I post quotes.
I have been doing it for a number of years, an outgrowth of one of the authors (Brian Tracy) that I read: "Find a useful quote. Send it to fifty people." And so, over the years, I have been collecting quotes from everywhere: literature, audio books, business books, the internet itself. Over time my planners have filled up in the back - and rolled to the front - with the quotes I have gotten.
Thanks to the wonder of Facebook and Twitter, I have the mechanism for the outreach of quotes: every day Monday through Friday I post one or two. I post one around general life or achievement and one that tends to be around some aspect of business. The pleasure comes from seeing people "like" them - an indication that they have found something significant quote. It is a small way for me to feel like I am contributing to the life and achievements of others.
Except.
Some time ago - maybe a year? - I posted a quote (I do not recall what one now) to which someone posted a snarky answer. It surprised me a bit, both because of who did it and the fact that they did it publicly. It depressed me because I always want to encourage, not upset - so much so that I stopped posting them for a while. Time passed of course, and I started posting them again - with the same sort of general "likes" in a day.
Then it happened again.
It rocked me back on my heels again - not just because of who did it but that they did it publicly. I fought the initial response of deleting the post - after all, I think that a third party reading it will find it as jarring as I did and I suppose that is not a bad thing - but I had to circle back and review what I was doing again.
Fortunately this morning I was reading Linchpin by Seth Godin and came across the following quote:
"You can spend your time on stage pleasing the heckler in back, or you can devote it to the audience that came to hear you perform".
Of course. I can pay attention to the 1% that seem intent on voicing their opinion (if you do not agree with somebody, just do not comment or even ignore them), or I can focus on the 99% that seem to be garnering some value out of my daily activity. Where is the correct focus?
Some people just seem to have a case of the bitters. The trick is not to let them dominate your life or ruin your attempts to better it.
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