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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 23, 1925)
-V* -V * ‘ 'A- 3 MAY » a The Chemawa American Printed at Chemawa, Oregon, and Devoted to the Interests of Indian Education Vol. XXVII Wednesday, December 23, 1925 BE CHEERFUL We believe that nothing will give such a tremendous return in efficiency and happiness as the cultivation of a cheerful, hopeful outlook on life. If we train our selves to look persistently on the bright side, refuse to dwell on the dark side, our happiness as well as our welfare generally is assured. Life would be a song in stead of a groan, a glory instead of a grind. A vast number of people—you see them here, there, everywhere—resolutely close the door against happi ness and persistently look on the dark side. By so doing they seal up all the avenues by which joy and sunshine can enter and illuminate their lives. They cut themselves off from the good things intended for them by their doubts, their fears, their suspicions, their anxieties, their jealousies, their hatreds, their revenge ful thoughts, their poverty thoughts. These obscure all the brightness and joy of life. They shut out the sunshine and make it all shadows. Joy and sunshine are not gained by asking for them, but only by acting for them. If we want to be happy we must throw down the bars that keep sunshine and happiness out of our lives. There is no other thing in human living which pays so well from every point of views as does the cultiva tion of heart sunshine, a cheerful outlook upon life, a mental attitude that sees the best instead of the worst side of everything. It heals all sorrows and misfor tunes. A cheerful soul seems to have about every thing that is necessary to make life happy, while a morose, gloomy, sad, melancholy person is miserable. Students and readers, sunshine is the source of all that is strong, wholesome and upbuilding. Darkness and gloom weaken a person—make him puny and un productive. Good cheer and uplifting thoughts pro duce mental harmony, and every thought which tends to produce mental harmony increases the strength of faculty, hence increases our power, our efficiency. Just think what it would mean to each one of us if we could learn to hold constantly in mind helpful, hope ful, unselfish, cheerful, optimistic thoughts. No matter how antagonistic our feelings or our par ticular mood may be at any time, we can, by using our will power, change it, neutralize it by dictating to our No. 14 mentality and persisting in entertaining thoughts of good cheer, love and joy. We can dictate the kind of mental guests we will entertain. Every time we per mit ourselves to look on the dark side, not with the thought of improving things, but just to pity ourselves; every time we complain or find fault we are only weakening our power of resistance and making our troubles worse. We acknowledge by so doing that there is a power to hold us down, to make life uncom fortable, disagreeable, unendurable. The way to get rid of these enemies of our happiness is to open our avenues of joy and drive them out of mind. We can learn to wipe out of our minds all doubt thoughts, all failure thoughts, all unhappy thoughts and replace them with their opposites—help ful and uplifting thoughts. It is astonishing what tremendous force there is to transform one’s attitude and aid toward realizing our desires in a persistent and determined effort to look on the bright side, the hope ful, optimistic side of everything; to refuse to see the black, the ugly, the discordant side. Cheerful, encouraging people create a vitalizing, suc cess-generating atmosphere. They radiate strength and courage. Their indomitable spirit helps them to overcome obstacles and to encourage others. We are created for happiness. If we are miserable it is because we persist in holding gloomy thoughts, in looking upon the dark side instead of the bright side of the picture. Those people who are always thinking of their own pleasure and happiness, who will trample upon the rights and feelings of others in order to se cure them, will never know what real enjoyment is. They are so absorbed in their hunt for self-gratification that they do not know that they are closing the doors to far higher joys than they can ever know in their selfish chase for pleasure. The world is just beginning to learn that whether we shall be happy or miserable depends entirely upon ourselves. We are beginning to realize that we carry within ourselves the panacea for all our ills—the poisons of selfishness, of envy, of jealousy, of hatred, of anger, of false ambition, of impurity, of all evil thoughtsand passions—exists in our own minds in the form of love, (Continued on pa^e 4)