"If people were made of fine china
perhaps they would take far better care of themselves."
We are all just a stroke away from
being in a nursing home. We talk about what we are going to do with our lives
currently. But our lives will be shortened, our quality of life reduced, and
our accomplishments lessened if we do not maintain a proper diet with exercise.
In a gym, resistance is used to make
one stronger. In life, resistance holds one back. Channel it; work with it, and
you can build a new you.
Why is it that people will often put
forth more attention and care towards materialistic purchases rather than
themselves?
Do we need to purchase a warranty for
our bodies and minds so that we will truly take care of all facets of
ourselves? We are taught to bring our vehicles in for oil changes and
maintenance, to maintain our warranty; to maximize the life of our vehicles,
our investment.
We research which oil is best for our
engine. We place so much time cleaning, detailing, caring for that purchase.
Even in some cases, a real love is placed towards it.
What about us?
Do we place that much care towards
ourselves? Do we research or care about what we place in our own engines? Our
bodies? Detail ourselves? Our minds?
People often become overweight, as they
didn't get the love they so desperately needed as a child. They thought that
there was something wrong with them because they didn't get the full attention
from their parents. So they punish themselves needlessly.
We purchase home or tenant insurance,
and home security, as a protection from events out of our control. But the idea
of going to a gym, buying a gym membership, or taking care of our own being,
feels like a burden. Too high a price to pay. And yet we can control the
outcome.
Where can I start the change in my
life? It always begins with you
We constantly see children who become
lost adults whom never received the full attention they needed from their
parents. By parental example, they think materialistic purchases are warranted
and have real value and importance.
A father can labor over his prized
vehicle. His time can be invested in restoring a vehicle; a vehicle that
someone else designed, made, created. Maintaining his warranty to make him feel
complete.
A mother perhaps has a wardrobe of
shoes and purses that makes her feel good, although she is insecure. Perhaps
their energies would be better directed at the children they made.
Often mothers can collect fine china
and store them in valuable wall units to admire and only use on special events
(again something that someone else made). It almost seems like we are taught
that we aren't as important as something that someone else made or something
that we pay for as a purchase.
We make our children. We need to detail
them, nurture them. Praise them. To throttle into action, tender loving care
for them.
This collectible, an elegant
advertisement of you. Maintain ourselves and them. Maintain our children. Let
us not void their human warranty.
In Canada, where I'm from, we have free
health care. A wonderful service.Though sadly, we have far too many people
abusing the system. Often they don't even really know they are.
They need the services of many
individuals like administrators, nurses, doctors, and require surgeries. All
housed within a hospital. The staggering cost is overwhelming. It is a real
burden placed on tax payers. All of us. The people.
When you need the service (if you
didn't die from a heart attack or stroke for example) some realize then, why
didn't I take better care of myself? Take steps to protect myself? Create a
healthy lifestyle (it is never too late to start). Why did I let it come to
this?
What often surfaces during extreme
acute health issues is a real fear for your own being; validation. Often we need to purchase that automobile,
that house, those clothes, allowing our minds to polish that beautiful lie fed
to us by corporate-sponsored media.
Are we really taught how valuable we
are? Us, just as we are?
Maybe we need to replace that precious
fine china, in that special wall unit, with photographs of our children and
admire them; this unmistakable labor of craftsmanship, these historic beings.
Maybe we need to maintain them. Detail and polish them.
When china breaks, it is not fixable.
We as humans can repair our broken,
splintered, sharded past, and truly become collectible.
1 comments:
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