Worries
- If you want to avoid worry, do what Sir William Osler did: Live in
"day-tight compartments." Don't stew about the futures. Just live each
day until bedtime.
- The next time Trouble--with a Capital T--backs you up in a corner,
try the magic formula of Willis H. Carrier:
- Ask yourself, "What is the worst that can possibly happen if I
can't solve my problem?
- Prepare yourself mentally to accept the worst--if necessary.
- Then calmly try to improve upon the worst--which you have already
mentally agreed to accept.
- Remind yourself of the exorbitant price you can pay for worry in
terms of your health. "Those who do not know how to fight worry die young."
Basic techniques in analyzing worry
- Get the facts. Remember that Dean Hawkes of Columbia University said
that "half the worry in the world is caused by people trying to make
decisions before they have sufficient knowledge on which to base a decision."
- After carefully weighing all the facts, come to a decision.
- Once a decision is carefully reached, act! Get busy carrying out your
decision--and dismiss all anxiety about the outcome.
- When you, or any of your associates, are tempted to worry about a
problem, write out and answer the following questions:
- What is the problem?
- What is the cause of the problem?
- What are all possible solutions?
- What is the best solution?
Seven ways to cultivate a mental attitude that will bring you
peace and happiness
- Let's fill our minds with thoughts of peace, courage, health, and
hope, for "our life is what our thoughts make it."
- Let's never try to get even with our enemies, because if we do we
will hurt ourselves far more than we hurt them. Let's do as
General
Eisenhower does: let's never waste a minute thinking about people we
don't like.
- Instead of worrying about ingratitude, let's expect
it. Let's remember that Jesus healed
ten lepers in one day--and only one thanked Him. Why should we expect
more gratitude than Jesus got?
- Let's remember that the only way to find happiness is not to expect
gratitude--but to give for the joy of giving.
- Let's remember that gratitude is a "cultivated" trait; so if we want
our children to be grateful, we must train them to be grateful.
- Count your blessings--not your troubles!
- Let's not imitate others. Let's find ourselves and be ourselves, for
"envy is ignorance" and "imitation is suicide."
- When fate hands us a lemon, let's try to make a lemonade.
- Let's forget our own unhappiness--by trying to create a little
happiness for others. "When you are good to others, you are best to
yourself."
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