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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter The
newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural awareness around the world. Value
Speak – A Joe Walker Column July
2, 2008 ValueSpeak A Weekly
Column
By Joseph Walker
THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS “We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these
are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness . . ” I don’t know why
the moment is frozen in my memory, but it is: my fourth grade teacher, Miss
Greene, is introducing us to The Declaration of Independence. Maybe it’s because she is such a fine
reader, or maybe it’s because I have a crush on her, but it feels as if every
phrase shoots directly from her lips to my soul. Especially that
last phrase. At age 10, I’m really into
happiness, so learning that my headlong pursuit of it is one of my “unalienable
Rights” . . . well, suddenly I like the Founding Fathers even more than the
Yankees. Not counting
Mickey Mantle, of course. Only one
problem. I had no idea what the world
“unalienable” means. “I think it means
you can’t have it,” George said when I asked him about it during recess. My heart
sank. But then I thought about it. “I don’t think that’s right, George,” I
said. “Why would those guys get excited
about rights they can’t have? It
doesn’t make sense.” So I went to the
smartest person I knew: JoAnn. “Well,” she pondered,
“I know `alien’ means someone from another planet, so `unalienable’ must mean
something you can’t bring in from outer space.” She seemed to know
what she was talking about even though I couldn’t for the life of me figure out
what it had to do with anything. Which
is why I decided to summon my courage and ask Miss Greene (not that she was
scary or anything – it was just . . you know, that crush thing). “It’s a very good
question, Joe,” she said. “Let’s go to
the dictionary to find out.” Holy cow! Why didn’t I think of that? Soon I learned
that an “unalienable Right” cannot be “surrendered or transferred.” Now, that was more like it. I had the right to pursue Happiness, and no
one could take it from me. No one, that is,
except Mom. “Good,” she said
when I announced my intention to devote the rest of my life to my “unalienable
Right” to pursue happiness. “Now go
clean your room.” Somehow this
wasn’t working. Where were the days of
frivolity, where breakfast was pie and root beer and “work” was getting up to
change the channel? Where were the
10-speed bicycles? These were the
things I was sure I needed to be happy.
And Happiness was my Right. I’ve learned a lot
about happiness since then – sometimes by getting what I wanted. I had a job where I had to watch TV eight
hours a day and it became a chore. I
had a 10-speed and the chain kept falling off.
I had pie and root beer for breakfast once. It made me sick. Mostly, I’ve
learned that happiness isn’t a possession.
You can’t buy it, and no one can give it to you. It’s a feeling, and it usually involves
things like family, peace, security, love and service. It doesn’t always come easily, but it is
always worthwhile. And I think that’s
what the signers of The Declaration of Independence had in mind when they
affirmed humanity’s God-given right to “the pursuit of Happiness.” They weren’t talking about momentary
pleasures; they were talking about long-term, whole-souled, capital-H-type
Happiness. It isn’t something you can
touch, but something you feel. It isn’t
something you get, but something you are.
It isn’t a lifestyle, it’s a way of life. But it IS
something you have to pursue. Only the
journey won’t take you far and wide – it will take you deep within
yourself. You may not rack up any
frequent flier miles, but you will return with a much grander bonus: peace,
contentment and Happiness. After all, it’s
your “unalienable Right.” |
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| << July02, 2008 - July 2, 2008 - Storytime Tapestry Contributor: Conrad S. Cardinal |
July03, 2008 - All Things Canadian - An Open Column for writers to share their knowledge of Canada >> |
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