“The pain I feel now is the happiness I had before.”

February 14, 2008

C. S. Lewis brings up an interesting statement, “The pain I feel now is the happiness I had before.” Without ever experiencing sorrow, we cannot fully appreciate happiness or joy. We must experience opposition for growth. Trials are the chisel with which we are shaped. Temporary physical pleasure and indulgence brings long term spiritual pain and sorrow. Temporary physical exertion and pain brings long term spiritual happiness and joy. Things that feel good now often hurt later and things that hurt now are often to our benefit later. That’s all.

(originally posted Sunday 11/18/07 10:19 PM)


As a day of rest, Sunday increases performance in the secular world

February 14, 2008

I will, in my every so often blabberings, accommodate those who do and who do not belong to my faith, touching on principle and theory as applicable to life and prosperity. The humble seeker of truth, of any environmental circumstance, needs only to heed and put to practice what is here proposed. I believe my writings to be very near and accurate to the evident truth and to the unseen reality, by means of both reason and instinctive feeling. I invite you to so ponder, test and experiment with what is here exposed. As always, feedback is appreciated and in future posts, a “comment” feature will be available.

“Keep my Sabbaths” My thoughts on an address given by Dallin H Oaks on November 4, 2007

We’ve all heard it before, “…the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work.. “ – Ex 20:10. As a Latter-Day-Saint, there are things that I’m supposed to do, and things that I am not to do on Sunday. I won’t go into any details of the matter, but I want to comment on the previous verse: “Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work:” - Ex 20:9. A concept that Dallin brought to light for me tonight was the fact that if I were to truly live this teaching, I would work and labor hard for six days, and when Sunday would come around I would actually want to rest, not so much physically, but I would just need a break. Right now, I don’t exactly rest on Sunday. I pretty much go to church, do a little reading, and hang out with friends as I would any other day (with a limit to which types of activities are engaged in). Now, an attempt to tie this in secularly. Common behavior: to work/study every day of the week in a less-than-exhaustive way, resting on and off the job, sometimes performing in a leisurely way. My application of a spiritual teaching as a secular principle: to work/study hard for six days, almost to the point that if it weren’t for the seventh day of resting, you would break. This results in a substantial increase of productivity and performance. (working 7 days at 60% capacity < working 6 days at 99% capacity, for example). If an increase in productivity and performance (not just industrially, but physically, mentally, spiritually, emotionally and socially as well) equals prosperity and happiness, then the proposed work six days/rest one day teaching applies secularly and to life in general.

(originally Sunday 11/4/07 11:56 PM)