Call for Action
By Chuck Gallozzi
Robert H. Schuller said, “You will never win if you never begin”.
According to Michael Landon, "Somebody should tell us, right at the
start of our lives, that we are dying. Then we might live life to
the limit, every minute of every day. Do it! I say. Whatever you
want to do, do it now! There are only so many tomorrows." Little did
he realize when he said this that he would die so young. He was only
54 when he died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1991. Yet, he had
already become an accomplished actor, writer, director, and
executive producer. He instinctively realized that procrastination
is a malignant tumor that prevents us from reaching our full
potential. That's why he was a person of action.
Will we realize, as Michael Landon did, that our progress is
blocked, not by what we want to do and can t, but by what we ought
to do and don't? Those who choose action, choose life, for life
expresses itself through action. We can always choose between action
or inaction. We can also choose between right and wrong action,
between doing good and feeling good. Experience teaches us the less
we do, the less we can do, and the more we do, the more we can do.
The longer we remain inactive, the harder it becomes to crawl out of
the quicksand of inertia. While right action will move us forward,
wrong action will take us backward. In other words, inaction leads
to paralysis, right action to progress, and wrong action to
setbacks.
Helen Keller refused to use her deafness and blindness as excuses
for inaction. On the contrary, she said, "I am only one, but still I
am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; And
because I cannot do everything I will not refuse to do the something
that I can do." Helen Keller understood that if we want to get
ahead, we have to get started. Or as Robert Schuller said, "You will
never win if you never begin."
Do you ever get any good ideas? Sure you do! We all do. There's no
shortage of good ideas. But there is a shortage of follow-through.
Many of us have brilliant ideas, but fail to act on them. Ideas are
impotent unless we breathe life into them. It is our nature to be
creative. Unlike the rest of the animal kingdom that copes with what
is, only humans create what is not. Airplanes, telephones, TV,
computers, and books all came into being through the creative power
of humanity. And that power is released by ACTION.
We also create ourselves. We become courageous by acting
courageously; compassionate, by acting compassionately, and
understanding by acting with understanding. If we are overcome by
misfortune, what remedy do we have but to take action? When we are
mired in problems, action is the crane that will pull us out. Is our
fate sealed by the circumstances we face or by the actions we take
under those circumstances?
How can we experience the joy of accomplishment or the exhilaration
of victory unless we ACT? Action is our teacher, for we learn by
doing. It is through action that we gain control over our destiny by
shaping our future and creating our reason for being. Action changes
us from a consumer of life to a contributor. Each act we take is
another brushstroke on the canvas of our life. How else can we know
ourselves but through our own actions? The power to act is the power
to create; it is God's greatest gift to humanity. The universe is
God's unfinished symphony and our acts are the notes that are
completing it.
How, then, shall we act? Henri L. Bergson explains, "Think like a
man of action, and act like a man of thought." Because of the weight
of our actions upon the world and its inhabitants, we need to think
before we act. We need to act with responsibility. And when shall we
act? How about some time between yesterday and tomorrow? Don't wait
for the perfect moment to act because the moment is never perfect
until your action makes it so.
Each breath we take counts. Each breath sustains life. Action is the
breath of our soul. Let each one count. Don't confuse frivolous
activity, or simple motion, with action. Purposeless activity
destroys time while action creates it. Robert Louis Stevenson adds
the following advice, "Judge each day not by the harvest you reap
but by the seeds you plant."
We are not assured of success with each act we take. But the thing
to try when all else fails is again. If it's success you're after,
you cannot seek it in general, but need to seek it in specifics.
Precisely define your goal and break it down into a series of action
steps. Then, lights, ready, ACTION! We can study the rules of
success as much as we want, but they won't work for us unless we do.
If you agree that it's time to act, but find it difficult to get
started, consider what Robert J. Mckain has to say: "The common
conception is that motivation leads to action, but the reverse is
true - action precedes motivation. You have to 'prime the pump' and
get the juice flowing, which motivates you to work on your goals.
Getting momentum going is the most difficult part of the job, and
often taking the first step is enough to prompt you to make the best
of your day."
Since each call for action is an invitation to grow, let's respond
with enthusiasm. After all, won't it be much better if we do all the
things we ought to than spend the rest of our lives wishing we had?
© Chuck Gallozzi
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