Dawood Ibrahim
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- May 25, 2016
- Messages
- 3,475
- Reaction score
- 3
- Country
- Location
By Webmaster -
December 20, 2016
0
33
EVERY now and then I read in the newspaper that a particular bus driver, rickshaw puller or cabby has been rewarded because of his honesty.
I took at their photographs and though I applaud their honesty, a question comes to my mind ‘is honesty so rare that when found it has to be honoured?”
A 15-year-old boy learned a valuable lesson about life principles. He found a woman’s wallet that contained $127 as well as the woman’s identification. He hopped onto his bicycle and peddled over to her house – about a mile away. He told her he found her wallet and she gave him a big hug. She also gave him twenty dollars.
That evening the boy told his parents about the event and his father said, “I don’t think you should have accepted $20 for doing what you should have done. A person shouldn’t be rewarded for being honest.”
He pondered his father’s statement and decided he would return the money. He biked to the lady’s home and gave her back the twenty dollars. She didn’t want to take it, but he told her she had to – that his father pointed out something to him that he had never realized before. Her eyes filled with tears as she said, “This is true!”
When ideals such as honesty and a personal standard of always doing the right thing guide our every action and decision, we actually change. These great principles shape our lives and make us into persons of character. They build self esteem and teach confidence.
That boy is fortunate to be raised by a wise father who had the wisdom to say, “Those are my principles.” Martin Luther King, Jr. put it well: “The time is always right to do what is right.”
Those were his principles. Decide to always do what is right – today and every day – and you will find yourself building a life that matters. A couple of weeks ago I went to watch a group discussion on honesty. There was a prominent policeman, a politician, a doctor and a journalist. What delighted me was that they were all people who had absolute principles on honesty and these values shown through in their talk, very firmly and very vehemently.
I went home happy. These are people who have done well in life. They had risen in their respective fields and were held in high esteem by friends and colleagues. As I looked at them I knew that there was no doubt that honesty pays, and pays well..! You don’t need to be rewarded for honesty, being honest brings its own reward..!
—Email: bobsbanter@gmail.com
@SherDil007 @Jugger @Morse_Code
December 20, 2016
0
33
EVERY now and then I read in the newspaper that a particular bus driver, rickshaw puller or cabby has been rewarded because of his honesty.
I took at their photographs and though I applaud their honesty, a question comes to my mind ‘is honesty so rare that when found it has to be honoured?”
A 15-year-old boy learned a valuable lesson about life principles. He found a woman’s wallet that contained $127 as well as the woman’s identification. He hopped onto his bicycle and peddled over to her house – about a mile away. He told her he found her wallet and she gave him a big hug. She also gave him twenty dollars.
That evening the boy told his parents about the event and his father said, “I don’t think you should have accepted $20 for doing what you should have done. A person shouldn’t be rewarded for being honest.”
He pondered his father’s statement and decided he would return the money. He biked to the lady’s home and gave her back the twenty dollars. She didn’t want to take it, but he told her she had to – that his father pointed out something to him that he had never realized before. Her eyes filled with tears as she said, “This is true!”
When ideals such as honesty and a personal standard of always doing the right thing guide our every action and decision, we actually change. These great principles shape our lives and make us into persons of character. They build self esteem and teach confidence.
That boy is fortunate to be raised by a wise father who had the wisdom to say, “Those are my principles.” Martin Luther King, Jr. put it well: “The time is always right to do what is right.”
Those were his principles. Decide to always do what is right – today and every day – and you will find yourself building a life that matters. A couple of weeks ago I went to watch a group discussion on honesty. There was a prominent policeman, a politician, a doctor and a journalist. What delighted me was that they were all people who had absolute principles on honesty and these values shown through in their talk, very firmly and very vehemently.
I went home happy. These are people who have done well in life. They had risen in their respective fields and were held in high esteem by friends and colleagues. As I looked at them I knew that there was no doubt that honesty pays, and pays well..! You don’t need to be rewarded for honesty, being honest brings its own reward..!
—Email: bobsbanter@gmail.com
@SherDil007 @Jugger @Morse_Code