that our scars may provide some small insight and hope.

Robert Muller said, “To forgive is the highest, most beautiful form of love. In return, you will receive untold peace and happiness.” It makes no since to be bitter when the lessons you learn can make you better.

What will you choose “bitter” or “better” today?

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote
Thank you for reading

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Daily Mood Quotes - November 17, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day 197 – November 17, 2011

Bitter experience has taught us how fundamental our values are and how great the mission they represent.
~Jan Peter Balkenende

Yesterday's blog prompted a question. I was pointedly asked, “Where do you come off making these assertions about doing the right thing? Surely, you have not lead a perfect life!” Nothing can be more true, You Bettcha! (thanks Minnesota),” My husband and I have made plenty of mistakes, who hasn’t? But, we have learned some pretty important things from our painful experience. The first is; how important it is to be be honest, candid and forthright and most importantly; always trust that feeling that clearly delineates the difference between what is right and what is wrong (our moral compass). So rather than pointing out other people's mistakes, we thought it was in all fairness, important to reveal a few of our own, to illustrate the point. “Let the chips fall where they may.” Owning up to a mistake seems to be something of a lost art in our time. People seem to go to extraordinary lengths to try to cover up failures of judgment and of ethics, which is in itself a failure of judgment and ethics. Funny how that works out.

Sooo, here we go! Where do we begin, I guess the beginning is always a good place to start. My husband is 52 years old and has 25 years in the advertising industry, about half his life and almost all of his adult life. When he started out in the 1980's he worked for one the largest public relations firms on the planet. We'll let you guess which one. They were an enormous, global organization and very successful. He was a creative (art director) and quite honestly extremely naïve, despite his education. Long story short, the agency took on a massive client, who made their living selling cigarettes. He was assigned to the account. This was something he had a major moral issue with; not a little one, a very big one. My husband had watched smoking and its effects kill members of his own family and friends; lung disease, heart disease and one unfortunate house fire. Yet, he rationalized, after all this was business, wasn't it? But in short order, a matter of months, he couldn't take it anymore. What they were doing, and saying was a complete sham, and he asked to be removed from the account. He states, “I couldn't have killed my career faster with a bullet.” Things spiraled rapidly down hill after that. Ultimately, it lead to him leaving the company by “recommendation” and then the town, because he was blackballed and his reputation was subjected to an unrelenting assault from the same people he had worked with just days earlier. The point is, my husband firmly believes that if he would have refused to work on to the account in the first place, held his head up and moved on, things would most certainly have turned out far better. At least his name would not have been smeared throughout the local ad community. He may have not been liked, because his talent was a threat, but he would have been most certainly respected and he would have maintained his self-respect. That's more important by far. My husband says he will always regret the decision of working on that account in the first place, because he knew it was wrong. He doesn't dwell on it, but he has learned from the experience. You would think...

A few years later in a new town in a different time, we started up our own agency. My husband said point blank to me, “I want to do this right! No cutting corners and I want to incorporate.” Well that didn't last very long. We went to an accountant to have him help us set up our business accounts and the very first thing he said to us was , “You don't want to incorporate, because not incorporating will provide you with “tax advantages.” You would think little red lights would have flashed inside our heads and sirens should have gone off. But no.... Despite our misgivings, we listened to the “expert.” Strike two. We were definitely down in the count, because that decision, easily qualifies as the second biggest mistake we ever made. How were we to know our little company and our family would grow so quickly. To sum it all up, in the long-run, whatever short-term “tax advantage” our “expert” thought we would gain has been supplanted by a long-term tax burden, that will take an undetermined amount of time to resolve and make good on. You would have thought we would have learned our lesson and stuck to our “do it right” position. But, the combined effects of inexperience and misplaced trust, means the story only gets deeper from here.

We switched accounting firms, to one recommended by the Chamber of Commerce, thinking that was a better call and we once again, trusted “expert advice” with our financial fate, as we were both working 17-18 hour days, while raising a family. Do you want to guess what happened? Our trusted accountant, not only didn't pay our taxes as he was supposed to do with the checks we sent through him, he also filed taxes improperly, then cleaned all the money out of our business and personal accounts and skipped town. The disaster that rolled out after that, is a novel in itself. Suffice to say, we were in a financial vise grip that was closing quickly. Still, that was only the tip of the iceberg that was to sink our little enterprise. So, we took on a catalog client; a large client who's business practices were at the very least questionable. The client extended credit to credit challenged customers, at a ridiculously high rate. They preyed on people who wanted “stuff” but lacked the sufficient funds to buy it outright. The projects were big and the money was good; at least we thought. So we worked hard, extended ourselves financially by hiring photographers, freelancers, separators and printers, based on projected income from the project(s). Even though we didn't feel particularly right about, it was a good money decision (Please refer to yesterday's post about money and decisions). This is the severe experience, like Abraham Lincoln spoke about in 1860 in his letter to George Latham, “I know not how to aid you, save in the assurance of one of mature age, and much severe experience, that you cannot fail if you resolutely determine that you will not.” Unfortunately, this says nothing about the client failing and its domino effect.

First, they wanted to cut the contracted invoice by more than 25 percent (kiss any profits goodbye), then they didn't pay the bill and drum roll please, they filed for bankruptcy. Leaving us, I would say, “high and dry” but we were “low and arid.” We had obligations to meet, and our attorney (don't even get me started on attorneys) said, “we may only see a half a cent on the dollar.” It was time to walk away.

Once again my husband said, “It would have been better had we never engaged a client against our better moral judgment and just toughed it out.” Money had made a very bad decision and the lesson here is, this was a blown moral judgment call and it has cost our family everything at that time, including bankruptcy (we think it is important to note, we are not the only people to ever file bankruptcy. We are in some pretty good company, to name a few, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln,, Donald Trump, Henry Ford, Mark Twain, Charles Goodyear...to name a few. For a more extensive list go to: http://www.bankruptcylawnetwork.com/famous-people-who-filed-for-bankruptcy/). Everything that is, except for love. That endures. What made the situation worse was that...(more to follow tomorrow).

Nobody leads perfect lives. If they say they do, most assuredly they are lying... it simply cannot happen here. However, our lives can help us to understand what is truly important and what endures beyond our failures. If you have to choose; better to fail in business and grow in love and moral character, than to deny our better moral judgement and grasp at the fleeting golden calf of profit. My husband has always maintained “Contrary to the popular adage; adversity doesn't build character, it reveals it.” “And that's the ugly truth” as stated by Mike Chadway, (played buy Gerard Butler) to Abby Richter (Katherine Heigel) in The Ugly Truth. The truth may not always be pretty, but it is truly a thing of beauty in the long-run.

Will you heed your “moral compass” today?

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote
Thank you for reading

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - October 26, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quote
Day 175 – October 26, 2011

The best thing about the future is that it comes one day at a time.
~Abraham Lincoln

The more I read about Abraham Lincoln (the name of the book is Worthy Of Their Esteem: The Timeless Words and Sage Advice of Abraham Lincoln, America's Greatest President), the more respect I have for his accomplishments. How many of us just think of tomorrow as a day, one that follows today? I did too, but in actuality tomorrow is the future. It's coming with or without our permission, or approval. Good thing is comes one day at a time.

I never had a policy; I have just tried to do my very best each and every day.
~Abraham Lincoln

Policy to me implies a rule, a law, something that must be followed each and every day. Life can throw curve balls that do not obey rules, at least our rules. So living under the strictest rule doesn't always allow you to do, or be, your best. Sometimes you have to just go with the flow and “be the best you can be.” Life isn't a job, it's an adventure (thank you United States Navy). One where we make the choice to do our best, or not. It's up to us...

I will prepare and some day my chance will come.
~Abraham Lincoln

I have been preparing all my life for what the future holds. First, I served my country, thank you for allowing me to serve you. Then I became a mom, this career never ends and it's one I am very proud of. Now, I am preparing for a second career. All along the way, I have lived life one day at a time, preparing for tomorrow and doing the best I could. Sometimes that worked out, sometimes not. But, each situation I have been through has better prepared me to face the challenges that will come my way, today and when my chance does come (maybe its today). I can think of few things more disheartening than coming upon a great opportunity that I am ill prepared to utilize. I'll be ready for that ol' curve ball, and the opportunity for a home run it presents, when I see it again. I know that from experience. “Fool me once shame on you; fool me twice.....”

In the movie Unstoppable with Denzel Washington (Frank) and Chris Pine (Will Colson), Frank said, “I'm stepping on it, in it, around it and through it.” And, that's what life is, we step on it, in it, around it and through it. We can't get away from it, it happens, yesterday, today and tomorrow and if we're really blessed or lucky, we'll be prepared for the opportunities it presents and meet the future on its terms... successfully.

How will you prepare for the future?

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote
Thank you for reading.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - October 16, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quotes
Day 166 – October 16, 2011

Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
~Abraham Lincoln

An even though we know these words, recited these words and studied the man who said these words, we are still not equal. For approximately a month now, many have been and continue to protest economic inequality, not just in our country, but around the world. I wonder, are our voices being heard at all, or is it being tuned out because the ones the inequality hurts, the unemployed, the retired fixed incomes, disabled and recent college graduates don't matter to those who we put into office? Most likely not, Its money that talks, plain and simple. I read Rick Perry raised $17.2 million dollars in just a month in a half. How? Where? Who? Do you know how many families can be helped with that kind of money? Funny thing, it seems that no one cares about the families. The money will go towards, traveling fees (most expensive hotels, best food, etc...), commercials that will tell us how “bad” the opponents are and I'm sure some money will also go towards very expensive, personal items to ensure the image of Gov. Perry is upheld. Its image, not substance that matters right? Well, in a word, no. Looks like somebody (not the regular, everyday, taxpaying citizen) really, really wants this guy from Texas in the game, no matter how inappropriate his statements are. What is the motive? I have a few thoughts.

Last night, I watched the Texas Rangers – Detroit Tigers baseball playoff game and the camera picked up former President George Bush in the stands, sitting with the Texas Rangers owner, Nolan Ryan. I was amazed as I watched the President's body language, it screamed, “I don't have a care in the world, I'm enjoying life.” Meanwhile, the brave American soldiers that he and his shotgun toting buddy Dick Cheney sent into harms way, so Halliburton could make a few extra bucks, are still fighting and dying overseas. Lets not give any further credence to the facade; it was always about the cash and oil, really. It reminded me of the movie Titanic, where a conversation took place between Ruth, Rose's Mom (Frances Fisher), Rose (Kate Winslet) and Cal Hockley (Billy Zane), regarding the sinking of the ship:

Ruth: Will the lifeboats be seated according to class? I hope they're not too crowded.

Rose
: Oh mother, shut up! Don't you understand? The water is freezing and there aren't enough boats. Not enough by half. Half the people on this ship are going to die.

Cal Hockley: Not the better half.

Rose thought him to be an unimaginable bastard. I would have left him too. Anyway, it has always amazed me how those who have so much, where given so much, don't really do much to balance the scales. Instead they better their position on the backs of others. I do wonder how they sleep at night? In the movie Independence Day, President Thomas Whitmore (played by Bill Pullman) said, “It's a fine line between standing behind a principle and hiding behind one. You can tolerate a little compromise, if you're actually managing to get something accomplished.” And, in the movie American President, President Andrew Shepherd (played by Michael Douglas) said, “...We have serious problems to solve, and we need serious people to solve them...” Here's an idea for any politician running for President with the belief they can make “change” happen. Use your contributions, go to a food shelter and help pass out containers full of food (bought with your own cash) to families, who can't buy groceries to feed their family. Walk into an unemployment office and look at the faces of those who have lost their jobs. Walk into a Goodwill store, look at who is shopping. These are “We The People”, they're the voters, whose vote you need and they are struggling. They are the people who’s Constitution you are going to swear to protect and defend. Or, will you lie to all the world and God on Inauguration Day? George did. Face the facts, this country has serious problems... $17.2 million dollars? One month? Grrrrr. The election is not that far off and people are occupying Wall Street because they are fed up with greed. What you have on this earth is what you have, what you do with what you have, well that's a story only you can write. Ask yourself this question; what story do you want told?

What will be your “legacy” today?

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote
Thank you for reading

Friday, October 7, 2011

Daily Mood Quotes - October 7, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quotes
Day 157 – October 7, 2011

“On Wall Street he and a few others – how many? three hundred, four hundred, five hundred? had become precisely that...Masters of the Universe.”
~Tom Wolfe

I prefer Rose's (Kate Winslet) statement from the movie Titanic when she said to Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio), “Next it will be brandies in the smoking room...Now they will retreat into a cloud of smoke and congratulate each other on being masters of the universe.” What and who pays the price for these Master's of the Universe?

I had a conversation with my husband on this matter and I agree with his point of view. Granted, this has been a tough week for him and this may come across a bit grumpy, but here goes. Perhaps you are familiar with the protests that are going on around the country, people are banding together to voice frustration with the financial system of this country. The push me-pull you battles in Washington, the banking industry and top-ranked CEOs making millions and millions of dollars on the backs of the unemployed and working class; along with millions and millions of dollars that corporations are making as profits, while cutting jobs and sitting on the cash. Students are protesting the cost of student loans, they are going to have to pay back, if they are given the opportunity to complete the degree they are working towards. What a mess!!!

The way I see it, these folks, those who are protesting are to some degree right and in some ways maybe not so right. It depends on how one looks at the totality of the system that we are all part of. They most assuredly have the right and responsibility to organize and protest a financial system that promised to right its ways, when it was begging the American people for a bailout. Seems they have forgotten, or perhaps have no intention of showing gratitude for the mercy of the American people. I can't speak to their motivations. And I really don't care to hazard a guess. The point is the right to gather and protest is written into our Constitution and so they can. They will however, have little or no impact on the system, because they really aren’t causing any more inconvenience than midday traffic in Manhattan. I've been a parent for a very long time and I know you can't get anywhere with hardheaded boys by yelling.

To get the attention of the misdirected children, parents usually find it effective to take away the toys. I'm just saying... Banks depend on stock prices to give their company value. If folks were to decide to drop financial institutions from their 401Ks, and other investment portfolios, there are less toys and they'll find it tougher to borrow new toys too. I've also heard that Federal Credit Unions are great places for folks to put the money that they would usually lend to banks. Oh yeah, lets remember that every dime you put in a checking account is an interest free loan to the bank. I'm just saying the intention can be right, but the strategy? Well maybe, its not so right.

Also, as long as we're on the subject... How about looking to the house in the next election cycle. Those boys aren’t behaving any better and they are letting the big kids from the corner of Wall and Nassau, the decidedly wrong side of the tracks, make up the rules, pretty much as they go along... Soooo, how do we get them to behave? Take their cushy toys (read jobs) away too. Abraham Lincoln said “Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on him personally.” So to with unemployment.... If incumbents won't do something, well then don't the American people have the right and responsibility to correct our mistake of letting them stay and play with the bad kids from Manhattan? In the movie Wall Street with Michael Douglas, Carl Fox (played by Martin Sheen) said, “Stop going for the easy buck and start producing something with your life. Create, instead of living off the buying and selling of others.” Who serves who here? To quote Donal Trump, “your fired” come the next election. That is a choice we can make, it is our right and our responsibility.

Let's not make any mistake. Our political system is still better than any yet developed and I know global economics can be a very complex issue. In the near future, tons of misinformation from both sides will flow like floodwater, all over the media. They will lap it up and spit it back out as genuine news. But, people of all ages are people, and they tend to pay attention when the things they desire most are used to correct them; just like kids (take away their toys). Or perhaps not, that just how I see this mess.  Something to think about.

How will you become a master of the universe today?

The latest news about the protest on CNN:

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote.
Thank you for reading

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - October 6, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quotes
Day 156 – October 6, 2011

“The road of life twists and turns and no two directions are ever the same. Yet our lessons come from the journey, not the destination.”
~Don Williams, Jr.

What a week of twists and turns. I got to say this, what a weird week this has been. There was a death in my family. My mother-in-law passed away, sad, but there are good memories of her and lessons that will carry forward. Steve Jobs passed away, a man who once said, “I want to put a ding in the universe.” He did. President Obama went on television to inform the American People that congress isn't working with him (no big surprise) again. Finally, a doctor is on trial for what happened to Michael Jackson. What an interesting week so far!!!

I am not a reporter or even a journalist, but I do listen and I do say what's on my mind, and this week has a lot to offer. One thing I have found that is constant is "the unexpected." As soon as you think, things have settled down and you can proceed forward, the apple cart looses a wheel and heads off in another direction. That's the nature of life and death. Change happens and usually at the least convenient time. Seems that the universe really doesn’t “get” convenient, it just keeps rolling along, changing and proceeding forward. It never asks if it's okay or if we want it, changes are going to happen. There is a song by Anna Nalick called Breathe that goes “And life's like an hourglass glued to the table, no on can find the rewind button now.....” And so it is; what's done is done and things past, will forever be past. The good and the not-so-good we have done are gone along with the past, even if we live with the echos and shadows of those things. These are choices we make, what to hold onto and what to let go of. The key is to embrace the good's watershed and learn from the not-so-good, then let it drift away on the stream of time.

In the movie A River Runs Through It, with Brad Pitt, Tom Skerritt and Craig Sheffer, Older Norman (narrated by Robert Redford) said, “ My father was very sure about certain matters pertaining to the universe. To him, all good things - trout as well as eternal salvation - came by grace; and grace comes by art; and art does not come easy.”

Thank you to my mother-in-law for raising such an extraordinary man, who I call my husband and my best friend. Thank you to Mr. Steve Jobs for showing us the things we can achieve, if we dream and don't quit. I wish someone could teach congress what they can achieve; if they would just start to “change” some very foolish ideological entrenchments and bad behaviors. It (change) is going to happen anyway; why not start to walk that road forward together, instead of trying to run the other party off the road, or heading in reverse? Let's face it, that way isn't working and is making a “two-car pile up” out of our political system. We all should consider what Abraham Lincoln said, “And in the end, it's not the years in your life that count. It's the life in your years.” Live on, positively.

How will you positively live on today?

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote
Thank you for reading.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - September 11, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quote
Day 131 – September 11, 2011

One day at a time-this is enough. Do not look back and grieve over the past for it is gone; and do not be troubled about the future, for it has not yet come. Live in the present, and make it so beautiful it will be worth remembering.”

~Unknown

In the movie Remember Me, Tyler (played by Robert Pattinson) said, “If you could hear me, I would say that our finger prints don't fade from the lives we've touched.” As I write this, the names of those lost in the 9/11 attacks are being read on TV and I realize that those lost have touched us all as a nation and to some respect the rest of the world. I understand that terror attacks have touched almost every country, but the one we remember today, 9/11 is one that will long stand as one of our nation's defining moments. The stories of sudden loss and of extreme heroism have echoed long after the lost were placed to rest and the damage repaired. Those who sought to tear the nation down only succeeded in pulling it closer together. The terrorist names and evil will be lost in the fog of time, but the everyday people who became heros of that day, those who put their lives at risk to save others, will live long in our memory. Their fingerprints are now woven into everyone of our lives. They reveal the strongest treads in the fabric of America.

Perhaps that's what those who hate America do not understand, we are a nation of various colors and dreams, workers and thinkers, all woven together over the course of the last 240 years into a strong and resilient fabric. The country isn’t a single ideology, or a nation of affluent fluff balls. We are an ever growing and changing tapestry, that deals with the realities of now and continues onward into the future, together. If you have ever ridden a bus or a subway on a normal day, (as I did on the morning of September 11, 2001) you will see this and feel the unity among the differences; it is palpable. We may agree to disagree, but we are forever united in our larger purpose of freedom and democracy.
The lives of those who were lost on that day will be remembered, celebrated and mourned for years to come. The tapestry, the view, may be forever changed, but we as a nation united will continue to grow.

Abraham Lincoln said in his 1860 Cooper Union Speech, "Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations against us, nor frightened from it by menaces of destruction to the Governement, nor of dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes might and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it."

What stories will you share today about 9/11?

Tune in tomorrow to read the daily mood quote
Thank you for reading

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - August 7, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quote
Day 96 – August 7, 2011

You cannot escape the responsibility of tomorrow by evading it today.
~Abraham Lincoln

Funny thing about responsibility, it affects everyone; no one escapes. Sometimes, we have to be responsible for the actions of others, whether we choose to or not. It has a lot to do with the decisions we make and how late we enter the process. Sometimes, the last guy in is the one holding the bag. It isn't his bag and he had nothing to do with developing the bag, but he is the one who will ultimately be responsible for the bag. That is the choice we make when we Step-up and Step-in© and accept responsibility. How many of us have witnessed a job that was vacated, or left by an employee who was let go, who did not do the job they were assigned and the new employee is left holding the bag? They are stuck solving the problems. And, being the one who accepts the responsibilities for all their predecessor's decisions and actions. In some cases, the successor ends up losing the job, before ever having a chance to make a change and fix the mess. I guess that's the risk we take.

Winston Churchill said, “The price of greatness is responsibility.” From choosing to be a parent to choosing to run for the Presidency of the United States; people take risks. When people assume lead roles they not only assume responsibility for themselves, but for others and sometimes that includes those to which they have no connection to, or any control over. That is the price of responsibility and greatness.

In the movie Twister, Bill (played by Bill Paxton) said to Jo (Helen Hunt), “...Things go wrong. You can't explain it, you can't predict it...” The point is sooner or later everybody is faced with the responsibility to stop kicking the can down the road and do something before the “can” becomes the size of a tractor trailer, that is so far off in the ditch we can't even see the right road anymore. Just the direction from which we came, via the damage path. Yet, so many are quick to judge and quicker to criticize. The view from the cheap seats must be pretty good...(thanks Michael Douglas from the movie The American President). The world is full of Monday morning quarterbacks; from sports to politics, to business and family decisions, there is always going to be someone who is second-guessing. The fact is great people step up, assume the risk, accept the responsibility and try regardless. Sometimes, that means cutting a new, and often highly criticized, path back onto the right road. And the rest...well, they're the rest.

Will you be a quarterback on the field today or a critic tomorrow?

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Thank you for reading




Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - July 27, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quote
Day 85 – July 27, 2011

The truth is incontrovertible. Malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end, there it is.
 ~Winston Churchill

Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth.
~Buddha
 
Yesterday, at the grocery store, my husband and I were checking out. There was a couple behind us bragging about their awesome vacation and the beautiful scenery they encountered. The wife was ruffling through her purse, pulling out coupons and handing them to her husband for use at the checkout. He mentioned to her that some of the coupons were expired, and in a much lower tone, she said to him, “Use them anyway, they're stupid here, they won't notice, just slide them through.” I turned my head slightly in his direction, to make him aware that I had heard the exchange. He responded to her, “I'll just put these in my pocket.” Whether or not he did, I don't know, I left in disgust.

These were obviously well off people, who could have easily afforded the few groceries they had. It made me wonder how they got their money? If they are willing to stoop that low to save a few pennies, maybe a nickle, then what else are they capable of? Is it that hard to be truthful, to be honest? Maybe I am being a bit cynical about this, but it seems to me that this duplicitous behavior is becoming a dominating factor in our society. From inappropriate and irrelevant interview questions, to lying about expired coupons in a grocery store, we seem as a society, to have developed the “habit” of falsehood. How far are we willing to fall before things change? Or, are we just following the example that has been put before us, on television, movies, politics, friendships and on the job. It is corrosive and destructive to the very fabric of our communities. Do people even know how to be honest, or truthful anymore?

I know my disappointment is evident in today's Daily Mood Quote, but I found that action so petty and repulsive that it just “stuck” with me. It was as if I needed to peel the slime coat, of accidental contact with an infectious disease, off of my spirit. Euwww! In the movie Striking Distance, Lieutenant Vincent Hardy (played by John Mahoney) said to Tom Hardy (Bruce Willis) “Loyalty above all else...except honor.” I understand that in a marriage you are supposed to be “loyal” to each other, but when your spouse asks you to do something you know to be wrong, or goes against your moral fiber and you comply, then you are as complicit and guilty in the event as the spouse asking you. Granted this was a minor offense, but it is akin to shoplifting and if someone is willing to do this, then what else are they willing to do when more is at stake? By the way, to touch on an earlier blog, these are things that don't show up on a credit report. I wouldn't be questioning those with low credit scores, but rather those with remarkable ones...what lies did they tell to get it?

Abraham Lincoln said, “resolve to be honest at all events; and if, in your own judgement, you can not be an honest lawyer (insert career or event here), resolve to be honest without being a lawyer. Choose some other occupation”

Where will your “truth” be today?

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Monday, July 4, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - July 4, 2011

 
Daily Mood Quote
Day 61 – July 4, 2011

But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate-we cannot consecrate-we cannot hallow-this ground. The brave men, living in dead, who have struggle here have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.”

~Abraham Lincoln (November 19, 1863)

The Battle of Gettysburg began on July 1, 1863 and by July 4th, the battle was over, the tide of the American Civil War was turned and the Union would be preserved. This was the second July 4th, that marked a milestone in preserving and protecting the freedoms which we currently enjoy. The cost to our nation to preserve those freedoms has been enormous and stretches all the way back to 1776, when the Declaration of Independence was signed.

There are people inside and outside our country who believe that everything we have as a nation has either been given to us, or we have taken it without cost. Nothing could be further from the truth. One only needs to walk through Gettysburg National Battlefield, or Arlington National Cemetery to understand how much has been given, by so many, for the ideals of Freedom and Liberty. Somewhere, someone said, “Freedom isn't free.” and we need to remember that on this day.

When I began this blog today, my intent was to ensure it was not a political statement of any type, but an expression of gratitude to those who have struggled and died, that have created the conditions where I can sit and write this blog. I am thankful..

In the movie Independence Day President Thomas Whitmore (Bill Pullman) in his “inspirational” speech before the human counter offensive spoke a simple truth: “"Mankind." That word should have new meaning for all of us today. We can't be consumed by our petty differences anymore. We will be united in our common interests”. That is something we also tend to forget. Our world is small, our differences large, but we are all human and all living on a tiny, shiny globe that's pretty much an island in a vast, empty sea. The Internet has brought us closer together and provided us (regular people) new insights into how others in our world live and think. We all need to remember, what we have should not be taken for granted. Happy 4th of July.

What will you be “thankful” for today?

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Thank you for reading

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - June 26, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day 53 - June 26, 2011

Nobody can go back and start a new beginning, but anyone can start today and make a new ending.
~Maria Robinson

I wonder how many of us ever wished we had a time machine. Just fire up the old time machine and go. Whenever, where ever, to do what ever needed to be done to “fix things.” For me, I have thought about it. But I wouldn't travel back in time to change anything, because the lessons I have learned in my life were worth learning. If I had changed any of those situations, then I may not know the things I know today, or have had the experiences that were worth having.

We can't predict the future, nor can we change the past despite the premise of the movie Back to the Future with Michael J. Fox. He went back to a time to when his parents were teenagers and in high school. He never guessed that interfering with the past would dramatically alter the future. Well things worked out for Marty McFly, and why wouldn't they? It was a movie and things always work out in the movies. The point is, we all have “woulda, shoulda and coulda's” in our lives, but even if we did those things, made the changes, we would find ourselves to be someone else, with other “woulda, shoulda and coulda's”. We are where we are supposed to be and at the time we are to be there. There is some comfort in that. Abraham Lincoln said in his 1860 letter to George Latham; “ I know not how to aid you, save the assurance of one of mature age, and much severe experience, that you cannot fail if you resolutely determine that you will not.” So experiences, even the bad ones have there place in life. Not that you have to like them, but we can draw a lesson from each.

Like Marty McFly said, “If you put your mind to it, you can accomplish anything.” and the history of your future will change. So, instead of longing for the past, let's learn from it and stop wondering about the “what if's.” Look towards the future by making a positive change today.
What positive change will you start today?

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Friday, June 24, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - June 24, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day 51 – June 24, 2011

It is impossible for you to be angry and laugh at the same time. Anger and laughter are mutually exclusive and you have the power to choose either.
~Wayne Dyer

The past couple of nights at the dinner table, I found myself laughing so hard I got the hiccups. With all that has been going on here, I forgot, or just chose to ignore how important laughter is when dealing with life's situations. Things can overwhelm us and sometimes take control, so much that we forget the phrase, “this too shall pass” by King Solomon and quoted by Abraham Lincoln. I added to this by saying “Yes, this too shall pass, like a kidney stone, but it will pass.” meaning, there will pain and difficulty involved, but it's important to keep perspective, especially when things are tough.

Last night, I had gone to bed early, because I was feeling a bit sorry for myself. I injured my knee many years ago and recently re-injured it, causing swelling, inflammation and pain every time I take a step. But as I sat in bed, I listened to some neighborhood kids playing outside, running after each other, screaming in fun and just having a good time. What an awesome thing it is to be young and have fun. “Somewhere along the course of our lives, we forget to have fun and begin to “audit” our lives (thank you to Terrence Stamp who played the guru Terrence Bundley in the movie, Yes Man). “You can't audit life, my friend.” We try to appear to be something we are not and laughter seems to be the first thing to go. We have serious issues to deal with, but I wonder if those issues would be easier to deal with if we laughed, or smiled?

In the movie Yes Man with Jim Carey (Carl Allen) Allison (played by Zooey Deschanel) said, “The world's a playground. You know that when you are a kid, but somewhere along the way everyone forgets it.” I must admit I have forgotten that occasionally, but not today. Today, I will approach the world with a smile and laughter, no matter how many grumpy people I run into. And around here, that seems to be the majority. Maybe I'll dance in the grocery store aisle today, you never know...

How will you spread joy and laughter today?

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Friday, June 10, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - June 10, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day 37 – June 10, 2011

Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
~Martin Luther King Jr.

I really don't know why this quote struck such a cord in me today. This is the most negative quote I have ever read by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Still it's true. I understand in the context of his time in history, this position was not only warranted, it was altogether required to get his point across.

I know there are a lot of people who hark back to “better days” and young people especially, who have simply no idea of the magnitude of the ignorance that generated the social and civil strife of the 1960's and 1970's. It's not that the people weren’t well meaning back then, it just that they did not understand the weight of their actions, to quote Abraham Lincoln, “a house divided against itself cannot stand.” We hear in the news and media, random allusions and tweets during trade disputes, about discrimination, “slavery” and other such accusations. Unfortunately, the people who are espousing these points of view, are clearly misguided and ignorant of how far we have come as a nation and how open and balanced our society has become. The majority of these people have college educations, so ignorance isn't the issue, it's conscientious stupidity that is their lot. How selfish it is to reignite social discord over more money for themselves. They look at what is and say, “it is bad” and not at what has grown and see the good. Robert Kennedy said, “There are those who look at things the way they are, and ask why... I dream of things that never were, and ask why not."

Some, also in ignorance, long for “the better days of the past.” Those “better days” really weren't, and we tend to forget that. Maybe we should ask the question, “Are we exactly where we should be?” Chances are the answer is yes, but where we go from here is up to us. Because the future is an unknown, it is easy to fear it and long for “better days,” or to blame someone else for our lot in life no matter how severe or plush. In actuality it is up to us to reach for the “why nots” and overcome the fear and conscientious stupidity that are the hand tools of ignorance and the enemy of progress.

No movie quote today.

What “why nots” for a better tomorrow will you embrace today?

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Daily Mood Quotes - May 25, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day 21 – May 25, 2011

You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him.”

~James D. Miles

In the movie The American President, President Andrew Shepherd (played by Micheal Douglas) said “...I've been here three years and three days, and I can tell you without hesitation: Being President of this country is entirely about character.” 
 
Yesterday, our family dog destroyed my husband's glasses and his reaction revealed a little bit about his character. Even tempered, balanced, a little laughter and one big, giant son-of-aaaa-bi@#$ (thanks Uncle Joe). The point is, it didn't reveal everything. Character is a three dimensional concept. You can't see everything at once and it takes some time to see all the sides. We need to view character much like a ball, within the light of the events of the moment. Different lights make different views.

So often in life, we tend to judge people and ourselves solely on one event, or light, without taking the time to walk around the entire object. Things and people are not always what they appear to be at first observation. My family has faced their fair share of challenges and also have had a few successes. Each of these has shone a different light on one side of our character, or the other. How you handle these situations reveals only one aspect of your character at a time, and that is how you treat people who can do nothing for you. When you're successful, how you treat the everyday people you meet on the streets, in the supermarkets, or elsewhere who may not be as successful, shines a spotlight on your character. It can reveals cracks that even you didn't know you had. When you have a failure, how you treat those same people and people who happen to be successful at that moment, can shine a global light on your character. People will look from all sides and you should too. It's true, folks can achieve success without character, however in the long run they are neither respected, nor liked and they have done nothing to advance their own spirit.

People can certainly fail without character, but that doesn't mean people who have failed have little or no character. Robert Kennedy said, “Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly.” History is ripe with people of great character who have fallen on hard times. Much like Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln, who both filed bankruptcy. Yet history has revealed the long-term power of their character. Lincoln lead the nation through a time of unprecedented tribulation and lead a charge for civil rights and civil unity that defines our nation, and; Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence... it wasn't to get out of paying his bills.

An unattributed quote that rings true is “adversity doesn’t build character, it reveals it,”. My husband has been saying this for nearly 30 years. However, it only reveals it in one light, the light of the moment, its not a 360 degree view. Whether you are faced with adversity, or you know someone that is, don't let the light of the moment define the total understanding of their character. Be kind and non-judgmental to yourself and others, until you can gain some perspective and a new light.

What light shines on your character today?

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Monday, May 16, 2011

Daily Mood Quote - May 16, 2011

Daily Mood Quote
Day Twelve – May 16, 2011

My father taught me to work, but not to love it. I never did like to work, and I don't deny it. I'd rather read, tell stories, crack jokes, talk, laugh-anything but work.
~Abraham Lincoln

What a great way to start a new work week with an honest quote from honest Abe. 
 
My parents never taught me the value of hard work, we were a struggling family my entire childhood. It wasn't until I went into the military that I learned the value of hard work. Unfortunately, that hard work came with long hours, exhaustion and low pay. One day a friend of mine said, “I now know the value of hard work, it's more hard work.” I laughed and she was right. I think sometimes we have to learn what hard work is, in order to understand working smart.

Working smart doesn't mean taking advantage of other people, or getting them to do your work. Working smart is about leveraging your best abilities to do what you love to do. We are all born to do something, fill some role and we should do that to the best of our abilities. I doubt seriously its worker drone. In the movie Star Trek, the J.J Abrams version..., Captain Pike (Bruce Greenwood) meets a young James Kirk (Chris Pine) after a bar room brawl and says, “You can settle for less in ordinary life, or do you feel like you were meant for something better? Something special.” I believe we are all meant for something special in are own way. Let's work hard toward that.

What is your something special, something better?

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