by Michael Josephson, WhatWillMatter.com
Here’s the bad news:
Virtue isn’t a golden ticket to a pain-free life. Bad things happen to good people as often as they happen to bad people.
It seems unfair, but in the natural order of the world, suffering is random. To expect otherwise is to sentence oneself to despondency, disillusionment, bitterness, and anger.
Here’s the good news:
The magic power that comes with our humanity isn’t a shield protecting us from misfortune but an inner strength that helps us deal with it, overcome it, and learn from it so we can still find love, laughter, and joy despite it.
At our darkest moments, we can’t see and often don’t believe there is light at the end of the tunnel. Sometimes we think the tunnel is our life. This is when we need to have faith in our inner strength and summon the moral courage to find the spark within that, with just a puff of hope, will become a flame bright enough to show us the way out.
But what can we do if despair is feeding on the soul of someone we love?
We can’t carry their burdens or make their pain or grief go away, but we can be a friend so they don’t suffer or grieve alone.
Simply by being there – with a shared tear, a kind hug, or an outstretched hand – we can be a living answer to despair’s dark question: “How can I go on?”
In the midst of despair, being reminded that tomorrow is another day provides no comfort because it’s hard to believe tomorrow will be any better. But it will be. Tomorrow is the doorway to the future, and that’s where we’ll live the rest of our lives.
This is Michael Josephson reminding you that character counts.
Here’s the bad news:
Virtue isn’t a golden ticket to a pain-free life. Bad things happen to good people as often as they happen to bad people.
It seems unfair, but in the natural order of the world, suffering is random. To expect otherwise is to sentence oneself to despondency, disillusionment, bitterness, and anger.
Here’s the good news:
The magic power that comes with our humanity isn’t a shield protecting us from misfortune but an inner strength that helps us deal with it, overcome it, and learn from it so we can still find love, laughter, and joy despite it.
At our darkest moments, we can’t see and often don’t believe there is light at the end of the tunnel. Sometimes we think the tunnel is our life. This is when we need to have faith in our inner strength and summon the moral courage to find the spark within that, with just a puff of hope, will become a flame bright enough to show us the way out.
But what can we do if despair is feeding on the soul of someone we love?
We can’t carry their burdens or make their pain or grief go away, but we can be a friend so they don’t suffer or grieve alone.
Simply by being there – with a shared tear, a kind hug, or an outstretched hand – we can be a living answer to despair’s dark question: “How can I go on?”
In the midst of despair, being reminded that tomorrow is another day provides no comfort because it’s hard to believe tomorrow will be any better. But it will be. Tomorrow is the doorway to the future, and that’s where we’ll live the rest of our lives.
This is Michael Josephson reminding you that character counts.
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