We can decide to choose our attitudes every day, one of the most important decisions we will make...



Good morning and happy Tuesday, I pray your day is off to a good start and that it just gets better and better as the day goes by. It is a hazy, lazy day today...we have a chance of rain and snow later in the day so am asking all of my friends to be safe on the roadways.

In prayer this morning I said my normal, usual prayers asking God to bless each of you with his kindness and compassion. I asked him to continue to bless those who are battling disease and sickness, who are struggling through the pain of broken ness and who are now begin the long and painful process of rehabilitation. I asked God to continue to hold each of the storm victims in his loving arms providing them with their needs to get through and begin rebuilding. I prayed for each of you for peace in your hearts, calm in your minds, comfort in your hearts and an abundance of love. I prayed that each of us would choose the right today as an honor to God. In the name of Jesus Christ I ask for these mercies and graces. Amen.

We all have the right to choose how our attitudes will be, are we going to sort and file or are we going to let the junk in our lives pile up until we explode....I pray your day is filled with good choices and that you receive the blessings you deserve for those choices. God bless each of you. 

A Choice To Make

I believe that, at least to some degree, we can each exercise control over our outlook and attitudes. And the problem is - if we don't control our attitudes, they will surely control us. 

One farmer took charge of his outlook. He did it by filling his mind with awe and gratitude. He found that doing this gave him more energy to work on problems and to tackle those things that needed his attention. His neighbor's outlook could not have been more different. 

One summer morning he exclaimed, "Look at the beautiful sky. Did you ever see such a glorious sunrise?" 

She countered. "It'll probably get so hot the crops will scorch." 

During an afternoon shower, he commented, "Isn't this wonderful? Mother Nature is giving the corn a drink today." 

"And if it doesn't stop before too long," came the sour reply, "we'll wish we'd taken out flood insurance on the crops." And so it went. 

Convinced that he could instill some awe and wonder in this hardened woman, he bought a remarkable dog. Not just any mutt, but the most expensive, highly trained and gifted dog he could find. The animal was exquisite. It could perform remarkable and impossible feats that, the farmer thought, would surely amaze even his neighbor. So he invited her to watch his dog perform. 

"Fetch!" he commanded, as he tossed a stick into a lake, where it bobbed up and down in the rippling water. The dog bounded after the stick, walked ON the water, and retrieved it. "What do you think of that?" he smirked. 

Her brow wrinkled. "Hmmm. Can't swim, can he?" 

Not to sound too Pollyanna, but I agree with newscaster Paul Harvey when he said that he has never seen a monument erected for a pessimist. A stubbornly positive attitude can often make the difference between happiness and misery, between health and illness and even between life and death. 

Viktor Frankl would have agreed. Dr. Frankl chronicled his experiences as a Holocaust and concentration camp survivor in his book MAN'S SEARCH FOR MEANING. In it he asserts something really quite remarkable. He says that everything can be taken from a person except one thing. What can never be taken away is the power to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances. 

We can decide to choose our attitudes every day. That may be one of the most important decisions we will make. I don't want to neglect making that choice. 

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