Today's blog post was originally published last year:
Today's blog post is from a column by Harvey Mackay:
A newlywed young man was sitting on the porch on a humid day, sipping iced tea with his father. As he talked about adult life, marriage, responsibilities and obligations, the father thoughtfully stirred the ice cubes in his glass and cast a clear, sober look at his son.Harvey is one of the master networkers in the world, so it's probably a good idea to at least think about what he has to say.
“Never forget your friends,” he advised. “They will become more important as you get older. Regardless of how much you love your family, you will always need friends. Remember to go out with them occasionally or keep in contact with them somehow.”
What strange advice, thought the young man. I just entered the married world. I am an adult and surely my wife and the family that we will start will be everything I need to make sense of my life.
Yet, he followed his father’s advice, kept in touch with his old friends and made new friends along the way. Over the years, he became aware that his father knew what he was talking about. Even as time and nature affect a person, friends are the bulwarks of our life.
Children grow up. When they become independent, they begin their own families. Grandchildren are a blessing, but we can’t expect them to be at our beck and call. And besides, your family will love you regardless of who you are or what you do.
Jobs/careers come and go. People can't do what they did physically when they were young. Parents pass on, but you persevere. Colleagues forget the favors you did. The race to achieve slows.
But true friends are always there, no matter how long or how many miles away they are. A friend is never more distant than the reach of a need, intervening in your favor, waiting for you with open arms or in some way blessing your life. Love your parents, take care of your family, but keep a group of good friends.
My good friend Dale Brown, former LSU basketball coach, sent me this story, and it reminded me of a fascinating study by Harvard University that tracked the physical and emotional health of 700 people. They followed these people and tested them (e.g., blood samples, brain scans) for 75 years.
Here’s the primary conclusion: “The clearest message that we get from this 75-year study is this: Good relationships keep us happier and healthier. Period,” said Robert Waldinger, director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development.
The analysis showed a 50 percent increased likelihood of survival for participants with stronger social relationships. Put simply, if you have healthy relationships, your chances of survival increase by 50 percent.
“Social relationships, or the relative lack thereof, constitute a major risk factor for health – rivaling the effect of well-established health risk factors such as cigarette smoking, blood pressure, blood lipids, obesity and physical activity,” stated the three authors of the study.
Good relationships will help you deal with life’s minor annoyances and your most challenging problems. Without good relationships, you’ll have a hard time finding customers, making a sale, securing a job, hiring the right employee and having great friends.
As I like to say, you must “Dig Your Well Before You’re Thirsty,” which coincidentally is the title of a networking book I wrote. Here is the most important line in that entire book: If I had to name the single characteristic shared by all the truly successful people I’ve met over a lifetime, I’d say it is the ability to create and nurture a network of relationships.
You can take all my money! You can take all my factories! You can take all my land! But leave me my network of relationships, and I’ll be back to where I was today in three to five short years.
I am so convinced of that fact that I’ve worked constantly to build relationships. It has served me every day of my life in ways I could never have imagined. And I am honored to be my friends’ go-to guy when they need a favor, a reference or someone to lean on.
If you want one year of prosperity, you grow grain. If you want 10 years of prosperity, you grow trees. But if you want 100 years of prosperity, you grow relationships. With the coronavirus tipping the world upside down, one thing will remain constant – the relationships we develop over a lifetime.
Relationships matter.
Mackay’s Moral: In my entire career, I have never once heard a successful person say he or she regretted putting time and energy into working on their relationships.
I have a handful of really close friends, mostly from growing up in Oakland. We're all friends on Facebook, but it takes more than that. Go to your high school reunions, call them on their birthday (I just got off the phone with my friend Joe Johnson, who has been my best friend since second grade, to wish him a happy birthday). I've been to the funerals of both of Jon Argyropoulos' parents, who were part of the core of the neighborhood where we grew up. Jon was the first kid I met when I transferred to a new school in the middle of first grade.
I've stopped by a few times to say hi to our old neighbors, the Taylors, another core part of the Maxwell Park neighborhood. I'm Facebook friends with Mrs. Taylor and it's good to be able to see what's going on in their lives (happy 63rd wedding anniversary the day before yesterday!), but it's good to be in their familiar living room and talking to them
And of course, I have newer friends that I like to do things with, or I used to do things with, but we'll be able to hang out again soon.
So, like their posts, comment on them, send them private messages, text, call or write but keep your relationships with your friends strong!
And if you've lost touch with your friends, tomorrow is Locate An Old Friend Day, which is easier with Facebook and other online tools. So, think of a friend you've lost touch with and see if you can reconnect with them!
Interesting days
Today - Guacamole Day, Play Doh Day, Teenager Workout Day, Working Parents Day, Collect Rocks Day, World Ozone Day, Stepfamily Day and Cinnamon-Raisin Bread Day
Tomorrow - International Country Music Day, Get Ready Day, Table Shuffleboard Day, Locate An Old Friend Day, Monte Cristo Sandwich Day, Apple Dumpling Day and Constitution Day
Week long celebrations:
Sep 12 - Sep 18: Housekeepers Week
Month long celebrations:
Sep 15 - Oct 15: Hispanic Heritage Month
Next Thursday - Remember Me Thursday Restless Legs Awareness Day, Za’atar Day, Education Technology Day, International Day of Sign Languages, Celebrate Bisexuality Day and Checkers Day
Week long celebrations:
Week long celebrations:
Sep 20 - Sep 24: International Week of Happiness at WorkMonth long celebrations:
Sep 15 - Oct 15: Hispanic Heritage Month
October 16 - Repair Day, Sweetest Day, World Food Day, Dictionary Day, Department Store Day, Feral Cat Day, Steve Jobs Day and Bridge Day
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