Commitment

What is it that truly makes us happy? I will never forget what my old 
headmaster told me. Normally when you are only 15 years of age you do not 
remember most of the things that are preached by your teachers. But, this 
particular story is one such lesson I will never forget. Every time I drift off 
course, I get reminded of this story.

It was a normal Monday morning at an assembly, and he was addressing the 
students on important things in life and about committing ourselves to what is 
important to us. This is how the story went:

An old man lived in a certain part of London, and he would wake up every 
morning and go to the subway. He would get the train right to Central London, 
and then sit at the street corner and beg. He would do this every single day of 
his life. He sat at the same street corner and begged for almost 20 years.

His house was filthy, and a stench came out of the house and it smelled 
horribly.

The neighbors could not stand the smell anymore, so they summoned the police 
officers to clear the place. The officers knocked down the door and cleaned the 
house. There were small bags of money all over the house that he had collected 
over the years.

The police counted the money, and they soon realized that the old man was a 
millionaire.

They waited outside his house in anticipation, to share the good news with him. 
When he arrived home that evening, he was met by one the officers who told him 
that there was no need for him to beg any more as he was a rich man now, a 
millionaire.

He said nothing at all; he went into his house and locked the door. The next 
morning he woke up as usual, went to the subway, got into the train, and sat at 
the street corner and continued to beg.

Obviously, this old man had no great plans, dreams or anything significant for 
his life. We learn nothing from this story other than staying focused on the 
things we enjoy doing, that's commitment.

We should remain true to our course; which may mean committing yourselves to 
things that people around you mightd normally disapprove. Let nothing distract 
us from being happy, let nothing else determine our fate, but ourselves.

What makes us happy is what matters in the end, not what we acquire.

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