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July 6, 2023
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When I was growing up, my bedtime ritual always included a fairy tale that started with “Once upon a time...” and ended with the comforting words we all remember: “And they lived happily ever after.” As a child of the optimistic 1950s, I dreamed that life might be like that: whatever obstacles, dangers or perils might come my way, in the end, I would live happily ever after.

There were certainly plenty of struggles along the way, but I have to say that things did eventually work out even more happily than I could have imagined, from a career that I love to a wonderful family, including the world’s greatest grandkids. But sadly, for many people, “living happily ever after” does seem like an unobtainable fairy tale. Why is that happy ending growing ever more out-of-reach for so many people?

Of course, there are always factors beyond our control, like health problems and accidents. None of us can ever know if our birthday or Christmas celebration was the last we’ll ever enjoy. We have no way of knowing when it will all end, only that someday, it will (that’s why it’s said that the only certainties in life are death and taxes.)

Well, I can’t help you with your taxes, but I do have a bit of advice that I think will make death less frightening and greatly increase your chances of living “happily ever after.”

For decades, our nation has been focused on personal pleasure. The message drummed into everyone by pop culture is, “If it feels good, do it.” It’s fostered a culture of self-centeredness that led to Baby Boomers being nicknamed “The Me Generation.” Today’s young people have been dubbed “iGen” because many are so fixated on self and selfies that even their gadgets’ names all start with “I.” Advertising bombards us with the message that life is all about me and all about now. Such messages of immediate self-gratification may sell products and services, but they cause us to sell our souls if we follow this philosophy to its logical conclusion.

At some point in life, we all experience events that shake up our routine, much like the agitator in a washing machine shakes loose the grime in our clothes. We may not want or enjoy such experiences, but they’re necessary to force us to focus on the frailty of life and the certainty of death. They also force us to begin asking what really matters and why.

If we react to setbacks based solely on what feels good right now, we greatly lower our chances of enjoying a happy future. But if we believe there is even a remote possibility that our actions have lasting implications beyond the immediate, both within and beyond our lifetimes, it should cause us to think differently, live differently, and leave a different kind of legacy.

Without apology, I believe that the spiritual side of our lives really does matter. To believe otherwise is to define humans as little more than animated protoplasm, going through the motions of life for no particular purpose. I prefer to believe there’s more to us than flesh and blood. If we possess a soul capable of living beyond our lifetimes, then the seeds we plant in this life will yield fruit forever. If you believe those things, the ultimate becomes more important than the immediate.

When we decide to live beyond our lifetimes, our responsibilities to the next generation will outweigh our roles in our current jobs. More important than the money we’re paid for our work is what we will become as a result of our work. Our character will become more important than the careers we follow.

For all of us, life began “once upon a time.” Unlike the fairy tales, however, it’s up to us to make the choices that determine whether the last line of our life stories will read, “And they lived happily ever after.”

(Adapted from the book, “Rare, Medium or Done Well: Make the Most of your Life.”)

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Comments 71-78 of 78

  • Mark Moses

    07/08/2022 11:15 AM

    Bro. Mike. I hope you and your staff have had a restful week. Thank you for your well-written, common-sense articles, which I read daily. You came to my attention about 20 years ago when I read an article about how you, as governor of Arkansas, passed legislation to encourage covenant marriage, rather than the typical contract marriage. I thought, “Wow, this politician has values, good ones!” I voted for you when you ran for president and would do so again if you were crazy enough to try. Thank you for remaining faithful to the God-given values that made our country great. While we have no guarantee that the United States will once again be great (that’s in God’s providential hands) I’m grateful for men like you, and the men and women on your staff, who remain true to what is right regardless of the outcome or opposition. Blessings to you all.

  • Teresa Ubando

    07/08/2022 11:13 AM

    so well said. i love this article.??

  • Charles H King Jr

    07/08/2022 10:25 AM

    Good day, Governor! (Just think there is about to be two "Huckabees" that will be honored with that title. Well one Huckabee and one Huckabee-Sanders. Congratulations Sarah)
    I also believe our spiritual side of our lives matter. I am old enuf, 83 years, to remember when we still had God and prayer in our schools as well as out Sunday Schools. A beginning knowledge of Him in those institutions and later a deeper knowledge of Him through a personal relationship of Salvation in Jesus Christ made a dramatic difference in society of that day.
    We then allowed the removal of God from "public" life and jumped on the slippery slope of a godless society resulting in where we are today. Praise God for the Supreme Court Justices and their decision for Coach Kennedy and his right to PRAY on the the public school football field. I know there is still hope, and I'm praying for it, of returning God to our public life. After all He wins in the end.
    Keep up God's work for the Nation! Go Sarah!!!!!

  • Glenda Piacenti

    07/08/2022 10:09 AM

    I found your book, from which this article came, at Christian Book.com. I will get it there. :)

  • Glenda Piacenti

    07/08/2022 10:00 AM

    I love this article!

  • Elizabeth Crouse

    07/08/2022 09:45 AM

    So true. For those of us who lived during WWII, we know what a washer with an agitator was. We know what limited money and products were and we conserve both money and resources. But God is the only resource that can carry us through sickness, deaths and anything we face. I know because I have experienced and He has been there for me,

  • Nadine Zerbe

    04/03/2022 12:43 PM

    Well said! I appreciate your common sense and your love for God, family and country!! These are sadly missing so often today and SO VITAL FOR US TO COMMUNICATE TO A LOST AND HURTING WORLD! God bless you and yours!! ??????

  • Ruth Ferraro

    12/27/2021 06:49 PM

    Beautiful essay on "Spiritual Life". Thank you for sharing!