The Carpenter
An elderly carpenter was ready to retire.
He told
his
employer-contractor of his plans
to leave the
house-building business
and live a more leisurely
life
with his wife enjoying his extended family.
He
would miss the paycheck,
but he needed to retire.
They
could get by.
The contractor was sorry to see
his
good
worker
go and asked if he could build
just
one more
house as a personal favor.
The carpenter said yes,
but
in time it was easy to see that his
heart
was
not in his work.
He resorted to shoddy
workmanship
and used inferior materials.
It was an unfortunate
way
to end his career.
When the carpenter finished his
work
and the
builder came to inspect the house,
the
contractor handed the front-door
key to the
carpenter.
"This is your house," he said,
"my gift
to
you."
What a shock! What a shame!
If he had
only
known he was
building his own house,
he
would have
done it all so differently.
Now he had to live in
the
home
he had built none too well.
So it is
with
us.
We build our lives in a distracted way,
reacting rather than acting,
willing to put up less
than the best.
At important points we do
not
give
the job our best effort.
Then with a shock we
look
at the situation we have created
and find that we
are
now living
in the house we have built.
If
we had
realized that we would
have done it
differently.
Think of yourself as the
carpenter.
Think about your house.
Each day you hammer a
nail,
place a board,
or erect a wall. Build
wisely.
It is
the only life you will ever build.
Even if you live
it
for only one day more,
that day deserves to be
lived
graciously and with dignity.
The
plaque on
the wall says,
"Life is a do-it-yourself project."
Who could say it more clearly?
Your life today is
the
result of your
attitudes and choices in the
past.
Your life tomorrow will be
the result of your
attitudes
and the choices you make
today.
Unknown
The Fence
There was a little boy with a bad temper.
His father gave him a bag of nails
and told him
that every time
he lost his temper,
to hammer a
nail in
the back fence.
The first day the boy had driven
37 nails into the
fence.
Then it gradually dwindled down.
He discovered it was easier to hold his
temper than to drive those nails into the fence.
Finally the day came when the boy
didn't lose his
temper at all.
He told his father about it and the father
suggested
that the boy now pull out one
nail for each day that he was able to
hold his
temper.
The days passed
and the young boy was
finally able
to tell his
father
that all the nails were gone.
The father took his son by the hand
and led him to the fence.
He said,"You have done well, my son,
but look at the holes in the fence.
The fence will never be the same.
When you say things in anger,
they leave a
scar just like this one.
You can put a knife in a man and draw it out.
It won't matter how many times
you say I'm sorry,
the
wound is still there.
A verbal wound is as bad as a physical one.
Friends are a very rare jewel, indeed.
They make you smile
and encourage you to succeed.
They lend an ear,
they share a word of praise,
and
they always want to open
their
hearts to us.
Author Unknown.
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