Our
true rewards in life will depend on the quality and amount of
contribution we make. From the Scriptures to science, to psychology, to
business, the documentation is the same. “As we sow, we reap.” Life is
an unfailing boomerang. What we throw out will come back full circle.
The
way we can build self-reliance is to recognize the number of
alternative choices we have in a free society. And for every choice we
make, there is a consequence of or reward for that decision that we
must acknowledge as our responsibility. God’s Law of Cause and Effect
is forever the ruler.
During
debriefing interviews, returning POWs from the wars in which we have
fought during the past century said that what they missed most of all
was their freedom of choice. There are two primary choices in our
lives: to accept conditions as they exist or to accept the
responsibility for changing them.
To
attain emotional security, each of us must learn to develop two
critical capabilities: the ability to live with uncertainty, and the
ability to delay immediate gratification in favor of long-range goals.
Losers let life happen to them. Winners make it happen for themselves
and others. Losers engage in pleasurable activities, with no purpose or
result in mind. Losers try to escape from their fears and drudgery
with activities that are tension-relieving. Winners are motivated by
their desires toward activities that are goal-achieving.
A
number of research studies during the past decade indicate that the
happiest, most well-adjusted individuals are those who believe they
have a strong measure of control over their lives. They choose more
appropriate responses to what occurs and they stand up to inevitable
changes and daily setbacks with less apprehension. They learn from
their past mistakes, rather than reinforce or repeat them. They spend
time taking action in the present, rather than fearing what might
happen in the future.
To be self-reliant adults, we need to set some guidelines:
Be different, if it means higher personal and professional standards.
Be different, if it means being more gracious and considerate to others.
Be different, if it means being cleaner, neater and better groomed than the group.
Be different, if it means putting more time and effort into all you do.
And
be different, if it means taking the calculated risk. The greatest
risk in life is to wait for and depend upon others for your own
security. The greatest security is to plan and act, and take the risk
that will ultimately ensure your personal freedom and independence.
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