Our
grandchildren have just completed their annual visit and have returned
to Canada. Last year, our granddaughter, then age 6, was continually
at the piano, banging away at the keys and pretending she was playing
something. This past year she has been taking piano lessons and
so this year her mother wanted her to practice the pieces she is
learning and it was like pulling teeth to get her to the piano.
Toy manufacturers sell miniature stoves, refrigerators and sinks
for the little girls to play house with, and they love to pretend
they are cooking, washing dishes etc. They also make toy tools and
even miniature lawn mowers that putput for the boys to imitate doing
what daddy does, but when these children grow older and are asked
to use the real sink for doing dishes and the full size lawn mower
to cut the grass, then it is no longer play but work, and young
ones will avoid it like the plague. Why is it that we like to do
that which we are not required to do and we avoid that which is
expected of us? The one is called play and the other work. Adults
will take vacations from their work and travel to a ranch to work
ten times harder than they ever did in the city. It is our attitude
that makes the difference between work and play. Since we must work
for a living, why don’t we take the attitude that we like what we
are doing, since we are going to have to do it anyway?
Our
little granddaughter was constantly procrastinating. She didn’t
know that was what she was doing but she kept putting off the piano
practicing that her mother wanted her to do. Again, we are all so
much alike. How often have we put off doing something we know we
must do, and as long as we are not doing it, it is on our mind nagging
us, but still we do not do it. We’ve also had another house guest
recently, a dear sister from Rhode Island and while she was here
she gave us a book entitled, ”Stop Procrastinating, Do It!” One
of these days we are going to read it. Now that makes a lot of sense,
doesn’t it, to put off reading a book about procrastinating. Actually
we have read it and it is very good. The author tells us, ”You might
have to change a mood before starting to work on a task, especially
if it causes you to procrastinate.” He goes on to say, ”Concentrate
on spiritual things as a form of private devotion.” Now this is
not a religious book, yet it is giving us some sound advice. When
we lift our hearts and minds to things of God we are reminded of
Paul’s advice ”whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord
and not unto men.”
By changing our attitude towards our work and doing it heartily
unto the Lord, we will find that tasks which seemed boring and tiring
take on a new meaning. By changing our attitude, we can learn to
tackle them with gusto for the sheer joy of seeing them behind us
instead of staring us in the face.
Again
the author of the book on procrastinating tells us that ”you’ll
get a lot more done if you can take it piece by piece.” This reminds
us of the well known saying that ”anything’s a cinch, inch by inch.”
Our young granddaughter was overwhelmed by the thought of practicing
for a long period of time, but it’s only possible to play one piece
at a time, and all she needs to do is change her attitude, make
it fun again and play one piece at a time. We too, can make our
jobs into beautiful music instead of discordant sounds by being
happy in our work.
We
recall that Paul confessed that ”when he was a child, he spake as
a child, he understood as a child. he thought as a child; but when
he became a man, he put away childish things.” Let us, too, grow
up, and stop putting off the things we ought to be doing. Let us
”seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness” and all other
things in life will fit in their proper place.
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