I Choose To Be Cheerful

Car BreakdownI teach economics at UNLV three times per week. Last Monday, at the beginning of class, I cheerfully asked my students how their weekend had been. One young man said that his weekend had not been so good. He had his wisdom teeth removed. The young man then proceeded to ask me why I always seemed to be so cheerful.

His question reminded me of something I’d read somewhere before: “Every morning when you get up, you have a choice about how you want to approach life that day,” I said. “I choose to be cheerful.”

“Let me give you an example,” I continued, addressing all sixty students in the class. “In addition to teaching here at UNLV, I also teach out at the community college in Henderson, 17 miles down the freeway from where I live. One day a few weeks ago I drove those 17 miles to Henderson. I exited the freeway and turned onto College Drive. I only had to drive another quarter mile down the road to the college. But just then my car died. I tried to start it again, but the engine wouldn’t turn over. So I put my flashers on, grabbed my books, and marched down the road to the college.

“As soon as I got there I called AAA and arranged for a tow truck to meet me at my car after class. The secretary in the Provost’s office asked me what has happened. ‘This is my lucky day,’ I replied, smiling.

“Your car breaks down and today is your lucky day?” She was puzzled. “What do you mean?”

“’I live 17 miles from here.”I replied. “My car could have broken down anywhere along the freeway. It didn’t. Instead, it broke down in the perfect place: off the freeway, within walking distance of here. I’m still able to teach my class, and I’ve been able to arrange for the tow truck to meet me after class. If my car was meant to break down today, it couldn’t have been arranged in a more convenient fashion.”

The secretary’s eyes opened wide, and then she smiled. I smiled back and headed for class. So ended my story.

I scanned the sixty faces in my economics class at UNLV. Despite the early hour, no one seemed to be asleep. Somehow, my story had touched them. Or maybe it wasn’t the story at all. In fact, it had all started with a student’s observation that I was cheerful.

Deepak Chopra has quoted an Indian wise man as saying, “WHO you are speaks louder to me than anything you can say.” I suppose it must be so.


Editor’s comment: Who you are speaks louder than anything you say, and who you are is determined by how you react to any given situation. Our reaction is always a matter of choice as this article illustrates.

This is a story by Lee Ryan Miller and has been reposted with permission. You can find the original here.

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1 Response to I Choose To Be Cheerful

  1. Dwayne Britnell, Major, USA (Ret) says:

    Law of Physics: For every action, there is an opposite and equal reaction. What are the implications here? This is the beginnings of resistance. “What you resist will persist.” CARL JUNG (1875-1961). Resist nothing because anti-anything is war nonetheless. The reason I bring this up is because I want to share a story with you. When the second Gulf War broke out, I was a student at the University of New Mexico and there were anti-war protests going on around the country as well as at UNM. I was torn with guilt when they demonstrated because I was not there to support them as I did not believe in the war. It was during this time I read the story of Mother Teresa. Someone asked her to go with them to an anti-war demonstration and she said, “Oh, no, never support an ANTI-anything! Now if it were a PRO-Peace rally, then I would go.” This is how I got my answer to the dilemma…anti (ANYTHING) is war nonetheless. If you resist it, it will persist and get bigger because it is like throwing gasoline onto an open flame. Anti-war, anti-abortion, anti-drugs, anti-poverty…all have gotten bigger. Be for peace, life, sobriety and Abundance and the world could change tomorrow.

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