Quittintime: The Art of being Wise
 

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markcadioliAdministrator



Reged: Apr 25 2002
Posts: 1405
Loc: Australia
The Art of being Wise
      #2585 - Sat Jul 13 2002 08:35 AM

"The art of being wise" said William James, "is the art of knowing what to overlook".

Life without friends, without loved ones would be too altogether empty. But since people are not perfect, our companionship with people is never perfect. When we associate with people we take them with their imperfections. But over-emphasizing imperfections leads to unpleasantness, unhappiness, dissillusionment. That is so in marriage, in the home, the family, among friends, in every relationship in life.

One of the greatest lessons of life is learning to help people to improve without making them resentfull, or shattering their confidence, or destroying our influence with them. Correcting people when others are present is especially embarrasing, and correcting with sarcasm is always hurtfull in effect.

We ourselves never do all we ought to do as as well as we ought to do it. No one of us is possessed of all virtues, or abilities, or flawless performance. There is none who is never forgetfull. No one can always follow a schedule, always have meals precisely on time or always have the house look as if company was expected.

Man is not merely a machine. he is much more, but even machines need understanding, and even machines make errors. There is much to be overlooked in all of us and some things that should not be overlooked. But even these can be dealt with in tact and helpfullness, choosing the time, the place the mood, the method.

There are ways of suggesting, of holding back, of timing, of correcting in kindness, instead of harsh, cruel, blundering correction that makes people feel hurt, small, resentfull.


There are times to correct and times not to. There are ways to correct and ways not to.

"The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook" and when.



"Thoughts for One Hundred days"

Richard Evans.


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LukaAdministrator



Reged: Apr 25 2002
Posts: 1387
Loc: The great NorthWet
Re: Welcome Home [Re: markcadioli]
      #2722 - Tue Jul 16 2002 10:43 PM

Thank you Mark.

I'm afraid that I am guilty of far too much of the wrong side of that.

--------------------
The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good. ~Samuel Johnson


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muggs



Reged: Jun 05 2009
Posts: 5
Loc: Md
Re: Welcome Home [Re: Luka]
      #12390 - Sat Jun 06 2009 04:52 AM

Good reminder to start the day. Thanks.

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