If You Get Bucked Off; Get Back On

Growing up on a small farm had a lot of advantages.  Living with my grandparents through my high-school years, in Snowflake, AZ, also had its privileges.  In addition to learning the fastest way to clean stalls filled with horse manure (my grandpa always told me that you can learn a lot from the end of a shovel) and how to mend a broken fence I was privileged to learn from a generation removed and learn, to some degree, how things were done in the “old days”.

My grandpa, Glen Stratton, had a way of teaching things using analogies and with sayings of his that we frequently called “Glenisms”.  One of his most popular sayings was, “I wouldn’t throw stones at your outhouse like that”.  I’ll let you figure out that one.  I’m not sure if he purposely meant for his instructions in one area of life to be applied to several areas of life, but they did leave lasting impressions.

My grandpa taught me to have a love of horses and also taught me how to team rope.  In learning how to ride horses and to rope there was always a guarantee that at some point you were going to be bucked off.  With that guarantee there was also a guarantee that no matter how small you were or how big the horse was you ALWAYS got back on.  This was not negotiable.  In fact, if you didn’t get back on it taught the horse a bad lesson; that it could buck someone off and be okay with it.  Try being the next rider on the horse after it’s formed this bad habit.

Isn’t this the same with life?  At some point we are guaranteed to be bucked off and if we don’t get back on what have we taught ourselves or learned from the lesson?  In fact isn’t getting back on an empowering action that strengthens us while if we were to stay off it would be a disempowering action that would weaken us.

There is a favorite poem that I have framed, hanging in my bedroom, entitled “Don’t Quit”.

Don’t Quit

When things go wrong as they sometimes will, when the road your trudging seam all uphill.

When the funds are low and the debts are high, and you want to smile but you have to sigh.

When care is pressing you down a bit, rest if you must but do not quit.

Life is queer with its twists and turns, every one of us sometimes learns.

And many a failure turns about, when you might have won had you stuck it out.

Don’t give up, though the pace seams slow; you may succeed with another blow.

Success is failure turned inside out; the silver tint of the clouds of doubt.

And you never can tell how close you are; it may be near when it seems so far.

So stick to the fight when your heart is hit; it’s when things seem worst that you must not quit.

I would like to hear about your greatest triumph and the feeling that came from conquering.

And as always, if you enjoyed it, please share it, digg it, stumble it and retweet it…

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Lessons I Learned as a Boy

I am confident that as we scan our personal corridors of memory we can all recall lessons that we learned in our youth.  Some memories may be pleasant while others might be disheartening.  Despite the circumstances that our lessons came in or the situations in which they were made we all have the power to choose if our lessons are empowering or disempowering.  Do they cause us to grow or to shrink?

Glen Stratton

My Grandpa, Glen Stratton, always told me that if you see something that needs to be done, just do it.  I don’t know if he took this from Nike or if they took it from him but it did make a lasting impression on me.

He also taught me that today is the first day of the rest of my life.

On my eighth birthday my grandpa gave me a framed quote, entitled Believers Creed, which I still have today. I suppose that he saw potential in me that was not limited to my age or circumstance.

Believers Creed: Today is the very first day of the rest of my life. This is the beginning of a new day. God has given me this day to use as I will. I can waste it…or use it for good, but what I do today is important, because I am exchanging a day of my life for it. When tomorrow comes, this day will be gone forever, leaving in its place something that I have traded for it. I want it to be gain, and not loss; good and not evil; success, and not failure; in order that I shall not regret the price that I have paid for it. I will try just for today, for you never fail until you stop trying.

I suppose that I would ask what lessons are we teaching our children, if we have any, or even those with whom we associate with?

Regardless of what you religious or spiritual convictions are, the video below reminds us that we are all part of something that is greater than ourselves.

As always, after watching the video share the lessons that have been the greatest worth in your life and the lesson they taught.

Living for Today

Recently as I was waiting to board my flight from Salt Lake City to Dallas I had the privilege of witnessing something that was very sobering and caused a lot of reflection. A member of our armed forces walked and stood by me waiting for the same flight but he was not alone. He stood there with his wife and three daughters, I’m guessing ages 9, 6 and 4. The soldiers’ wife and children were there to see their husband and father leave for another tour in Iraq. I watched in silence as his daughters clung to their fathers’ leg giving him their last embrace, and taking their last photos together, for what would be a 12-18 month separation from his family. It touched my heart and I couldn’t help but offer a simple prayer that he would return home in safety and that his family would also be protected and strengthened in his absence.

When the boarding call came I made it a point to be the last person to board so that I could further expand the impression that this scene was having on me. As the soldier boarded the plane his three daughters waived to their dad for one last time and then stood there at the window with their mom waiting for the plane to taxi which must have seemed like an eternity for them.

After boarding the plane I thought of the drive home for this mother of three and what must have been going through her mind. I am sure that when she arrived home the silence there was deafening; after all she would be a single mom in many aspects for the next several months ahead. I don’t believe that this was the first time that her husband had been sent away but I also don’t believe that it gets easier with each deployment.

Since then I have had some time to reflect on what I was a witness too. I thought about me and the soldier; here was I boarding a plane to provide my family with a comfortable living while the soldier was boarding the same plane, to possibly be placed in harms way, while his wife and daughters living just became increasingly uncomfortable.

I have thought about what I am doing every day to honor this soldier along with countless others who have served and given their lives in the pursuit of freedom; not to mention the wives, widows and children whose sacrifice is greater in many ways. It led me to commit myself to live each day a little better, try a littler harder, smile a little longer, listen a little more empathetically, anonymously give a little more, hug a little tenderer, and shine a little brighter; to recognize that there is a bigger purpose to life that has little if nothing to do with my own agenda or ego.

On my eighth birthday my grandpa, Glen Stratton, gave me a framed quote, entitled Believers Creed, which I still have today. I suppose that he saw potential in me that was not limited to my age or circumstance.

Believers Creed: Today is the very first day of the rest of my life. This is the beginning of a new day. God has given me this day to use as I will. I can waste it…or use it for good, but what I do today is important, because I am exchanging a day of my life for it. When tomorrow comes, this day will be gone forever, leaving in its place something that I have traded for it. I want it to be gain, and not loss; good and not evil; success, and not failure; in order that I shall not regret the price that I have paid for it. I will try just for today, for you never fail until you stop trying.

The question is then what can we do today to lift hands that hang low, bring a smile to a strangers face, reconcile a broken relationship, and just try a little harder, because true success doesn’t come from what we do for ourselves but what we can do for others.

Please comment and share…