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If management does
their part in providing a pleasant work environment, what can
employees do to keep their enthusiasm for work? A lot depends
on how we look at things...
Once there were three
bricklayers busily working in the hot afternoon sun. When asked what they
were doing, the first bricklayer answered gruffly “I’m laying bricks.”
The second man replied, “I’m putting up a wall.” But the third
bricklayer said enthusiastically and with obvious pride, “I am building a
beautiful cathedral!”
~ Source Unknown
In our work-life, we certainly don’t
want to be known as one who builds walls! Today’s business consultants may
think they invented the idea of teamwork, but consider the level of
cooperation it took to build cathedrals!
Jim Doran, director
of a high school in Panama, explained things this way to graduating
students:
“The cathedrals of Europe were built at a
time when life was very difficult. All but a privileged few were oppressed.
Education for the masses was non-existent while disease and war ravaged the
countryside. Yet, during this time of darkness the very people who were so
oppressed built the most beautiful examples of religious architecture ever
known. People came from hundreds of miles away to build a cathedral. Each
person lent his or her skill and labor to a structure that few of them would
see completed. Yet, they knew they were part of something that went beyond
the boundaries of normal existence."
Most of us work
because we have to, but we all need to feel that what we do for a living
makes a difference. Whether
you work to survive, to give your children more opportunity,
or to invest for a comfortable retirement, know that you are
making a valuable contribution every day you show up for work
and do your best.
Consider the traditional gospel
song, “Keep Your Eyes on the Prize.” Sung by North Carolina folk
musician, Doc Watson, the lyrics echo a refrain from the Civil Rights era
and encourage us to “hold on” and never loose sight of our goal- our
higher purpose- whatever we perceive it to be. The song probably has
particular meaning for Doc, whose blindness did not deter him from becoming
one of the world’s most accomplished and best-loved folk musicians.
“Life has a way of
bringing surprises and it is not easy to know which of these surprises are
obstacles and which are opportunities,” contines Jim Doran. “The important thing
is to use neither as an excuse for failure. The people who lived in the era
we call the Dark Ages had every reason to settle for mere survival, but they
built cathedrals.”
“Believe that your own
hard work will be rewarded. Believe that you can make a difference. Believe
that you can create a better world for the children who will follow you.
And, above all, believe that your cathedral is about to be built.”
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