Wake Up Calls |
It can be very hard, if not impossible, to look at wake up calls in a positive light. Many people died in the tragedies of September 11, Hurricane Katrina and the Southeast Asian Tsunami leaving behind thousands of distraught loved ones. Personal wake up calls, such as health problems and trouble with the law, typically cause us immense pain and difficulty.
The point of this article is to show that wake up calls present us with an opportunity to change. No matter how tragic or terrible the event is, we always have the choice as to how we respond.
The tragedy of Hurricane Katrina, for example, gave the world a glimpse of the potential destruction climate change may cause if we don’t take action. There is still much to be done, but people are noticeably making changes to green their lives and become carbon neutral.
I try to keep this blog non-political, but it could be argued that September 11 presented the US Government with a chance to re-assess its foreign policy in the Middle East. Instead, it seems to have taken a course of action that has only exacerbated the threat of terrorism and has squandered the worldwide sympathy it received. In this sense, it has ignored it’s wake up call.
One a personal note, I have had a number of wake up calls in my life. At 17, I got into trouble with the law which resulted in me going to Court and receiving 30 hours of community service. At 20, I was a passenger in a car that hit a tree and almost lost my eye. At 24, I got the unexpected news that I was going to be a dad.
Seize the opportunity to change. |
In summing up, wake up calls present us with a huge opportunity to change. It is important then that we, as individuals and as a greater worldwide community, listen to life’s alarm bells and seize the opportunity to change.
By Peter Clemens
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