Everything you wanted to know about parking but were too shy to ask . . . . . .

       



 
About Parking :
 
» HOME
» Domain Parking
» Auto And Trucks

» Business And Finance

» Computers And Internet

» Education

» Family

» Food And Drink

» Gadgets And Gizmos

» Health

» Hobbies

» Home Improvement

» Humor

» Kids And Teens

» Legal

» Marketing

» Men

» Music And Movies

» Online Business

» Parenting

» Pets And Animals

» Politics And Government

» Recreation And Sports

» Relationships

» Religion

» Self Improvement

» Site Promotion

» Travel And Leisure

» Web Design

» Women

» Writing

»
»
» Random Quotes
» Best Websites
 
Great Websites :
 

Aesop’s Fables

Fun & Games

Advertise Here

Amusement

Best Baby Names

Christmas Jokes

College Humor

Complete Nonsense

Fairy Tales

Famous Poems

Famous Quotes

Flowers

Framed Posters

Free Diet Plans

Free Song Lyrics

Free View Webcams

Friendship Quotes

Funny Cat Pictures

Funny Cats

Funny Jokes

Funny Jokes Online

Funny Pictures

Funny Poems

Funny Quotes

Ghosts

Ghost Pictures

Ghost Stories

Glaswegian

Healthy Recipes

Humorous Scripts

Humor Posters

Inspirational Poems

Insult Generator

Jokes

Knock Knock Jokes

Lighthouses

Limerick Poems

Limericks

Love Poems

Fantasy Books

Mockery

Model Posters

Movie Posters

Names Meanings

Rabbie Burns

Not Mensa

Parking

Photographs

Poet

Poker Articles

Posters

Quotations Online

Random Words

Riddles

Riddles Online

Odd Jokes

Spam

Sports Posters

Duck Webcam

Strange Laws

Stupid Laws

Tongue Twisters

Top 100 Baby Names

Trophies

Vodka

Webmaster Articles

Weird Animals

Weird Facts

Weird Websites

Weird

Whisky

Wine

Work From Home

Worst City

Worst Jokes

Worst Killers

 
 
 
 
 
Parking.gs
 

Facts and Articles on Parking and Other Interesting Topics

TOPIC: Family

TITLE: The Red Balloon of Happiness

Article:

The Red Balloon of Happiness by: David Leonhardt

Just when you think you know it all, some 17-month old child comes along and teaches you another valuable life lesson.

Little Lady lost her favorite ball. There are few things that bring this 17-month-old more joy than playing with her favorite ball. And, of course, we want our daughter to have all the happiness she can get.

So we headed out to the store to replace the missing ball. Little Lady enjoyed the outing, since there were so many exciting things to pull off shelves. And when we reached the ball aisle, she nearly jumped for joy. (OK, more like raced to the bin and started covering the floor with her joy, one bounce at a time.)

As we left the aisle, Little Lady was happy and smiling. She held her replacement ball in her hands as we walked up to the cash. While waiting to pay, Little Lady caught sight of a red balloon that had obviously been used for some promotion, but was now wandering aimlessly around the floor like a lost puppy.

If you think a ball can bring happiness, wait 'til you see the sparkle in the eye of a toddler who has just found her very own red balloon. Pure joy! Of course, she adopted the balloon immediately and clung to it all the way back to the car. Did she want to hold the ball? No way. She had a balloon!

I couldn't help but marvel at how she valued the free, fragile balloon more than the sturdy ball I for which had just paid good money. Is there a lesson we can learn for self-actualization? Here are the possible lessons that immediately occurred to me:

Why bother having a thick skin, if your daughter prefers thin skins?

If you drift aimlessly long enough, you might get adopted.

Money can't buy the most important things in life (happiness, joy, smiles, balloons, etc.)

Your child can see value where you cannot, so listen to what she says.

I figure at least two of these are valuable lessons that can add happiness to a person's life. Little Lady teaches me self-actualization lessons daily now, and I am learning to listen with head and heart.

How often do we value the wrong things? The things that cost the most? How hard to we work to earn all that extra income to buy things we simply do not need. Anyone reading this probably has more than she will ever need, and yet don't we all want more anyway?

Suppose we chose to have less of the things money can buy, and instead chose to have more time? More time to spend with our family? More time to spend with ourselves? More time to just be? What if we are giving up the red balloon chasing after the ball?

My wife and I made a big decision a few months ago. We gave up the condo in the city for a big ol' house in the country. Our red balloon was space to raise a family in a much less noisy and stressed-out environment. The ball we gave up was the 'glamour' of city living and a fancy condo.

Assuming we can make a living from my book, my ezine, my web site and whatever other work-from-home projects I take on, we get to keep the red balloon.

I invite you to look carefully at your life. Ask what truly brings you meaning. Then ask yourself if you could have more of that if you spent less time and effort on activities that don't bring you meaning but just fill your time.

Enjoy your red balloon.

About The Author

David Leonhardt is the Happy Guy, speaker, author, and publisher of 'Your Daily Dose of Happiness' at http://www.TheHappyGuy.com/daily-happiness-free-ezine.html. Visit him at http://www.TheHappyGuy.com

amabaie@phastnet.com

This article was posted on November '12

<-- Previous     |     Next -->

 

If you found "The Red Balloon of Happiness" interesting then check out our other :

Parking Facts and Other Articles

 
Parking.gs
 
 
 
Interesting :
 

 
 
   
 
© Website Design Copyright 2009 by Parking.gs