I really enjoyed this one, Steve, and thanks, as always, for sharing!
Sandy
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Frances Vitulla" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, October 11, 2009 3:01 PM
Subject: [RecipesAndMore] Re: The Most Difficult Instrument To Play


> 
> Hello Steve, I like this one thanks for sharing.
> Original message:
>> The Most Difficult Instrument To Play
>> Do you know what is the hardest instrument in the orchestra to play?
>> The hardest instrument to play is second fiddle. While all the rest of 
>> the instruments have their own sections, the violins are divided into 
>> two parts - "first" and "second" violins.
>> First violins are often the stars of the show. They get the melody 
>> lines. They get to show off. They sit next to the audience.
>> Back behind, where they are hard to see, are the second violins. They 
>> play a supporting role. They play harmony to the first violins.
>> Theirs is a service role. Their job is to round out the sound of the 
>> other instruments.
>> They serve the orchestra. They do what is not glamorous so that the 
>> whole will be beautiful. Without the second violins, the orchestra 
>> would sound incomplete.
>> You know what the hardest role to play in life is? Second fiddle. To 
>> play second fiddle is to play a supporting role for someone else. And 
>> it is sometimes a service role; doing what is not glamorous, usually 
>> behind the scenes, so that the whole can be more beautiful.
>> The late Leo Buscaglia, that effervescent educator, speaker, author, 
>> and lover of life, used to tell his university students that there is a 
>> world out there dying to be loved! He challenged his students to love 
>> and often told them that serving others is the way they can find such 
>> things as happiness and joy.
>> He sometimes told about Joel. Leo got Joel hooked on serving. He took 
>> him to a nursing home and said, "You see that woman sitting over there? 
>> I want you to go and introduce yourself to her."
>> Joel was not looking forward to his nursing home visit. But he 
>> nevertheless went to the stranger and introduced himself. She looked at 
>> him skeptically and asked, "Are you one of my relatives?"
>> Joel answered, "No, I'm not."
>> And she said, "Good. I hate my relatives. Sit down, son, and talk to 
>> me." He did and they talked.
>> He went back the next week. And the next. They developed a close 
>> friendship and Joel soon looked forward to his visits. He learned 
>> something about the joy of serving.
>> About working behind the scenes.
>> About playing second fiddle.
>> And he made one woman's world a little more beautiful.
> 
>> 
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