Tag Archives: spirituality

Monday Afternoon Ramblings – Thankful #7

I’m thankful to have personal pride.  I don’t mean vanity, which usually is a terrible character flaw, but rather, pride in who I am as a person, what I represent by carrying on the Adams name, and what kind of quality I deliver in the work I produce.  I don’t claim to be perfect, but I strive for perfection in the jobs that I undertake, even if it’s a crappy second job in a pizza place.  Every single day, I attempt to do my very best.  This pride was instilled in me by my father, my grandfather, most of my football coaches, and a handful of teachers, and every day of my life, I am thankful to them for teaching me to find gratification in the quality of work I do.

Somewhere along the way, pride seems to have taken on a negative connotation, which probably has to do with mixing it up with vanity.  Vanity is all about ego and self-grandeur, but pride is more about caring about how others perceive the work you produce.  Our country suffers from a lack of personal pride.  Too often, quantity trumps quality and half-assed is deemed good enough.  We have lost our edge as the world leader, I believe, because too many of us have lost our sense of pride.  We have to start rewarding quality and rejecting shit, and it all starts with pride.  Business owners need to take more pride in the kind of business they run, not just the bottom line but also the impact on people’s lives.  That’s just as important as profits.  Employees need to take more pride in the quality of work they provide for their employers, and consumers need to demand higher quality in what they receive.  If we can re-establish pride, maybe we can stop falling behind the rest of the world in education, which eventually will put us behind in technology, innovation, and leadership.  And it all starts with personal pride.

I am grateful to have pride in myself and my work, and I will make every effort to pass it on to my own sons.

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Saturday Afternoon Ramblings – Thankful #6

I’m thankful for Saturdays.  They are the best day of the week.  After a 50+ hour week, Saturdays are my chance to do all the things I want to do, like working on the farm or doing yard work or cleaning up.  I usually spend 10-12 hours on Sundays grading (that’s in addition to the 50 hour week, by the way), so Saturdays are the only day that’s mine.  Even if I spend the entire day working on something, it’s a break from the overwhelming grind of the week, so I am thankful for this day to get away from education.

Today, for example, I have spent the entire day going back and forth from working on the prototype to doing laundry to burning brush.  The basic frame for the unit is complete, and while it was a lot of work and a lot of trial and error, I couldn’t be happier with it.  The design is sturdy and functional and should be fairly easy to replicate now that I know the basic layout.  In terms of cost, I think it will save us hundreds of dollars over a pre-made system.  There are still many Saturdays worth of work to go before the entire prototype is complete and operational, but I am grateful for this day of the week to pursue my dream of launching this farm.

Friday Morning Ramblings – Thankful #5

I’m grateful for my job.  On the same day I was hired for this position, my best friend was laid-off from his.  In this economy, it took him nearly a year to find work.  Even though I grumble and complain about the state of education and the downward spiraling of student apathy, I am grateful for the position.  My child support is paid in full every month, my children have health insurance, and I have enough left over to survive on for the month.  Things could be much, much, much worse for me.  So I’m thankful for my position at the college.

I’m also grateful for the opportunity to pass along knowledge.  There are still a handful of students who care about learning, and I still enjoy engaging those students and watching them get it.  I enjoy seeing the single mothers gain self-confidence and the young men who hid in their shells during high school slowly crawl out and find their voices.  I am grateful for the opportunity to serve these students and hopefully bring out of them something they didn’t know they had.  That aspect of the job is still gratifying and fulfilling.  I am thankful that through education my life has been about more than self-gratification and that my value as a human being is higher than my net worth on a spreadsheet.  I’m thankful that I have given something back to my society.

www.thirdaxe.com