Written by Chuck Gallozzi   

Adversity: Here to Break Us or Make Us?

Pain, suffering, stress, and other difficulties are the admission
tickets to the game of life. But, at times, we cannot help suspecting
that life would be much more pleasant without the hassles. Is that what
you think? Before answering, ponder the following. In a world without
hurdles, there are no champions; without suffering, there are no saints;
without battles, there are no victories; without rain, no rainbows.
Doesnt it appear that a world that includes pain is more rewarding than
one that doesnt? Isnt heat necessary to produce gold, pressure and
polishing necessary to produce diamonds, and adversity necessary to
produce character?

Heres how Henry Ford expressed the same sentiment: Life is a series of
experiences, each one of which makes us bigger, even though sometimes it
is hard to realize this. For the world was built to develop character,
and we must learn that the setbacks and grieves which we endure help us
in our marching onward.

Points to Consider

1. Adversity is unavoidable. So, dont fight it, accept it. Develop the
proper attitude, for as Havelock Ellis wrote, Pain and death are part of
life. To reject them is to reject life itself. Although pain is
inevitable, suffering is optional. We can choose to be strong. It is not
misfortune that produces suffering, but an improper reaction to it.

Even under the worst circumstances, we can choose to focus on the
positive rather than the negative. Thomas A. Edison is an example. In
1914, a fire almost destroyed his New Jersey laboratories. Valuable
records of his experiments and two million dollars worth of equipment
were lost. When surveying the damage, the sixty-seven year old Edison
said, There is great value in disaster. All our mistakes are burned up.
Thank God we can start anew.

When Hurricane Mitch swept across Central America and parts of the U.S.,
it left a path of destroyed homes, dashed dreams, and broken hearts.
After the storm subsided, birds returned to uprooted trees and began to
sing. Isnt it true, as Rose F. Kennedy says, Birds sing after a storm;
why shouldnt people feel as free to delight in whatever remains to them?

2. Realize that misfortune tells what fortune is. We need winter to
appreciate spring, rain to appreciate the sunshine, and adversity to be
thankful for the calm after the storm.

3. Recognize misfortune for what it is: an opportunity to lift yourself
to a higher level. Sailors caught in a storm should prayer not for
safety from danger, but for deliverance from fear. Why should they
accept the storm? Because a smooth sea never made a skillful mariner.

When an eagle believes her eaglets are large enough to learn how to fly,
she begins to take apart the nest and push the eaglets out. After this
rude awakening, the eaglets discover they have wings! They can fly! The
universe is constantly nudging us, pushing us off one cliff after
another, in the hope that one day we, too, will discover our wings and
soar to new heights.

4. Lessen your suffering by refusing to linger on past difficulties or
expecting future ones. Problems of the present are difficult enough to
deal with. Dont add to your misery by regretting the past or worrying
about what might happen in the future. Mark Twain understood that it was
pointless to fret about the future when he said, I am an old man and
have known a great many troubles, but most of them never happened.

5. Realize it could be worse. Count your blessings. Keep in mind the
Persian proverb: I cried because I had no shoes until I saw someone with
no feet.

Regardless of how horrible your circumstances, you are probably not
paralyzed and unable to speak. However, Mr. Washington Roebling was. You
see, more than 100 years ago, Washingtons father, John, had a dream to
build The Brooklyn Bridge. Experts at the time believed it to be
impossible, but John finally persuaded the city to support his project.
He and his son, Washington, were the lead engineers and the only ones
who knew how to build such a bridge. After just a few months into the
project, there was an accident that took the life of John and left his
son with permanent brain damage. Although unable to speak, write, or
walk, Washingtons mind was alert and he could move one finger.
Determined to realize his fathers dream, he developed a code, which made
it possible to communicate with his wife by tapping on her arm with his
finger. Washington tapped on his wifes arm for thirteen years, relaying
all the instructions for the engineers. Today, the bridge stands as a
testimony of how we can overcome any obstacle, if only we choose to do
so.

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