Are you a character? Or do you have it?

A woman teaching my daughters held up a copy of a magazine with scantily dressed women on the cover.  She asked, “What do you expect to find inside?”  The answer was, “Pictures and articles about sexy dressing and attracting men.”

She handed the magazine to a girl and said, “Open it and read from any page.”  Inside those covers was a religious magazine.  The teacher made the comment, “If you dress on the outside like the women on the cover of this magazine, no one will bother to find out that inside you are a woman of character. They won’t even consider it a possibility.”

Yesterday I wrote that perception really is everything. How you are perceived is always critical, especially to yourself. Over time your character is altered by all the little things you do.  At first you act to give an impression, but eventually you act from the bone deep character you have developed while impressing others.

Benjamin Franklin was brought up short one day when he realized he had developed a less than brilliant character.  He was a smart, hard working man, and becoming successful.  He was noticed that some people would cross the street to the other side when they saw him coming.  He realized he had a poor reputation in many things. In his autobiography he describes his plan to improve his character.  The simple device he used thrust him forward to prominence in the fields of writing, science, diplomacy and politics.

As Benjamin Franklin started working on his character he wrote, “I was surpris’d to find myself so much fuller of faults than I had imagined; but I had the satisfaction of seeing them diminish.”  He found that if he pretended to have a virtue long enough, he developed it as a part of his character.

I strongly recommend reading and re-reading Benjamin Franklin’s short autobiography.

Become the person you would admire.

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For this week:     Zen and the art of getting a job

Tomorrow:           Diamonds in the rough

Later:                    Cleat marks up your back

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