The following lessons were taken from my unpublished manuscript entitled, The Second Mouse Gets The Cheese: Lessons you don’t have to learn yourself. Since all of the lessons have been produced as entries in this Blog there are no more new entries. I have started a new Blog entitled, Thoughts From The Far Side Of The Hill which will begin 2/10/13. Hopefully you will visit us at http://lodestar2.blogspot.com/
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
QUINTESSENTIAL WORK
Be prepared to argue with me.
I don't believe anybody's work is more important than anybody else's work.
"What? Are you saying the work of Mother Teresa was no more important than the work of Mrs. Murphy who makes cat toys?"
I'm sure the casual observer sees a difference, but it doesn't have to be different to the two women.
If you feel a zeal, devotion, and intensity for what you do; what you do is not harmful to the community; and you do it to the best of your ability, there is no difference in the importance of the work itself.
All work, paid or unpaid, is inherently important. Work is important for the benefit it provides the community. (Without benefit the work won't last.) Also work is important for the sense of accomplishment it provides the worker. (Without accomplishment the worker won't last.)
Sure, the outcome of some work, by its very nature affects more people than others, but does that make the essence of that work more important?
Is the actual "work" of a pilot more important when he's flying alone or when he has a few hundred people aboard? The "work" of a doctor when she is treating one ghetto child or researching a cure for cancer?
Doctoring and piloting are important by themselves regardless of how many people they affect.
So is making cat toys.
Yesterday when I laughed at my cat chasing around a catnip filled replica of a rodent, the experience made more of a positive difference in my life that day, that moment, than Mother Teresa's work has done.
I just hope Mrs. Murphy knows that.
Lesson: All work is important; experience it that way.
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