For life is the mirror of king and slave.
'Tis just what you are and do;
Then give to the world the best you have,
And the best will come back to you.
--MADELINE BRIDGES.
THE old adage that "He profits most who serves best" is no
mere
altruism.
Look around you. What businesses are going ahead? What men
are making the big successes? Are they the ones who grab the
passing dollar, careless of what they offer in return? Or are
they those who are striving always to give a little greater
value, a little more work than they are paid for?
When scales are balanced evenly, a trifle of extra weight
thrown into either side overbalances the other as effectively
as a ton.
In the same way, a little better value, a little extra
effort, makes the man or the business stand out from the great
mass of mediocrity like a tall man among pigmies, and brings
results out of all proportion to the additional effort
involved.
It pays--not merely altruistically, but in good, hard, round
dollars--to give a little more value than seems necessary, to work a
bit harder than you are paid for. It's that extra ounce of value
that counts.
For the law of attraction is service. We receive in
proportion as we give out. In fact, we usually receive in far
greater proportion. "Cast thy bread upon the waters and it
will return to you an hundred-fold."
Back of (everything is the immutable law of the
Universe--that what you are is but the effect. Your thoughts
are the causes. The only way you can change the effect is by
first changing the cause.
People live in poverty and want because they are so wrapped
up in their sufferings that they give out thoughts only of
lack and sorrow. They expect want. They open the door of their
mind only to hardship and sickness and poverty. True--they
hope for something better--but their hopes are so drowned by
their fears that they never have a chance.
You cannot receive good while expecting evil. You cannot
demonstrate plenty while looking for poverty. "Blessed is he
that expecteth much, for verily his soul shall be filled."
Solomon outlined the law when he said:
"There is that scattereth, and increaseth yet more;
And there is that withholdeth more than is meet,
but it tendeth only to want.
The liberal soul shall be made fat;
And he that watereth shall be watered also himself."
The Universal Mind expresses itself largely through the
individual. It is continually seeking an outlet. It is like a
vast reservoir of water, constantly replenished by mountain sp
rings. Cut a channel to it and the water will flow in
ever-increasing volume. In the same way, if you once open up a
channel of service by which the Universal Mind can express
itself through you, its gifts will flow in ever-increasing
volume and YOU will be enriched in the process.
This is the idea through which great bankers are made. A
foreign country needs millions for development. Its people are
hard-working, but lack the necessary implements to make their
work productive. How are they to find the money?
They go to a banker--put their problem up to him. He has
not the money himself, but he knows how and where to raise it.
He sells the promise to pay of the foreign country (their
bonds, in other words) to people who have money to invest. His
is merely a service. But it is such an invaluable service that
both sides are glad to pay him liberally for it.
In the same way, by opening up a channel between universal
supply and human needs--by doing your neighbors or your
friends or your customers service--you are bound to profit
yourself. And the wider you open your channel- the greater
service you give or the better values you offer--the more
things are bound to flow through your channel, the more you
are going to profit thereby.
But you've got to use your talent if you want to profit
from it. It matters not how small your service--using it will
make it greater. You don't have to retire to a cell and pray.
That is a selfish method--selfish concern for your own soul to
the exclusion of all others. Mere self-denial or asceticism as
such does no one good. You've got to DO something, to USE the
talents God has given you to make the world better for your
having been in it.
Remember the parable of the talents. You know what happened
to the man who went off and hid his talent, whereas those who
made use of theirs were given charge over many things.
That parable, it has always seemed to me, expresses the
whole law of life. The only right is to use all the forces of
good. The only wrong is to neglect or to abuse them.
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God. This is the first and
the greatest Commandment." Thou shalt show thy love by using
to the best possible advantage the good things (the "talents"
of the par-able) that He has placed in your hands. "And the
second is like unto it. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself." Thou shalt not abuse the good things that have been
provided you in such prodigality, by using them against your
neighbor. Instead, thou shalt treat him (love him) as you
would be treated by him. Thou shalt use the good about you for
the advantage of all.
If you are a banker, you've got to use the money you have
in order to make more money. If you are a merchant, you've got
to sell the goods you have in order to buy more goods. If you
are a doctor, you must help the patient you have in order to
get more practice. If you are a clerk, you must do your work a
little better than those around you if you want to earn more
money than they. And if you want more of the universal supply,
you must use that which you have in such a way as to make
yourself of greater service to those around you.
"Whosoever shall be great among you," said Jesus, "shall be
your minister, and whosoever of you will be the chiefest,
shall be servant of all." In other words, if you would be
great, you must serve. And he who serves most shall be
greatest of all.
If you want to make more money, instead of seeking it for
yourself, see how you can make more for others. In the process
you will inevitably make more for yourself, too. We get as we
give--but we must give first.
It matters not where 'you Start you may be a day laborer.
But still you can give--give a bit more of energy, of work, of
thought, than you are paid for. "Whosoever shall compel thee
to go a mile," said Jesus, "go with him twain." Try to put a
little extra skill into your work. Use your mind to find some
better way of doing whatever task may be set for you. It won't
be long before you are out of the common labor class.
There is no kind of work than can-not be bettered by
thought. There is no method that cannot be improved by
thought. So give generously of your thought to your work.
Think every minute you are at it--"Isn't there some way in
which this could be done easier, quicker, better?" Read in
your spare time everything that relates to your own work or to
the job ahead of you. In these days of magazines and books and
libraries, few are the occupations that are not thoroughly
covered in some good work.
Remember in Lorimer's "Letters of a Self-Made Merchant to
His Son," the young fellow that old Gorgan Graham hired
against his better judgment and put in the "barrel gang" just
to get rid of him quickly? Before the month was out the young
fellow had thought himself out of that job by persuading the
boss to get a machine that did the work at half the cost and
with a third of the gang. Graham just had to raise his pay and
put him higher up. But he wouldn't stay put. No matter what
the job, he always found some way it could be done better and
with fewer people. Until he reached the top of the ladder.
There are plenty of men like that in actual life. They
won't stay down. They are as full of bounce as a cat with a
small boy and a dog after it. Thrown to the dog from an upper
window, it is using the time of falling to get set for the
next jump. By the time the dog leaps for where it hit, the cat
is up the tree across the street.
The true spirit of business is the spirit of that plucky
old Danish sea captain, Peter Tordenskjold. Attacked by a
Swedish frigate, after all his crew but one had been killed
and his supply of cannon balls was exhausted, Peter boldly
kept up the fight, firing pewter dinner-plates and mugs from
his one remaining gun.
One of the pewter mugs hit the Swedish captain and killed
him, and Peter sailed off triumphant!
Look around YOU now. How can YOU give greater value for
what you get? How can you SERVE better? How can you make more
money for your employers or save more for your customers. Keep
that thought ever in the forefront of your mind and you'll
never need to worry about making more for yourself!
A Blank Check
There was an article by Gardner Hunting in a recent issue
of "Christian Business," that was so good that I reprint it
here entire:
"All my life I have known in a vague way that getting money
is the result of earning it; but I have never had a perfect
vision of that truth till recently. Summed up now, the result
of all my experience, pleasant and unpleasant, is that a man
gets back exactly what he gives out, only multiplied.
"If I give to anybody service of a kind that he wants I
shall get back the benefit myself. If I give more service I
shall get more benefit. If I give a great deal more, I shall
get a great deal more. But I shall get back more than I give.
Exactly as when I plant a bushel of potatoes, I get back
thirty or forty bushels, and more in proportion to the
attention I give the growing crop. If I give more to my
employer than he expects of me, he will give me a raise--and
on no other condition. What is more, his giving me a raise
does not depend on his fair-mindedness--he has to give it to
me or lose me, because if he does not appreciate me somebody
else will.
"But this is only part of it. If I give help to the man
whose desk is next to mine, it will come back to me
multiplied, even if he apparently is a rival. What I give to
him, I give to the firm, and the firm will value it, because
it is team-work in the organization that the firm primarily
wants, not brilliant individual performance. If I have an
enemy in the organization, the same rule holds; if I give him,
with the purpose of helping him, something that will genuinely
help him, I am giving service to the organization. Great
corporations appreciate the peace-maker, for a prime requisite
in their success is harmony among employees. If my boss is
unappreciative, the same rule holds; if I give him more, in
advance of appreciation, he cannot withhold his appreciation
and keep his own job.
"The more you think about this law, the deeper you will see
it goes. It literally hands you a blank check, signed by the
Maker of Universal Law, and leaves you to fill in the
amount--and the kind--of payment you want! Mediocre successes
are those that obey this law a little way--that fill in the
check with a small amount--but that stop short of big vision
in it. If every employee would only get the idea of this law
firmly fixed in him as a principle, not subject to wavering
with fluctuating moods, the success of the organization would
be miraculous. One of my fears is apt to be that, by promoting
the other fellow's success, I am side-tracking my own; but the
exact opposite is the truth.
"Suppose every employee would look at his own case as an
exact parallel to that of his firm. What does his firm give
for the money it gets from the public? Service! Service in
advance! The better the service that is given out, the more
money comes back. What does the firm do to bring public
attention w its service? It advertises; that is part of the
service. Now, suppose that I, as an employee, begin giving my
service to the firm in advance of all hoped for payment.
Suppose I advertise my service. How do I do either? I cannot
do anything constructive in that firm's office or store or
plant or premises that is not service, from filing a letter
correctly to mending the fence or pleasing a customer; from
looking up a word for the stenographer, to encouraging her to
look it up herself; demonstrating a machine to a customer or
encouraging him to demonstrate it himself; from helping my
immediate apparent rival to get a raise, to selling the whole
season's output. As for advertising myself, I begin
advertising myself the moment I walk into the office or the
store or the shop in the morning; I cannot help it. Everybody
who looks at me sees my advertisement. Everybody around me has
my advertisement before his eyes all day long. So has the
boss--my immediate chief and the head of the firm, no matter
where they are. And if I live up to my advertising, nobody can
stop me from selling my goods--my services! The more a man
knocks me, the more he advertises me; because he calls
attention to me; and if I am delivering something better than
he says I am, the interested parties--my employers--will see
it, and will not be otherwise influenced by what he says.
"More than that, I must give to every human being I come in
contact with, from my wife to the bootblack who shines my
shoes; from my brother to my sworn foe. Sometimes people will
tell you to smile; but the smile I give has got to be a real
smile that lives up to its advertising. If I go around
grinning like a Cheshire cat, the Cheshire-cat grin will be
what I get back--multiplied! If I give the real thing, I'll
get back the real thing--multiplied! If anybody objects that
this is a selfish view to take, I answer him that any law of
salvation from anything by anybody that has ever been offered
for any purpose, is a selfish view to take. The only
unselfishness that has ever been truly taught is that of
giving a lesser thing in hope of receiving a greater.
"Now, why am I so sure of this law? How can you be sure? I
have watched it work; it works everywhere. You have only to
try it, and keep on trying it and it will prove true for you.
It is not true because I say so, nor because anybody else says
so; it is just true. Theosophists call it the law of Karma;
humanitarians call it the law of Service; business men call it
the law of common sense; Jesus Christ called it the law of
Love. It rules whether I know it or not, whether I believe it
or not, whether I defy it or not. I can't break it! Jesus of
Nazareth, without reference to any religious idea you may have
about Him, without consideration as to whether He was or was
not divine, was the greatest business Man that ever lived, and
he said: 'Give and ye shall receive--good measure, pressed
down, shaken together, running over!' And this happens to be
so--not because He said it--but because it is the Truth, which
we all, whether we admit it or not, worship as God. No man can
honestly say that he does not put the truth supreme.
"It is the truth--the principle of giving and
receiving--only there are few men who go the limit on it. But
going the limit is the way to unlimited returns!
"What shall I give? What I have, of course. Suppose you
believe in this idea--and suppose you should start giving it
out, the idea itself, tactfully, wisely, and living it
yourself in your organization. How long do you think it will
be before you are a power in that organization, recognized as
such and getting pay as such? It is more valuable than all the
cleverness and special information you can possibly possess
without it. What you have, give--to everybody. If you have an
idea, do not save it for your own use only; give it. It is the
best thing you have to give and therefore the thing best to
give--and therefore the thing that will bring the best back to
you. I believe that if a man would follow this principle, even
to his trade-secrets, he would profit steadily more and more;
and more certainly than he will by holding on to anything for
himself. He would never have to worry about his own
affairs--because he would be working on fundamental Law. Law
never fails--and it will be easy for you to discover what is
or is not law. And if law is worth using part of the time, it
is worth using all the time.
"Look around you first, with an eye to seeing the truth,
and then put the thing to the test. Through both methods of
investigation you will find a blank check waiting for you to
fill in with 'whatsoever you desire,' and a new way to pray
and to get what you pray for."
Suggested Further Reading
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The Secret of the Ages, by Robert Collier, [1926].
This text has been reformatted for the web at
Hinduwebsite.com by Jayaram V. This text is not an
exact reproduction of the original edition which was
published in 1925 in seven small volumes. The title
pages, page numbers, contents and index pages of seven
volumes are not included in this electronic version.
Those who are interested in the entire version of the
text may refer the original copy. This text is in the
public domain in the US, but may not be so in some
countries. |
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