Monday, January 30, 2012

Hold on to your life perspective

Robin S. Sharma

Hold on to your life perspective
 
One day a man condemned to immobility brought into the hospital room where the bed by the window was lying another patient. They soon became friends. Patient at the window looking out into the street through the windowpane, and then to somehow entertain his bedridden friend in the ward, was eloquently for hours telling him how beautiful the world outside the hospital. In some days, he described the beauty of the park, which was opposite the hospital, telling how flutter in the wind, the leaves of trees. At other times he entertained his friend, reciting in detail what they were doing walking down the street people. But over time, bedridden patient began to experience a bitter disappointment because he can not see the miracles described his neighbor. Finally, this feeling turned into hostility to the talkative neighbor.

One night, a patient who was lying next to a window, during a particularly severe attack of coughing respiratory arrest occurred. Instead call the nurse, his neighbor prefer to pretend not to notice the incident. The next morning the doctors officially pronounced dead by his fellow ward who gave him so many happy minutes with his stories about the beautiful world outside. Bed with the deceased were taken from a hospital ward. Freed from its neighbor, turnback immediately asked that his bed was placed by the window.Nurse on duty immediately performed the request. When he looked out into the street through the windowpane, then shuddered with horror, his eyes opened overshadowed the whole world a huge blank brick wall next door. It turns out that using the power of his imagination, his deceased friend coined the incredible pictures that bring him joy in a difficult time for him. He was driven by selfless love.

This story always helps me to correct the vision of its own life perspective. In order to live a happy and fulfilling lives, especially in difficult times, you need a new way to present your perspective by asking yourself at this: "Can I take a more sensible and wise decision and find a way out of this unpleasant situation for me?"

Stephen Hawking, one of the greatest physicists of all time, once said that we live on a small planet in a very ordinary star, lost in the outskirts of a giant, consisting of hundreds of thousands of millions of galaxies of the Cosmos. How do you like this change of perspective? In light of this information is so awful that you feel the personal troubles? Surely the problems of the past or the challenges of today seem to you just as serious, what you thought before?

We come into this world to live a short life. Taking into account all the above, we can conclude that the life of each one of us is just a short blip on the radar of eternity. So show your same wise enough to, as he walked through life, enjoy it in full.