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The Monday Morning Memo

Three Ideas that Explain Who You Are

January 6, 2020

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/85d4a889-77d0-4b8f-947f-6fd920cf7720/MMM20200106-3IdeasExplainWhoUR.mp3


1: You are the product of your genetic code, hardwired to behave in certain ways.

2: You are the product of your environment, the sum total of your influences.

3: You are the product of your choices. It is your preferences, not your surroundings, that define you.

I believe it is a mistake to cling too tightly to any of these 3 ideas. Each of them is true, I think, but not to the exclusion of the other two.

The first explanation of you – DNA – is biological.
The second explanation of you – Environment – is sociological.
The third explanation of you – Choice – is theological.

You don’t get to choose your DNA.
You don’t get to choose how or where you spend your early childhood years.
You do get to choose what you do next.

I say these things to you because you are staring into the mirror of a brand-new year; so new that you can still smell the vinyl upholstery.

I see your future clearly. Shall I tell you about it?

Things will happen to you that are beyond your control. A few of these will be bad. But why worry? They are beyond your control. You have no power to change these things, no matter how well you worry.

 “Never let the future disturb you. You will meet it, if you have to, with the same weapons of reason which today arm you against the present.”
– Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, from his book, Meditations, published in 200 A.D.

“True happiness is to enjoy the present without anxious dependence on the future.”
– Lucius Annaeus Seneca, (4 B.C. – 65 A.D.)

Yes, things will happen to you that are beyond your control. But most of these will be good things. Do not take them for granted, but anchor yourself in these daily moments of serendipity. Let them speak to you of the joy of living:

  • You will step outside just in time to see the afternoon sky melt into the red, orange and gold of autumn leaves.
  • You will be contacted by an old friend you had been thinking about calling.
  • You will have the opportunity to play with a puppy.
  • You will order a dish you’ve never had and be amazed at the interplay of flavors and spices.
  • You will be paid a true compliment by a stranger.
  • You will be given the opportunity to make a big difference in the life of someone else, and it will be within your power to say, “Yes.”
  • You will look into the face of an infant, and it will smile at you.
  • You will discover a short-cut that saves you time and trouble.
  • You will talk to empty air and know that you have been heard.
  • You will have a happy, new year.

These good things, and many hundreds of others like them, are waiting for you, just ahead.

Roy H. Williams

Decisions, big ones, await you in 2020. Abraham Lincoln made the big decision to publish the Emancipation Proclamation. Harry Truman made the big decision to drop the atomic bomb. Robert L. Dilenschneider is a public relations counselor and a serious historian who has studied the decisions of these men along with Marie Curie, Rachel Carson, Elie Wiesel, Henry Ford and 17 others whose decisions helped shape the 20th century. Listen and learn as Dilenschneider tells roving reporter Rotbart about how we can learn to make the best choices in our own lives, based on what we can learn from the brilliant process used by others.  It’s completely now and it’s completely free at MondayMorningRadio.com

 

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