It takes courage and lots of courage to look upon defeat as a blessing in disguise; but any position in life that is worth having requires a lot of sand.
This poem, by an uknown author says exactly what I am thinking.
I observed a locomotive in the railroad yards one day,
It was waiting in the roundhouse where the locomotives stay;
It was panting for the journey, it was coaled and fully manned,
And it had a box the fireman was filling full of sand.
It appears that locomotives cannot always get a grip
On their slender iron pavement, 'cause the wheels are apt to slip;
And when they reach a slippery spot, their tactics they command,
And to get a grip upon the rail, they sprinkle it with sand.
It's about the way with travel along life's slippery track -
If your load is rather heavy, you're always slipping back;
So, if a common locomotive you completely understan,
You'll provide yourself in starting with a good supply of sand.
If your track is steep and hilly and you have a heavy grade,
If those who've gone before you have the rails quite slippery made,
If you ever reach the summit of the upper tableland,
You'll find you'll have to do it with a liberal use of sand.
If you strike some frigid wheather and discover to your cost
that you're liable to slip upon a heavy coat of frost,
Then some prompt decided action will be called into demand,
And you'll slip 'way to the bottom if you haven't any sand.
You can get to any station that is on life's schedule seen,
If there's fire beneath the boiler of ambition's strong machine,
And you'll reach a place called Flushtown at a rate of speed that's grand,
If for all the slippery places you've a good supply of sand.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
When Nature Wants to Make a Man
There is no failure for the man or woman that fights on. A man or woman has never failed until (s)he accepts temporary defeat as failure. The is a BIG difference between temporary defeat and failure.
Here is a poem by Angela Morgan a turn of the 19th century poet. Her poems express the theory that adversity and defeat are generally blessings in disguise.
When Nature wants to drill a man,
And thrill a man,
And skill a man,
When nature wants to mold a man
To play the noblest part;
When she yearns with all her heart
To create so great and bold a man
That all the world shall praise --
Watch her method, watch her ways!
How she ruthlessly perfects
Whome she royally elects;
How she hammers him and hurts him,
And with mighty blows converts him,
Into trial shapes of clay which only Nature understands -
While his tortured heart is crying and he lifts beseeching hands!
How she bends, but never breaks,
When his good she undertakes...
How she uses whom she chooses
And with every purpose fuses him,
By every art induces him
To try his splendor out -
Nature knows what she's about.
When Nature wants to take a man,
And shake a man,
And wake a man;
When Nature wants to make a man
To do the Future's will;
When she tries with all her skill
And she yearns with all her soul
To create him large and whole...
With what cunning she prepares him!
How she goads and never spares him,
How she whets him, and she frets him,
And in poverty begets him...
How she often disappoints
Whom she sacredly anoints,
With what wisdom she will hide him,
Never minding what betide him
Though his genius sob with slighting and his pride not forgot!
Bids him struggle harder yet.
Makes him lonely
So that only
God's high messages shall reach him,
So that she may surely teach him
What the Hierarchy planned.
Though he may not understand.
Gives him passions to command.
How remorselessly she spurs him
With terrific ardor stirs him
When she poignantly prefers him!
When Nature wants to name a man
And fame a man
And tame a man;
When Nature wants to shame a man
To do his heavenly best...
When she tries the highest test
That she reckoning may bring -
When she wants a god or king!
How she reins him and restrains him
So his body scarce contains him
While she fires him
And inspires him!
Keeps him yearning, ever burning for a tantalizing goal -
Lures and lacerates his soul.
Sets a challenge for his spirit,
Draws it higher when he's near it -
Makes a jungle, that he clear it;
Makes a desert that he fear it
And subdue it if he can -
Do doth Nature make a man.
Then, to test his spirit's wrath
Hurls a mountain in his path -
Puts a bitter choice before him
And relentlessly stand o'er him.
"Climb, or perish" so she says...
Watch her purpose, watce her ways!
Nature's plan is wonderous kind
Could we understand her mind...
Fools are they who call her blind.
When his feet are torn and bleeding
Yet his spirit mounts unheeding,
All his higher powers speeding,
Blazing newer paths and fine;
When the force that is divine
Leaps to challenge every failure and his ardor still is sweet
And love and hope are burning in the presence of defeat...
Lo, the crisis! Lo, the shout
That must call the leader out.
When the people need salvation
Doth he come to lead a nation...
Then doth Nature show her plan
When the world has found - a MAN!
--------------------------------
Defeat talks to us in a language all its own; a language to which we must listen whether we like it or not.
Here is a poem by Angela Morgan a turn of the 19th century poet. Her poems express the theory that adversity and defeat are generally blessings in disguise.
When Nature wants to drill a man,
And thrill a man,
And skill a man,
When nature wants to mold a man
To play the noblest part;
When she yearns with all her heart
To create so great and bold a man
That all the world shall praise --
Watch her method, watch her ways!
How she ruthlessly perfects
Whome she royally elects;
How she hammers him and hurts him,
And with mighty blows converts him,
Into trial shapes of clay which only Nature understands -
While his tortured heart is crying and he lifts beseeching hands!
How she bends, but never breaks,
When his good she undertakes...
How she uses whom she chooses
And with every purpose fuses him,
By every art induces him
To try his splendor out -
Nature knows what she's about.
When Nature wants to take a man,
And shake a man,
And wake a man;
When Nature wants to make a man
To do the Future's will;
When she tries with all her skill
And she yearns with all her soul
To create him large and whole...
With what cunning she prepares him!
How she goads and never spares him,
How she whets him, and she frets him,
And in poverty begets him...
How she often disappoints
Whom she sacredly anoints,
With what wisdom she will hide him,
Never minding what betide him
Though his genius sob with slighting and his pride not forgot!
Bids him struggle harder yet.
Makes him lonely
So that only
God's high messages shall reach him,
So that she may surely teach him
What the Hierarchy planned.
Though he may not understand.
Gives him passions to command.
How remorselessly she spurs him
With terrific ardor stirs him
When she poignantly prefers him!
When Nature wants to name a man
And fame a man
And tame a man;
When Nature wants to shame a man
To do his heavenly best...
When she tries the highest test
That she reckoning may bring -
When she wants a god or king!
How she reins him and restrains him
So his body scarce contains him
While she fires him
And inspires him!
Keeps him yearning, ever burning for a tantalizing goal -
Lures and lacerates his soul.
Sets a challenge for his spirit,
Draws it higher when he's near it -
Makes a jungle, that he clear it;
Makes a desert that he fear it
And subdue it if he can -
Do doth Nature make a man.
Then, to test his spirit's wrath
Hurls a mountain in his path -
Puts a bitter choice before him
And relentlessly stand o'er him.
"Climb, or perish" so she says...
Watch her purpose, watce her ways!
Nature's plan is wonderous kind
Could we understand her mind...
Fools are they who call her blind.
When his feet are torn and bleeding
Yet his spirit mounts unheeding,
All his higher powers speeding,
Blazing newer paths and fine;
When the force that is divine
Leaps to challenge every failure and his ardor still is sweet
And love and hope are burning in the presence of defeat...
Lo, the crisis! Lo, the shout
That must call the leader out.
When the people need salvation
Doth he come to lead a nation...
Then doth Nature show her plan
When the world has found - a MAN!
--------------------------------
Defeat talks to us in a language all its own; a language to which we must listen whether we like it or not.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
The Dumb Language of Defeat
This language is the simplest and most effective language of all, and I am beginning to understand it. This language is natures way of say, "Hey Marla! Listen up girl! There is a lesson to be learned and there is no other way to learn it than by me cry out to you and making you learning through failure!"
I am glad that I have encountered much defeat in my life! Because it has given me the courage to undertake tasks that I would never have begun had I been surrounded by protecting influences. Influences that I have always had in my childhood, and have in adulthood.
Defeat is a blessing in disguise!
Joaquin Miller is an American Poet of the 19th Century (died in the early part of the 20th Century). He expressed a notable thought in the following poem:
"All honor to him who shall win a prize."
The world has cried for a thousand years;
But to him who tries, and who fails, and dies,
I give great honor, and glory, and tears.
Give glory and honor and pitiful tears
To all who fail in their deeds sublime;
Their ghosts are many in the van of years,
They were born with Time, in advance of Time.
Oh, great is the hem who wins a name;
But greater many, and many a time, Some pale-faced fellow who dies in shame
And lets God finish the thought sublime.
And great is the man with a sword undrawn,
And good is the man who refrains from wine;
But the man who fails and yet still fights on,
In, he is the twin-brother of mine.
There is no failure to a man or a woman who fights on.
A man or a woman never fails until he or she accepts temporary defeat as failure.
I am glad that I have encountered much defeat in my life! Because it has given me the courage to undertake tasks that I would never have begun had I been surrounded by protecting influences. Influences that I have always had in my childhood, and have in adulthood.
Defeat is a blessing in disguise!
Joaquin Miller is an American Poet of the 19th Century (died in the early part of the 20th Century). He expressed a notable thought in the following poem:
"All honor to him who shall win a prize."
The world has cried for a thousand years;
But to him who tries, and who fails, and dies,
I give great honor, and glory, and tears.
Give glory and honor and pitiful tears
To all who fail in their deeds sublime;
Their ghosts are many in the van of years,
They were born with Time, in advance of Time.
Oh, great is the hem who wins a name;
But greater many, and many a time, Some pale-faced fellow who dies in shame
And lets God finish the thought sublime.
And great is the man with a sword undrawn,
And good is the man who refrains from wine;
But the man who fails and yet still fights on,
In, he is the twin-brother of mine.
There is no failure to a man or a woman who fights on.
A man or a woman never fails until he or she accepts temporary defeat as failure.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Horse Sense
"Flaming enthusiasm, backed up by horse sense and persistence, is the quality that most frequently makes for success." -- Dale Carnegie
So to be successful, one needs some horse sense. What exactly does this mean? It means looking beyond yourself to maximize your full potential through others.
I guess you can say that you cannot get anywhere worthy without other people helping you along the way.
I am learning I can't do it on my own.
Salve Maria... ayudame porque me muero! Me ahogo!
So to be successful, one needs some horse sense. What exactly does this mean? It means looking beyond yourself to maximize your full potential through others.
I guess you can say that you cannot get anywhere worthy without other people helping you along the way.
I am learning I can't do it on my own.
Salve Maria... ayudame porque me muero! Me ahogo!
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Slap in the face Baby Shower!
I just received a baby shower invitation from a "supposed" close friend of my husband, yet this person didn't even acknowledge my husband when he was in the hospital.
Her invitation comes as a slap in the face. I feel bad for her and annoyed at the same time, which I just don’t think is the desired reaction from a baby shower invitation.
Her invitation comes as a slap in the face. I feel bad for her and annoyed at the same time, which I just don’t think is the desired reaction from a baby shower invitation.
USPS nightmare
Have you ever been the victim of a lost or misdelivered or damaged package sent via the US Govt Postal Service?
I have. What follows is a detailed letter to Postal Service for an insured package lost by destination postal service branch.
My goal was to have the right balance of pithy treatment yet with adequate detail; threatening yet sensible suggestion for resolving this matter; formal yet the sense that a forceful, persistant human being has written the letter.
-----------------------------------------------
November 2, 2009
CLAIM APPLEALSACCOUNTING SERVICES
PO BOX 80141
ST LOUIS, MO 63180-0141
Subject: Package not delivered
Claim ID: 1321187
Case number: CA100142347
Insurance label number is 13080370000098523759
I, [deleted], am the shipper of the package that was presumably delivered. This letter is in response to your denial of my claim. I write to demand immediate payment of the $90.00 for the insured package that was never delivered.
On September 23, 2009 I mailed a 19.6 lb package containing birthday presents for my niece and nephews and my sister-in-law, [deleted]. Per your records this package was delivered on Monday, September 28, 2009 at 12:44 p.m. However, this package, was in fact, not delivered to the recipients I shipped the package to.
Accordingly, I made a claim with the 1800 clerk to investigate why the package was not delivered and the clerk said they will forward to the Snapper Creek Postal Service Branch in Miami, Florida. According to a clerk at the above mentioned branch, the package was scanned by another mail carrier not the carrier that delivers to my sister-in-laws address [deleted], Miami, FL 33176-1799. The carrier that delivers to that address is Route 42.
This matter was handled very poorly by this branch. First, the service provided by this branch has been nothing efficient. I was given evasive excuses, made to wait for hours on the phone, and even experienced rudeness. Who is in a better position to solve this problem—your office?
Furthermore, I called the 1(800) number again on Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 7:00 a.m. and the clerk advised, I call the Snapper Creek Branch and ask them to advocate for me. I called the branch at 7:20 a.m. after hanging up with the 1800 clerk. A lady by the name of Izabel answered the phone, she said she would investigate the problem placed me on hold for nearly two hours. I called again, and a George answered and said no Izabel worked there. He claimed to be a supervisor and then handed the call to a clerk by the name of Suzanne. Suzanne was very nice and took down the information and said, “I don’t know why supervisor gave me this call, I don’t think I can solve this problem. This should be the supervisor's duty.” Then she placed me on hold for a few seconds and returned to the phone saying, “John supervisor is in a meeting. Give me the Insurance label number and I will have him call you back.” No one ever called back.
Understand that I bought insurance for just this reason and USPS should indemnify me for the loss of the package. USPS defected in the delivery of the package to a different address (or it was stolen). The actual recipient did not receive this package.
Additionally, I have included [deleted] affidavit as proof that the package was not delivered to the address I shipped it to. You may contact [deleted] at [deleted].
These are reasonable demands. If I don’t hear from you by November 16, I will assess what legal recourse I should take against the US Postal Service.
Very Truly Yours,
Marla F. Benavides
Copy to Ms. Autria Finley, Supervisor, Domestic Claims (by certified and regular mail)
------------------------------------------------------------------
USPS Results from demand letter
I sent a demand letter in October of 2009 to the Postal Service and I received a response. The postal service wrote a check out to me for the full amount of the insured package plus some extra cash. Yea!
I guess my letter was so effective, Postal Service wanted to reward me for a job well done.
I have. What follows is a detailed letter to Postal Service for an insured package lost by destination postal service branch.
My goal was to have the right balance of pithy treatment yet with adequate detail; threatening yet sensible suggestion for resolving this matter; formal yet the sense that a forceful, persistant human being has written the letter.
-----------------------------------------------
November 2, 2009
CLAIM APPLEALSACCOUNTING SERVICES
PO BOX 80141
ST LOUIS, MO 63180-0141
Subject: Package not delivered
Claim ID: 1321187
Case number: CA100142347
Insurance label number is 13080370000098523759
I, [deleted], am the shipper of the package that was presumably delivered. This letter is in response to your denial of my claim. I write to demand immediate payment of the $90.00 for the insured package that was never delivered.
On September 23, 2009 I mailed a 19.6 lb package containing birthday presents for my niece and nephews and my sister-in-law, [deleted]. Per your records this package was delivered on Monday, September 28, 2009 at 12:44 p.m. However, this package, was in fact, not delivered to the recipients I shipped the package to.
Accordingly, I made a claim with the 1800 clerk to investigate why the package was not delivered and the clerk said they will forward to the Snapper Creek Postal Service Branch in Miami, Florida. According to a clerk at the above mentioned branch, the package was scanned by another mail carrier not the carrier that delivers to my sister-in-laws address [deleted], Miami, FL 33176-1799. The carrier that delivers to that address is Route 42.
This matter was handled very poorly by this branch. First, the service provided by this branch has been nothing efficient. I was given evasive excuses, made to wait for hours on the phone, and even experienced rudeness. Who is in a better position to solve this problem—your office?
Furthermore, I called the 1(800) number again on Thursday, October 22, 2009 at 7:00 a.m. and the clerk advised, I call the Snapper Creek Branch and ask them to advocate for me. I called the branch at 7:20 a.m. after hanging up with the 1800 clerk. A lady by the name of Izabel answered the phone, she said she would investigate the problem placed me on hold for nearly two hours. I called again, and a George answered and said no Izabel worked there. He claimed to be a supervisor and then handed the call to a clerk by the name of Suzanne. Suzanne was very nice and took down the information and said, “I don’t know why supervisor gave me this call, I don’t think I can solve this problem. This should be the supervisor's duty.” Then she placed me on hold for a few seconds and returned to the phone saying, “John supervisor is in a meeting. Give me the Insurance label number and I will have him call you back.” No one ever called back.
Understand that I bought insurance for just this reason and USPS should indemnify me for the loss of the package. USPS defected in the delivery of the package to a different address (or it was stolen). The actual recipient did not receive this package.
Additionally, I have included [deleted] affidavit as proof that the package was not delivered to the address I shipped it to. You may contact [deleted] at [deleted].
These are reasonable demands. If I don’t hear from you by November 16, I will assess what legal recourse I should take against the US Postal Service.
Very Truly Yours,
Marla F. Benavides
Copy to Ms. Autria Finley, Supervisor, Domestic Claims (by certified and regular mail)
------------------------------------------------------------------
USPS Results from demand letter
I sent a demand letter in October of 2009 to the Postal Service and I received a response. The postal service wrote a check out to me for the full amount of the insured package plus some extra cash. Yea!
I guess my letter was so effective, Postal Service wanted to reward me for a job well done.
Holiday Inn National in Alexandria
A year an a half ago, we traveled back east for a wedding and a vacation. This trip was extended from 10 days to 3 months b/c my husband ended up in the hospital. I had a terrible time with this Hotel and Orbitz. After trying to cancel our reservation, Orbitz charged my credit card b/c hotel did not want to authorize cancellation of stay. I sent thame a letter upon returning to Denver. It read:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Mr. Gates,
I am Mr. X wife, with whom your hotel has corresponded about canceling our reservation back in January. I write asking you to authorize a credit in the amount of $623.26 to Orbitz.
We made reservations for 7 days and although the hotel’s policy is that cancellations or changes made after 6:00 PM local hotel time on the day of arrival are subject to a 100% charge. Your front end manager, Mr. Joshua Forten, did agree to cancel our reservation and charge us for a one night stay.
More than that, though, Virginia law states that “Where impossibility of performance is due to … to death or illness of one who by the terms of the contract was to do an act requiring his personal performance … the promisor will be excused ...” 1 M.J., CONTRACTS, § 69.
First, the purpose of the trip was to attend a wedding in North Carolina then visit D.C. before heading home. However, my husband was diagnosed with pneumonia at an Urgent Care Clinic in N.C. on January 3rd. In the evening of that day, around 6:00 P.M., I called the hotel to state we would not be staying that evening but that we would call the next day. We stayed in Fredericksburg with family instead, hoping that the illness would pass. I called the next day, January 4th, and tried to cancel with hotel. Ms. Greshuma, supervisor on duty, stated that I would have to cancel with Orbitz, however, Orbitz stated that the hotel will have to authorize the cancellation, and that I should call on Monday, the 5th of January for a refund. On Monday morning, my husband was rushed to the Hospital with irregular heart rhythm. I tried again to cancel on that afternoon. My husband’s hospitalization was a supervening event that had not reasonably been contemplated by us at the time of reservation. It made staying in your hotel impossible. Sure I could have agreed to stay at the hotel, and you could have given me possession of the room, but it so defeated the purpose that your hotel should excuse our performance of the contract and cancelled the reservation.
I have attached the following documentation of my husband’s hospitalization: the diagnosis from the Urgent Care Clinic, the Discharge/final summary of Dr. Y, my husband’s appointed primary care provider while at Hospital, and admission history and physical from Dr. Z, at Rehabilitation Hospital of Fredericksburg. Considering the overwhelming evidence that my husband was truly ill, I request that you authorize a credit in the amount of $623.26 with Orbitz.
These are reasonable demands. If I do not hear from you by May 22, 2009, I will assess what legal recourse we should take against your hotel, and Orbitz.
Very truly
Marla F. Benavides
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
After writing the manager of the HI hotel that letter, on May 20th, I received a call saying that they would refund the entire amount ($800.00). Yes, you read it right! The entire amount was refunded, and the hotel room was finally cancelled. It took me five months to resolve this issue. But a thoughtfully written letter with evidence to prove my case went a long way to getting management to see my point of view.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Mr. Gates,
I am Mr. X wife, with whom your hotel has corresponded about canceling our reservation back in January. I write asking you to authorize a credit in the amount of $623.26 to Orbitz.
We made reservations for 7 days and although the hotel’s policy is that cancellations or changes made after 6:00 PM local hotel time on the day of arrival are subject to a 100% charge. Your front end manager, Mr. Joshua Forten, did agree to cancel our reservation and charge us for a one night stay.
More than that, though, Virginia law states that “Where impossibility of performance is due to … to death or illness of one who by the terms of the contract was to do an act requiring his personal performance … the promisor will be excused ...” 1 M.J., CONTRACTS, § 69.
First, the purpose of the trip was to attend a wedding in North Carolina then visit D.C. before heading home. However, my husband was diagnosed with pneumonia at an Urgent Care Clinic in N.C. on January 3rd. In the evening of that day, around 6:00 P.M., I called the hotel to state we would not be staying that evening but that we would call the next day. We stayed in Fredericksburg with family instead, hoping that the illness would pass. I called the next day, January 4th, and tried to cancel with hotel. Ms. Greshuma, supervisor on duty, stated that I would have to cancel with Orbitz, however, Orbitz stated that the hotel will have to authorize the cancellation, and that I should call on Monday, the 5th of January for a refund. On Monday morning, my husband was rushed to the Hospital with irregular heart rhythm. I tried again to cancel on that afternoon. My husband’s hospitalization was a supervening event that had not reasonably been contemplated by us at the time of reservation. It made staying in your hotel impossible. Sure I could have agreed to stay at the hotel, and you could have given me possession of the room, but it so defeated the purpose that your hotel should excuse our performance of the contract and cancelled the reservation.
I have attached the following documentation of my husband’s hospitalization: the diagnosis from the Urgent Care Clinic, the Discharge/final summary of Dr. Y, my husband’s appointed primary care provider while at Hospital, and admission history and physical from Dr. Z, at Rehabilitation Hospital of Fredericksburg. Considering the overwhelming evidence that my husband was truly ill, I request that you authorize a credit in the amount of $623.26 with Orbitz.
These are reasonable demands. If I do not hear from you by May 22, 2009, I will assess what legal recourse we should take against your hotel, and Orbitz.
Very truly
Marla F. Benavides
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
After writing the manager of the HI hotel that letter, on May 20th, I received a call saying that they would refund the entire amount ($800.00). Yes, you read it right! The entire amount was refunded, and the hotel room was finally cancelled. It took me five months to resolve this issue. But a thoughtfully written letter with evidence to prove my case went a long way to getting management to see my point of view.
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