Bluebird Of Happiness

A sign in a pet store read, "If anybody has seen the Bluebird of Happiness, 
would you please notify this pet store?"

Happiness seems to be in short supply for many people. If the results of recent 
surveys can be trusted, there is a general decline of happiness in today's 
world. And people were not all that cheerful a few years back! It was Oliver 
Wendell Holmes who stated, "I might have been a minister for aught I know, if a 
certain clergyman had not looked and talked like an undertaker." I have to say, 
though, that some clergy and undertakers I've known could teach the rest of us 
something about joy.

Joy and happiness are not always the same things. Happiness can be thought of 
as more of a temporary, emotional condition, often based on outside 
circumstances. Joy, on the other hand, is deeper. It is often contentment in 
spite of the unsettling present. We can be basically joyful, regardless of a 
particular unhappy situation that we may be enduring. It is sometimes just a 
matter of keeping perspective on our troubles, and especially when those 
troubles seem to be in long supply.

You may know the story of the man who had a marvelous way of keeping joy in his 
life.

He was a carpenter. He followed the same ritual every day when he came home 
from the job. He stopped by a small tree in his front yard and placed his hand 
on a couple of branches. Then, when he walked into his home, it was as if a 
magical transformation had occurred. All of a sudden, the stress was lifted 
from him. He became energetic and joyful, able to fully interact with his 
children and his wife.

He explained it this way: "That tree is my trouble tree. When I come home I 
stop by the tree and, just like I leave my tools in the truck, I leave my 
troubles outside of my home. I hang them on that tree before greeting my 
family. Anything that does not have to come in my house stays outside. Anything 
that I do not have to deal with at home, I leave on that tree. And in the 
morning, I stop by the tree and pick up the troubles I left there in the 
evening."

Then he adds, "It's a funny thing, though. Every morning I always find fewer 
troubles remaining than I hung the night before."

Here is a man who has no doubt seen the Bluebird of Happiness. Chances are, it 
is nesting in a tree just outside his home.

There is wisdom in knowing that some problems can wait until tomorrow. And more 
wisdom in knowing what to hang on the tree and what to bring in. Managing daily 
problems well is vital to maintaining joy.

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