I was not born a bookworm. I got the habit of reading thanks to my SPED English back in elementary school where I had to do book reports often. (I was part of an "experimental Accelerated class".) I am thankful that the love of books was instilled on me early on. If there's an indulgence I will not have second thoughts splurging on, then that would be buying books! I will never trade the smell of pages after pages of a trade paperback to E-books and Kindle.
I do not like putting highlights on my books, I find them dirty. So I do take the extra effort of actually writing favorite quotations from all the books I have read in a notebook. The other day, I went through some old journals, and came across some notes I made from the book The Gift of Acabar by Og Mandino. I read it in high school, and it's actually timely to be reading a part of it again.
Here it goes.
The CREDENDA
From the Gift of Acabar |
By Og Mandino
Turn away from the crowd and its fruitless pursuit of fame and gold. Never look back as you close your door to the sorry tumult of greed and ambition.
Wipe away your tears of failure and misfortune.
Lay aside your heavy load and rest until your heart is still.
Be at peace; already it is later than you think for your earthly life, at best, is only the blink of an eye between two eternities.
Be unafraid; nothing can harm you except yourself. Do that which you dread, and cherish those victories with pride. Concentrate your energy. To be everywhere is to be nowhere. Be jealous of your time, since it is your greatest treasure.
Reconsider your goals. Before you set your heart too much on anything, examine how happy they are who already possess what you desire. Love your family and count your blessings. Reflect how eagerly they would be sought if you did not have them.
Put aside your impossible dreams and complete the task at hand no matter how distasteful. All great achievement comes from working and waiting.
Be patient. God's delays are never God's denials. Hold on. Hold fast. Know that your paymaster is always near.
What you sow, good or evil, that you will reap. Never blame your condition on others. You are what you are through your choice alone. Learn to live with honest poverty, if you must, and turn to more important matters than transporting gold to your grave.
Never meet trouble half way. Anxiety is the rust of life; when you add tomorrow's burden to today's, their weight becomes unbearable. Avoid the mourner's bench and give thanks instead for your defeats; you would not have them if you did not need them. Always learn from others. He who teaches himself has a fool for a master. Be careful. Do not overload your conscience.
Conduct your life as if it were spent in an arena filled with tattlers. Avoid boasting. If you see anything in you that buffs you with pride, look closer and you will find more than enough to make you humble.
Be wise. Realize that all men are not created equal, for there is no equality in nature; yet no man was ever born whose work was not born with him. Work everyday as if it were your first, yet tenderly treat the lives you touch as if they will end at midnight.
Love everyone, even those who deny you, for hate is a luxury you cannot afford. Seek out those in need. Learn that he who delivers with one hand will gather with two. Be of good cheer.
Above all, remember that very little is needed to make a happy life.
Look up. Reach out.
Cling simply to God and journey quietly on your pathway to forever with charity and a smile. When you depart it will be said that your legacy was a better world than the one that you found.
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