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Are you stuck
or struck in the challenges of life?
Struck or stuck? They are similar
sounding words that come from different drummers. One is up beat
and stimulates to action; the other does little more than sound the
death knell of opportunity.
Happiness lies in the difference
between being struck by the challenge or being stuck in the
challenge.
Some people are struck by the
challenge in their work. It shows on their faces. Ask them a
question about what they do, and they are off and running.
Excitement explodes in them, and their passion for their profession
is revealed.
They almost have a motto that says,
“Thank God it’s Monday and time to go to work again.” They are
struck by the challenge in their work. Happiness and fulfillment
are all around and inside of them.
But other people are stuck in the
challenge of their work. Like the old cowboy who disliked poking
cows, they look only for salt pork and sundown (food and quitting
time.)
Our family knows well one man’s story
in the 1940’s at a North Carolina lumber mill. Those workdays
started and ended with a whistle. Many of the men working there
lived only for the quitting whistle.
One afternoon a worker had a piece of
lumber in his hand ready to put it on the truck. The whistle blew.
He dropped the wood immediately and headed for the door. Soon he
was no longer working at the mill. His breed never seems to get
it. They are stuck in the challenge, limited by thought and deed to
a fixed attitude of discontent.
Yet, many people are struck by the
challenge of their work and constantly search for new ways to do old
things. Ever thinking, they creatively find special meaning in
common tasks.
They may become weary in
well-doing but never weary of well-doing. Negative thinking
is not part of their nature. Constantly seeking better ways of
doing something, their outlook remains positive. They are the
plus-people, the kind you like to be around.
Happiness in marriage and family is
determined precisely at the point of being struck by the challenge
or stuck in the challenge. If the challenge of being married to
your mate moves you to higher levels of relationship, then you are
struck by the challenge and, in this pursuit of knowing your mate,
happiness becomes the by-product.
That’s true for our children as
well. How easy it is to become stuck in the challenge of
parenting! We often parent children unlike ourselves, in times
certainly different from our childhoods. We can become stuck in the
“what’s wrong with today’s kids and society” mentality or struck by
the challenge to create a loving environment where our family can
grow. Instead of being overwhelmed and immobilized, we can be
stimulated by our children’s differences and motivated by their
potential. We can creatively engage them in today’s opportunities.
The choice is ours—to be stuck or
struck by our challenges. The difference may determine our
happiness.


3/27/2005
The Herald Dispatch
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