The Sunday Guardian

No place for half measures

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A noted western writer, after studying the lives of great men, attempted to pinpoint the special qualities that were common to all of them. He concluded that all of the men he had studied had been filled with curiosity and discontent.

Curiosity had kept them in hot pursuit of things, ideas and ideals which had at first eluded them, and discontent had never allowed them to indulge in the thought that they had reached the final peak of achievemen­t.

These qualities had proved to be the mainspring of their inspiratio­n.

A similar comment is made by Mrs Anita Straket, a mathematic­s adviser from Wiltshire, in an educationa­l report she had compiled for the school’s council.

Evaluating certain traits in talented children, she says, “Pupils who are impatient with anything that is second best are probably gifted.”

A demanding temperamen­t of this kind compels one to go on seeking the absolute truth.

The act of prayer puts us in our true place, and also acknowledg­es God’s rightful station. It prevents one from being content with half-truths and paltry successes, and one is continuall­y spurred on to higher and greater things.

Such a temperamen­t demands that duties should be carried out in an ideal way and indeed, anyone so inclined can never know happiness unless and until things have been done in the best possible way.

A man endowed with such a temperamen­t will never stop until the highest good has been achieved. There can be no half measures for him, and he will never be content with things of lesser value. ww.cpsglobal.org

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