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This self help
article is written by Gary Mosher.
------------
If
you want to be happy tomorrow you need to begin working at it today. Some
people spend their lives waiting for happiness to arrive on its own and it
never comes. Others work hard at creating wealth but still aren’t happy,
discovering that money only brings a whole different set of problems. Happiness
is a state of mind and not the size of your bank account. Happiness is
emotional and not physical. Each individual needs to work at creating their own
happiness.
I
like how Richard Bach, the author of Jonathan Livingston Seagull, put it when
he said, “If your happiness depends on what somebody else does, I guess you do
have a problem.”
To
find happiness you first have to understand where happiness comes from.
Memories are to the mind what a mirror is to the eyes - a reflection. The
mirror reflects the physical while our memories reflect the emotional. When you
look in the mirror it reflects what you look like; when you look in your mind
it reflects who you are. One big difference between the two is that you can
change what you see in the mirror but you can’t change the memories reflected
in your mind.
We
tend to spend a lot of time trying to improve what we see in the mirror, but
little or no effort trying to improve our thoughts. Every action creates a
memory. Do you really think that the person who is bitter and angry today was
happy and cheerful yesterday? If a person says or does something which angers
or upsets us, we can either add to the painful memory with our own negative
actions or we can replace them with positive actions and create positive
memories.
If
you want to be happy tomorrow you must choose carefully what you do today,
because today’s actions will be reflected in tomorrow’s memories and you can
not make them go away. Everything you do today will be in tomorrow’s
reflection. The next time a person angers you, instead of lashing out, try
imagining that you are holding up a mirror that bounces the reflection back at
him, knowing that his actions or words are a reflection of him and not of you.
We
all want to like what we see in the mirror. To be truly happy we also have to
like what we see reflected in our minds. What the mirror reflects is not nearly
as powerful as what the mind reflects, for it reflects our words and actions.
What
will your reflections be filled with? Will your reflections/memories be filled
with goodness and joy or with bitterness and anger? What have you done today
that will bring you happiness tomorrow?
Gary Mosher is co-author of the award-winning "Buddha in the Boardroom", the business book that shows you how to excel in today’s chaotic and stressful workplace environment, available from Bodhi Tree, LLC, at http://www.Bodhitreepublishing.com
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