Everywhere we go we are confronted by things that are important - but to who? What's important to me may not be important to you. We can ask ourselves what's important, but what does that really mean? Does it mean that what we consider important may not really be important in the big scheme of things? Maybe we're not important at all, or maybe we are but just don't know it yet. Or maybe we need someone else to compare ourselves to feel important, or maybe we need someone to praise us to feel important. A lot of people feel that the approach of belittling someone else to feel important, or by comparing themselves to others just to believe they're important. But are they really as important as they feel they are? Does feeling important have anything to do with being important? Is being important really that important to us? Does importance have an importance in itself? Maybe it's not important. What does the importance of one thing have over another? Who decides what's more important anyways? Who's to say one person's child is more important than another or another person's heart worth more than another?We lose our way from time to time when we forget what's important to us. Some spend a lifetime looking and never think they find it. We've become a culture seeking fulfillment in physical things and tangibles that often we overlook the everyday gifts that bring us the greatest joys- simple pleasures, clean air, beautiful bird songs, ice cream, good company, kind words, a helping hand, the majesty of nature, the leaves changing colors in fall, the flowers blooming in spring. We take so many things for granted and concentrate so much on the ownership of things that seems to have importance one moment, suddenly loses it luster the next. Perhaps what's truly important to each of us is simpler than we may believe. Perhaps it lies at the foundation of each of our beings, found in the basic structure of who each of us are: our values and beliefs, our hopes and dreams, our ideals and our passions.
We must recognize that through living, we also make choices about who we will become. We touch others every day with our words, our actions, and with our joy and grief. And they in turn touch our hearts in similar ways. The world isn't always perfect, but the choices we make are ours alone, based solidly upon our values and ideals. We may choose every day to be angels, granting wishes, helping those in need, caring and inspiring others with our words, with our passions, with our hopes and our dreams. Subsequently we have the responsibility to look at ourselves each day and ask ourselves who we are and what is it that's truly important to us.
What's important to me? What should I do differently today that didn't work yesterday? Am I happy with the choices I made? What can I do from this point on about who I am inside to make myself a better person if I'm not happy with who I am now? What do I fear and why? And what is it that's truly important in my life? Is acquiring material wealth no matter the cost really that important? Is being seen, or placed on a pedestal really that important to make me feel like a worthwhile individual? Is feeling that I fit in a group so important that its worth sacrificing my ideals, values, and everything I believe?
Never forget from where you came from. Never lose sight of where you are. And always look forward to where you want to go to chart your course over the great oceans of life. Some will navigate by the stars, some by the charts, and others by the winds alone. They all reach destinations and exotic ports of call eventually. Some stop for a while, while others journey on. But the memory of their journey will be recounted from the lips of the travelers they met along the way. Some will recall the friendships they forged with them if not for a little while, others will recall their choices at difficult crossroads. But the most poignant memories will often be the acts of compassion or courage that leaped forth from their heats because it was who they were.
John 3:16
"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life."