Each of us will face difficulties in our life.
We will have trials and obstacles to overcome. We will experience defeat and we
will suffer and bleed and eventually die. We will feel pain and sadness, misery
and sorrow. We will lose loved ones and experience loss and grief. Very few of
us are immune to the evils of this world, but as certain as I am that we will
face these challenges, I am equally as certain that we are naturally endowed
with the strength to overcome them. One of the tools that we are provided with
for this task is the ability to control our attitude and how we react to
whatever life throws at us.
One of our tasks as individuals is to make
meaning in our own lives. No one else can do that for us. And while I believe
we are the product of our experiences, we are also defined in part by our
reactions to those experiences in the first place. For example, a basketball
player may attend grueling practices every day in preparation for a game. His
coach may push him and make him run and do all sorts of painful exercises,
hoping to strengthen him. The player may work hard, and at the end of each
practice be so sore that he can hardly move. An outsider who doesn’t’
understand why the player does this might say “This is horrible. He’s in pain!
This is torture. That coach should be imprisoned for inflicting such evil on
that poor soul!”While the basketball player understands why he is being pushed
and accepts that if he endures these hardships, he will do better in the game
to come.
Perhaps no better definition of this principal
exists than that penned by Viktor Frankl:
“We
who lived in the concentration camps can remember the men who walked through
the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may
have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be
taken from a man but one thing: The last of his freedoms – to choose one’s
attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”
And so it is with life. If we believe that the
hardships we face are designed to make us better individuals, then the evils we
face are diminished, until such as time as we don’t see them as evil anymore,
but rather trials and exercises in faith. So the next time challenges are on
your horizon, see them for what they truly are: opportunities to grow. Go out
and meet them head on. Embrace them with a thankful heart and a determination
worthy of the champion inside of you! Good luck!
No comments:
Post a Comment