Every person at some point in their lives needs to ask themselves this simple question, “what is my true purpose in life?”
A purposeful life will help you find something more
meaningful -- in the things you do for yourself and others. It can also
help you achieve what you most want in life - true happiness. People
throughout the world have the same deep desire -- to be happy.
For me, happiness is not something that is given to me with
each passing day. It is something I try to bring to each passing day. In
other words, happiness is not found in the things we want to get from
life. But rather happiness is found in the things we give to life.
There is an old Buddhist saying, “Thousands of candles can be
lighted from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be
shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared.”
I liked telling my students when I taught High School in
China; There will be times when the burdens of life make us feel as if
we are carrying them on our shoulders, but without life’s pressures,
diamonds will never appear.
Helen Keller once said, “When one door of happiness closes,
another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do
not see the one which has been opened for us.” On our life’s Journey,
things may not always go as planned, but that does not mean there are
not greater opportunities before us.
I liked reminding my students that the most precious things
in life cannot be built by hand, bought, or sold by man. They can only
be experienced through a wondrous soul and shared from one heart to the
other. Happiness can only be experienced once it is shared with those
around us.
There is also an old Chinese proverb, “Fools seek happiness
in the distance; the wise grows it under their feet.” We all want
happier lives, and the material things we seek and desire may, in fact,
make our lives a little more comfortable. But the material things we
acquire will never provide us with a meaningful and purposeful life.
There are also things in life that we can give away and keep,
our word, a happy smile, and a grateful heart. There is an old saying,
“It’s not happiness that leads to gratitude; it’s gratitude that leads
to happiness.”
Our greatest achievements will not consist of fame or glory
but in the unremembered, unrecognized, and undetected acts of loving
kindness that were bestowed on others. That is where our true purpose
and the meaning of life reside.
I am a firm believer in the universal law - what we give to
others is returned to us a thousand-fold. I also liked to remind my
students that kindness and love are the greatest forms of wisdom, and
love itself is the afterglow of life.
Always with love,
Thomas F O'Neill
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