Brian J. Pombo Live

Life Will Willingly Pay


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Brian reads one of his favorite poems called, My Wage from Jessie B. Rittenhouse, which is brought up in one of his favorite books called, The One Thing by Jay Papasan and Gary Keller.




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvQmKD_UP00




Transcription



Life will willingly pay.



I am Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live.



I've got one of my favorite books here. I like talk about this one a lot. It's one that I love going back to and just flipping through and finding random quotes from, The One Thing. Jay Papasan and Gary Keller's book, really good book.



It really helps you to focus. I mean, even some of the chapters, I won't it completely agree with whole cloth. But it causes you to think it asks the questions and send you in a direction.



And it really is a great challenging book in the sense that it is going to challenge you no matter where you're at in life. And that's what I like about it.



So it's one that I like going back to the one thing I wanted to pull out, The One Thing, for you today, though, was this poem, and you've probably heard it before.



In fact, I'm pretty sure I heard it before reading this book, but I know it's in this book. So I could always come back to it. It's one of my favorites is by Jessie B. Rittenhouse. It's an older poem, I believe she died in 48, or something like that.



So I don't remember where that when the poem is from, I didn't look it up. But previous to that, in 1948. And here it is, real quick.



"I bargained with life for a penny, and life would pay no more. However, I begged at evening, when I counted my scanty score for life is just an employer, he gives you what you ask. But once you have set the wages, why you must bear the task. I worked for a menials hire, only to learn dismayed, that any wage I had asked of life, life would have willingly paid."



It's a very simple concept. But it's the idea that you need to what?



Well, initially, I would say that, it comes down to the thing, Larry Winget, it says, "life is your life is your own damn fault."



Right?



And so there's a certain amount of responsibility that falls on all of us, especially after we're adults. And we get, like I said, there's lots of fault to be placed all around. And you can say, a whole bunch of things is anybody else's fault. But in the end, it's your responsibility, your life is your responsibility.



And really, it's up to you to kind of define where you go next and what you expect from it.



The expectation is what makes the biggest difference. And if you expect great things, great things have a greater tendency to happen than if you don't expect great things.



You kind of have to define a lot of these things. Things are always going to happen that are out of your control. And they're always going to come out of nowhere, and both good things and bad things.



But if you expect great things to happen, oftentimes things will get better.



It's a strange thing, and I think it's tied to faith in some way.



But you have to expect great things and that that's what this is, this is basically any wage, that you ask why life will willingly pay, I believe that to be true.



I believe if you it's not just about this isn't a money thing. This is about what you get out of life, the experiences you get out of life, the meaning you get out of life.



If you ask for more, you'll get more, you know,
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Brian J. Pombo LiveBy Brian J. Pombo

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