A fried of mine sent this to me today and I thought I would share it 
with the group.  It sure made me stop and think.

---

I have a friend who lives by a three-word philosophy: "Seize the
moment."  Just possibly, she may be the wisest woman on this planet. Too
many people put off something that brings them joy just because they
haven't thought about it, don't have it on their schedule, didn't know 
it was coming or are too rigid to depart from their routine.

I got to thinking one day about all those women on the Titanic who 
passed up dessert at dinner that fateful night in an effort to cut back.
>From then on, I've tried to be a little more flexible.

How many women out there will eat at home because their husband
didn't suggest going out to dinner until after something had been 
thawed?  Does the word "refrigeration" mean nothing to you?

How often have your kids dropped in to talk and sat in silence
while you watched Jeopardy on television?

I cannot count the times I called my sister and said, "How about
going to lunch in a half hour?" She would gasp and stammer, "I can't. I
have clothes on the line. My hair is dirty. I wish I had known 
yesterday, I had a late breakfast, it looks like rain." And my personal 
favorite: "It's Monday." She died a few years ago. We never did have 
lunch together.

Because Americans cram so much into their lives, we tend to
schedule our headaches. We live on a sparse diet of promises we make to
ourselves when all the conditions are perfect.

We'll go back and visit the grandparents when we get Stevie 
toilet-trained.  We'll entertain when we replace the living-room 
carpet. We'll go on a second honeymoon when we get two more kids out of 
college.

Life has a way of accelerating, as we get older. The days get shorter, 
and the list of promises to ourselves gets longer. One morning, we 
awaken, and all we have to show for our lives is a litany of "I'm going 
to," "I plan on" and "Someday, when things are settled down a bit."

When anyone calls my 'seize the moment' friend, she is open to adventure
and available for trips. She keeps an open mind on new ideas.  Her 
enthusiasm for life is contagious. You talk with her for five minutes, 
and you're ready to trade your bad feet for a pair of Roller blades and 
skip an elevator for a bungee cord.

My lips have not touched ice cream in 10 years. I love ice cream.  It's
just that I might as well apply it directly to my hips with a spatula 
and eliminate the digestive process. The other day, I stopped the car 
and bought a triple-decker. If my car had hit an iceberg on the way 
home, I would have died happy.

Now...go on and have a nice day. Do something you WANT to...not 
something on your SHOULD DO list.

If you were going to die soon and had only one phone call you could 
make, whom would you call and what would you say? And why are you 
waiting?

Have you ever watched kids playing on a merry go round or listened to 
the rain lapping on the ground? Ever followed a butterfly's erratic 
flight or gazed at the sun into the fading night?

You better slow down. Don't dance so fast. Time is short. The music 
won't last.

Do you run through each day on the fly? When you ask, "How are you?"  Do
you hear the reply?

When the day is done, do you lie in your bed with the next hundred 
chores running through your head?

Ever told your child, we'll do it tomorrow and, in your haste, not see 
his or her sorrow?

Ever lost touch? Let a good friendship die? Just call to say "Hi"?

You'd better slow down. Don't dance so fast. Time is short. The music 
won't last. When you run so fast to get somewhere, you miss half the 
fun of getting there. When you worry and hurry through your day, it is 
like an unopened gift...thrown away. Life is not a race. Take it 
slower.  Hear the music before the song is over.

-- 
Kenneth Archer, San Antonio, Texas
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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