FSS Newsletter :: March 2003
Read All the Books
All of the books that we will ever need to make us as rich,
as healthy, as happy, as powerful, as sophisticated and
as successful as we want to be have already been written.
People from all walks of life, people with some of the
most incredible
life experiences, people that have gone from pennies
to fortune and from failure to success have taken the time
to write down their experiences so that we might share in
their wealth of knowledge. They have offered their wisdom
and experience so that we can be inspired by it and instructed
by it, and so that we can amend our philosophy by it. Their
contributions enable us to reset our sail based upon their
experiences. They have handed us the gift of their insights
so that we can change our plans, if need be, in order to
avoid their errors. We can rearrange our lives based on their
wise
advice.
All of the insights that we might ever need have
already been captured by others in books. The important
question is this: In the last ninety days, with this treasure
of information that could change our lives, our fortunes,
our relationships, our health, our children and our careers
for the better, how many books have we read?
Why do we neglect
to read the books that can change our lives? Why do we
complain but remain the same? Why do so many of us curse
the effect
but nourish the cause? How do we explain the fact that
only a small percent of our entire national population
possesses and utilize a library card - a card that would
give us access to all of the answers to success and happiness
we could ever want? Those who wish for the better life cannot
permit themselves to miss the books that could have a major
impact
on how their lives turn out. The book they miss will not
help!
And the issue is not that books are too expensive!
If a person concludes that the price of buying the
book is too great, wait until he must pay the price for not
buying it. Wait until he receives the bill for continued
and prolonged ignorance.
There is very little difference
between someone who cannot read and someone who will not
read. The result of either is ignorance. Those who are serious
seekers of personal development must remove the self-imposed
limitations they have placed on their reading skills and
their reading habits. There is a multitude of classes being
taught on how to be a good reader and there are thousands
of books on the shelves of the public libraries just waiting
to be read. Reading is essential for those who seek to rise
above the ordinary. We must not permit anything to stand
between us and the book that could change our lives.
A little reading each day will result in a wealth of valuable
information in a very short period of time. But if we fail
to set aside the time, if we fail to pick up
the book, if we fail to exercise the discipline, then ignorance
will quickly move in to fill the void.
Those who seek a better
life must first become a better person. They must continually
seek after self-mastery for the purpose of developing a balanced
philosophy of life, and then live in accordance with the
dictates of that philosophy. The habit of reading is
a major stepping-stone in the development of
a sound philosophical foundation. And in my opinion it is
one of the fundamentals required for the attainment of success
and happiness.
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