What would you say is the most boring job
in the world? A survey asked this very question of a large group of
people, who most frequently answered, "toll collector."
Recently I was in a car with several
friends waiting to pay a toll at the Chicago airport. The line seemed to
be moving rather slowly; I assumed the delay had something to do with
security. When we finally arrived at the booth, we found a handsome
Italian man with thick, gray hair and sparkling eyes. As he handed us
our change, he leaned over and enthusiastically sang us several verses
of "La Traviata" - and he was really good! We thanked him,
smiled, and went on our way with a little more color in our cheeks.
Many years ago my mentor told me,
"Take whatcha got and make whatcha want." If ever anyone has
ever put this principle into action, it is that toll collector! He has
taken a potentially dreary and chilly tollbooth and transformed it into
an opera hall! I’m sure the people who pass through his booth are the
happiest in that airport.
As we enter this new year, we all want to
change our lives for the better. The question is, how? There are
actually two ways you can change your life (1) Change your conditions;
and (2) Change your mind. Sometimes you can change your conditions.
Always you can change your mind. Ultimately, mastering your mind yields
far more success and reward than rearranging conditions. Perhaps you
have heard about the fellow who was losing coins out of a hole in his
pocket, so he went out and got a second job to replace the coins. He
didn’t realize how much more helpful it would have been to simply sew
the hole!
I heard about a man who was walking
across a bridge when he saw a fellow fishing from the bank of the river.
The fisherman caught a small fish and tossed it into a small bucket.
Then he caught a large fish and cast it back into the river. The
onlooker kept watching and saw that the fisherman kept all the small
fish but rejected all the large ones. Curious, he went down to the
riverbank and asked, "Why do you keep only the small fish?"
"It’s simple," answered the
fisherman. "I have this frying pan here that’s about nine inches
wide. Only the smaller fish fit in the frying pan, so they’re the ones
I keep."
The frying pan, in this story, represents
our mind and the beliefs we hold. If you allow into your life only the
things that match your current beliefs, the world you live in will be
only as large as those beliefs - but then you miss out on lots of bigger
fish! Instead of limiting life to your old frying pan, get a bigger one
and embrace all that life has to offer. You can go to the ocean with a
thimble, a cup, or a tanker, and you will come back with a volume of
water equal to the size of the receptacle you bring. So bring a big one!
My friend Drake is a landscaper who had
numerous small accounts. One day one of his customers, a wealthy man
with a large estate, invited Drake to work on his property full time.
"What is your dream of how good this job could be?" the owner
asked Drake.
Drake told him he would have to think
about it. He went home and wrote down all the aspects he could picture
for his ideal job. A week later Drake revisited his notes and realized
that what he had written did not represent his entire dream. So he
expanded the salary, equipment, and working conditions. Several weeks
later Drake came back to his written vision and realized it still wasn’t
big enough. This process went on for three months, with Drake’s dream
job continually expanding on paper. Finally he felt that what he had
written was big enough to match what was in his heart and mind. He took
the paper to his prospective employer and showed it to him. The fellow
read the paper, thought for a moment, and answered, "Sounds good to
me." Now Drake is living his dream job. He took what he had and
made what he wanted.
The key to taking what you have and
making what you want is to reframe. Find a way to look at every
experience so it empowers you. After the great Argentinean golfer Robert
De Vincenzo won a tournament, he received his check and began walking to
his car in the parking lot. There he was approached by a young woman who
told him that her child was seriously ill, near death. She did not know
how she could pay the doctor’s bills and hospital expenses. De
Vincenzo was so touched by her story that he endorsed his winning check
and pressed it into her hands with the loving wish, "Make some good
days for the baby." A few days later a golf official told him,
"That woman you met in the parking lot is a phony. She has no sick
baby. She’s not even married. She fleeced you, my friend."
"You mean there is no baby who is dying?" asked De Vincenzo.
"That’s right," answered the official. "Well," De
Vincenzo responded, "That’s the best news I’ve heard all
week."
I wish you a new year of news that is
good because you choose to find it, and a wish list that is so
magnificent the universe has no choice but to fill it.
Alan Cohen is the author of the
best-selling The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, the award winning A
Deep Breath of Life, and the acclaimed Why Your Life Sucks and What You
Can Do About It. To request a free catalog of Alan’s books, tapes,
seminars, and life-transforming Mastery Training in Maui, phone
1-800-568-3079, visit Alan's web site www.alancohen.com,
email admin@alancohen.com, or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708.