| Mrs.
Suzuki Just Hated to Wait
by Charles Burke
She was an impatient person, they
said.
Everybody who worked with Mrs. Suzuki
agreed that she was always in a hurry. And she
especially hated to wait for the elevator.
Shinjuku train station, where she
worked in a small kiosk, is one of the busiest
spots in Tokyo, and in the world. Between two
and three million people pass through the station
each day, so sometimes the elevators can take
a while to arrive.
Of course, Mrs. Suzuki was a hurry-up
kind of person anyway. She did everything quickly
and efficiently, because there was always so much
to do in such a busy setting.
At about 9:00 on the morning of
October 4th 1997, witnesses say that she hurried
over to the elevator, pushed to the front of the
small crowd of waiting people, and repeatedly
pressed the already-lit Down button.
As always, she hated waiting for
the elevator.
But on that morning, unlike every
other morning, she got her wish.
When the bell rang and the doors
began to part, she quickly pushed her way in.
And discovered that the elevator
had not arrived yet.
She fell to her death.
Witnesses say Mrs. Suzuki made no
sound as she fell. They only heard the meaty thump
when her body hit bottom. So we don't know what
she was thinking as she fell.
We don't know if she was elated
that - finally - she hadn't had to wait for the
elevator to arrive. Or she may have realized,
too late, that all her impatience was merely a
way of wishing for reality to somehow be different.
We don't know any of that. We only
know she was so occupied with getting to her next
objective that she forgot to do a reality check
on the way.
Many of the errors we make during
the day are easily correctable. Occasionally,
however, life presents us with the opportunity
to make a really big change. Sometimes that big
change can be a huge step up. Other times, it
can be a big mistake - something we won't walk
away from. But we usually get those kinds of "opportunities"
only if we absolutely, bull-headedly insist.
We may believe the axiom that thoughts
have power, but how responsible are we in the
application of that power? How carefully do we
select our thoughts?
Life (or our higher self, guardian
angel, God, the universe) usually leaves a little
slack between our wishes and what we get.
But once in a while, life just goes
ahead and gives us exactly what we've been insisting
upon.
The power that we all have to turn
thoughts into reality is a wonderful gift. And
life, through this gift, blesses us richly every
day.
Sometimes, however, we may practice
a blind, inflexible insistence that "I want
things this way, and this way ONLY!"
It's true that this is a flexible,
malleable universe - more flexible than we can
ever imagine - but everything, including irresponsibility,
has a price. That price changes constantly.
Luckily, the price is usually fairly
manageable.
But now and then the price jumps
wildly up or down. And when that happens, doors
open magically. Sometimes even elevator doors.
People say, "Be careful what
you wish for; you might get it." I would
second that warning.
Because, when that door DOES open,
whatever is on the other side is directly related
to the long-term trend of your own thoughts, feelings
and spiritual input.
What do you spend your time wishing
for - all those little wishes that, together,
make up the trend of your daily thinking?
Please... don't waste your wishes
on elevators. Because sometimes the price changes,
and doors open magically.
Cheers from sunny Japan,
Charles
~~ CharlesBurke.com ~~
NOTE:
You're
welcome to run this article in your ezine, or
to post it on your website. Just be sure to
include the following information with the article.
Charles
Burke is the author of Command
More Luck, the book
that shows you why all those things
keep happening to you. Learn why "luck"
doesn't work anything like the way
you've always been told.
The bad news - there's no such thing
as luck. The good news - there's something
even better. Go to http://www.moreluck.com
and learn how you can take command
of what people call luck. Start today.
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