FEELING GOOD
Food that one savors
Receiving a nice flavor
Helping others is a pleasure
Giving is a treasure
On a bus no extra seat
Offering yours is a treat
Entering a store
So kind to hold the door
What relates
to feeling good? Being kind? Being generous? Being thoughtful? Being polite? Being
courteous? Using ethics? Using etiquette? It seems that each time any of these
attributes occur there is an expression of a real authentic and comfortable
connection with life. In many respects
there is no monetary or material cost. It
is, however, very gratifying for one who is involved in any of them.
Most
people face issues of one kind or another during a lifetime and sometimes, come
stress, anger, frustration, disappointment or sadness. Despite these obstacles when you experience
diversions from these issues, certain behaviors result in one feeling
good. For example, walking past someone
you don’t even know catching one’s eye can evoke a friendly smile bringing a
moment of feeling good.
When you
do a favor without anyone asking for it, your mind has allowed you to think
beyond your present stress and there are moments of feeling good. If you are caught up or preoccupied feeling
sorry for not reaching a goal, extending yourself to help your neighbor carry her
groceries to her car is an act of generosity that can make you feel good. It’s funny how the little things can take the
edge off frustration. When you are faced
with what appears to be an insurmountable problem in balancing your checkbook,
step away and you can find a resolution to your frustration by offering to
assist your spouse to put a box up on the shelf. Then, when you return to the checkbook, your
mind has cleared enough to find another approach to the problem and you feel
good because you balanced the checkbook.
Etiquette often
referred to as using manners goes far beyond those of Emily Post, famous for
her writings on such matters. When you
are sneezing and coughing near other people, you can feel good, even
momentarily, when you are courteous by excusing yourself. There is also a connection between ethics and
etiquette.
If you have been brought up with a moral code of behavior, it
encompasses certain values that are important to you. When standing
in line to go to a movie, someone cuts in front of you and it can be both a
breach of etiquette and unethical behavior.
Seeing a movie is your way of finding relaxation from a stressful day
with family problems. You can step away
from being upset, to think clearly and feel good. Somehow, recognizing that your place in line
will not make you lose out to go to the movie and the other person’s behavior,
although unethical was not your behavior.
Feeling good comes about very rapidly and is not a form of
rationalizing. It is an authentic
feeling based upon your ability to move beyond your instant emotion. Thinking can allow you to feel good. Remember James Brown’s song?
“I Feel Good !”
“I Feel Good !”
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