Every year on March 17 we celebrate St. Patrick's Day. In our younger days, we used it as an excuse to make merriment, or at least I did. Before I started sleeping with the aforementioned Irishman, I don't even think I really knew anything about, nor did I care to know about St. Patrick's Day. But I have since found the history of the day interesting.
It is celebrated each year during Lent; if you are not familiar with that, then Google it. Saint Patrick was a real deal person who lived in the fifth century, and he is credited with bringing Christianity to the Irish. St. Patrick was brought to Ireland as a slave when he was sixteen years old. Many varied myths have been passed down over the years involving the Saint, but the most well-known is the one in which he explains the Holy Trinity using a three leaf clover, better known as the Shamrock. Just think, he was your average sixteen-year-old, once unknown, who is now a household name. And Walmart and Target now make a bundle of money from the tradition created by this young lad.
Isn't it amazing the people who are plucked out of their ordinary lives and used to do extraordinary things? People, frequently individuals who are down and out, are used to spread a message, used to inspire and give hope, used to instill courage. Some of us are used to change one life at a time, but others, like Saint Patrick, are used to change many lives for years and years to come.
What about the basketball player, Jeremy Lin? Have you heard about him? This young man was thought of as an average-at-best basketball player. He played at Harvard. Yes, that's correct… Harvard. One would never associate Harvard with a basketball powerhouse superstar. Nor was he a player who got drafted; in fact, he was cut by three or four NBA teams before he landed with the New York Knicks. And the truth is, if the Knicks had not had so many injuries on their team, he probably would have continued to ride the pine! Yet today he is a household name… his success was referred to as LINsanity! He was on the covers of numerous magazines; he was on late night talk shows, and he was just another average Joe like you and me. He gets up, he goes to work, he pays his taxes, and from what I have read, he is an all-around good guy. Yet, he is also inspiring people and changing lives.
My family is another example of ordinary persons being used to spread a message. We are just like you. But for some reason, we were plucked up to spread a message against racial prejudice that we hope will inspire people for years to come.
I could fill pages with stories of people who are everyday ordinary folks. These people don't think they can make a difference. They continue to believe they are not worthy enough to be useful. The American culture would lead us to believe that the guy who likes to work alone or who is the quiet type isn't the kind of person who is going to change the world. We are trained to believe it's the gregarious quarterback of the football team or the captain of the cheerleading squad who will lead the pack for change. WRONG, WRONG, WRONG. Ordinary, everyday, typical, normal people are the ones who can make a difference. Their lives are the ones being used to move the needle. They are the ones who like to take a step back from all the noise.
Remember, you do not have to be the President of the United States or the city mayor or the head coach or the chief executive officer or any big cheese. You just have to be you.
So many of us are afraid of failure. We are afraid of negative feedback, humiliation and making mistakes, so instead, we choose to have zero interaction and then nothing gets done. I think the pressure put on us in today's society to do the right thing and do that thing perfectly keeps many people from reaching out a helping hand. They end up worrying about being criticized. Well, I say let go of the worry that's holding you back. You just might be surprised what you're capable of.
There are two things we can do in life: step up or step down. I would hope that we all would choose the first. Doing nothing takes zero initiative and relieves us of any responsibility. But it also has no risk or rewards. Cowards have no conviction and do nothing. That's the easy way to live; however, we all know that anything that is worthwhile in life usually doesn't come easy.
It's not always easy to step up. In fact, it might become uncomfortable. My family is now called upon to visit the child who has months to live or try to find help for the family sleeping under the bridge. But lots of people in need are even more uncomfortable, at a point of no return, and we have the ability to offer them options.
How long has it been since you did that for someone? Don't wait for someone to ask you to open the door. Open it for yourself and see what is on the other side because the story of your life just might be the story to change someone else's life, like Saint Patrick's! And don't forget to wear green on St. Patty's Day to honor this extraordinary, ordinary individual; besides, it might also keep you from getting pinched!!
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