However great the obstacles between you and your goal may
be or have been, do not lay the blame of your failure upon them. Other people
have succeeded in overcoming just as great obstacles. Remove such hindrances
from the path for others, if you can, or tell them a way to go around. Even
lead them a little distance and cheer them on.
But so far as you yourself are concerned, do not stop to
excuse any delinquency or half-heartedness or defeat by the plea of
circumstance or environment. The great nature makes its own environment, and
dominates circumstance. It all depends upon the amount of force in your own
soul.
While you apply this rule to yourself and make no
scapegoat of "fate," you must have consideration for the weakness of
others, and you must try and better the conditions of the world as you go
along.
You are robust and possessed of all your limbs. You can
mount over the great boulder which has fallen in the road to success, and go on
your way to your goal all stronger for the experience.
But behind you, comes a one-legged man, a blind man, a man
bowed to the earth with a heavy burden, which he cannot lay down.
It will require weeks, months, years of effort on their
part to climb over that rock which you surmounted in a few hours.
So it is right and just for you to call other strong ones
to your aid and roll the boulder away or blast it out of the path. That is just
exactly the way you should think of the present industrial conditions. In spite
of them, the strong, well-poised, earnest and determined soul can reach any
desired success.
But there are boulders in the road which do not belong
there, boulders which cause hundreds of the pilgrims who are lame or blind or
burdened, to fall by the wayside and perish. It is your duty to aid in removing
these obstacles and in making the road a safe and clear thoroughfare for all
who journey.
Do not sit down by the roadside and say you have been
hindered by these difficulties, that is to confess yourself weak. Do not mount
over them and rush to your goal and say coldly to the throngs behind you,
"Oh, everybody can climb over that rock who really tries--didn¡¯t
I?" That is to announce yourself selfish and unsympathetic.
No doubt the lame, the blind and the burdened could attain the
goal despite the rocks if they were fired by a consciousness of the divine
force within them; that consciousness can achieve all things under all
circumstances. But there will always be thousands of pilgrims toiling
wearily toward the goal who have not come to this realization.
If there are unjust, unfair and unkind restrictions
placed about them, see to it that you do all in your power to right what is
wrong. But never wait to attain your own success because of these restrictions
or obstacles.
Believe absolutely in your own God-given power to
overcome anything and everything. Think of yourself as performing miracles with
God¡¯s aid.
Desire success so intensely, that you attract it as the
magnet attracts the steel.
Help to adjust things as you go along, but never for a
moment believe that the lack of adjustment can cause you to fail.
|