wmassewmmmmmi m i» ,^BWtff' «WPiw|w» r w''°'niajiw;yv!vo*^F!F?f¥^^ *'^**-T^^'j*T »*^l i 1 i c aMB f aaHimiBWBWim i iai B Wjm p Bg i W B mmmmsmiffM :.J iio ' t CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE Date Due JAfrfesso.i i jn0r ,^ |- ^-^ JAM#-?BOr "M M4- c«f Cornell University Library BJ1611 .F16 Laugh and live by Douglas Fairbanks.. olin 3 1924 029 053 225 LAUGH AND LIVE /^^ii^^ m^fPH^B ( ■"t*- .M^^w\ 1^, "''s^^L ^- A ■Jt.i^.MJ '^^k^ ^^^^^^W ^^'*^:ft ^ i^H^^^'tt^ i flS^^IH^^^l P^ ^^wj^Hi /"^E ■11^ ^^'"^^H^. . ^^^ ^^^'" Ar I^F ilK*^ ^«^^ Laugh and Live Laugh and Live By DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS ILLUSTBATED IP^ NEW YORK Britton Publishing Company Copyright, 1917 by Britton Publishing Company, Inc. Made in U. S. A. All itighh Reserved 73 s5 Laugh and Lite TO MY MOTHEB CONTENTS Chapter I. ""WTiistle and Hoe— Sing As We Go II. Taking Stock of Ourselves . III. Advantages of an Early Start IV. Profiting by Experience . V. Energy, Success and Laughter VT. Building Up a Personality VII. Honesty, the Character Builder Vin. Cleanliness of Body and Mind IX. Consideration for Others X. Keeping Ourselves Democratic XI. Self-Education by Good Reading XII. Physical and Mental Preparedness XIII. Self-indulgence and Failure . XIV. Living Beyond Our Means . XV. Initiative and Self-Reliance . XVI. Failure to Seize Opportunities XVII. Assuming Responsibilities XVIII. Wedlock in Time .... XIX. Laugh and Live .... XX. A "Close-Up" of Douglas Fairbanks Page 9 16 25 34 41 48 55 64 75 84 92 101 109 116 125 134 140 147 155 163 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Laugh and Live Do You Ever Laugh? Over the Hedge and on His Way Preparing to Pair With the Prickly Pear A Little Spin Among the Saplings Over the Hills and Far Away — Father and Son A Scene from "His Picture in the Papers" A Scene from "The Americano" — Matching Wits for Gold Taking on Local Color A Scene from "His Picture in the Papers" Douglas Fairbanks in "The Good Bad-Man" Squaring Things With Sister— From "The Habit of Happiness" A Scene from "In Again — Out Again" Bungalowing in California Demonstrating the Monk and the Hand-Organ to a Body of Psychologists "Wedlock in Time"— The Fairbanks' Family Here's Hoping A Close-Up LAUGH AND LIVE CHAPTER I "whistle and hoe — SING AS WE GO" There is one thing in this good old world that is positively sure — happiness is for all who strive to be happy — and those who laugh are happy. Everybody is eligible — you — me— the other fellow. Happiness is fundamentally a state of mind — not a state of body. And mind controls. Indeed it is possible to stand with one foot on the inevitable "banana peel" of life with both eyes peering into the Great Beyond, and still be happy, comfortable, and serene — if we will even so much as smile. It's all a state of mind, I tell you — and I'm sure of what I say. That's why I have taken 10 LAUGH AND LIVE up my fountain pen. I want to talk to my friends — you hosts of people who have written to me for my recipe. In moving pictures all I can do is act my part and grin for you. What I say is a matter of your own inference, but with my pen I have a means of getting around the "silent drama" which prevents us from organizing a "close-up" with one another. In starting I'm going to ask you "foolish question number 1." — Do you ever laugh? I mean do you ever laugh right out — spontan- eously — just as if the police weren't listening with drawn clubs and a finger on the button connecting with the "hurry-up" wagon? Well, if you don't, you should. Start off the morning •with a laugh and you needn't worry about the rest of the day. I like to laugh. It is a tonic. It braces me up — makes me feel fine! — and keeps me in prime mental condition. Laughter is a physiological necessity. The nerve system requires it. The deep, forceful chest movement in itself sets the "WHISTLE AND HOE— SING AS WE GO" 11 blood to racing thereby livening up the circu- lation — which is good for us. Perhaps you hadn't thought of that? Perhaps you didn't realize that laughing automatically re-oxygenates the blood — your blood — and keeps it red? It does all of that, and besides, it relieves the tension from your brain. Laughter is more or less a habit. To some it comes only with practice. But what's to hin- der practising? Laugh and live long — if you had a thought of dying — laugh and grow well — if you're sick and despondent — laugh and grow fat — ^if your tendency is towards the lean and cadaverous — laugh and succeed — if you're glum and "unlucky" — laugh and nothing can faze you — -not even the Grim Reaper — for the man who has laughed his way through life has nothing to fear of the future. His conscience is clear. Wherein lies this magic of laughter? For magic it is — a something that manufactures a state of felicity out of any condition. We've got to admit its charm; automatically and inevitably a laugh cheers us up. If we are bored — nothing to do — 12 LAUGH AND LIVE just laugh — that's something to do, for laughter is synonymous with action, and action dispels gloom, care, trouble, worry and all else of the same ilk. Real laughter is spontaneous. Like water from the spring it bubbles forth a creation of mingled action and spontaneity — two magic po- tions in themselves — the very essence of laughter — the unrestrained emotion within us ! So, for me, it is to laugh! Why not stick along? The experiment won't hurt you. All we need is will power, and that is a personal mat- ter for each individual to seek and acquire for himself. Many of us already possess it, but many of us do not. Take the average man on the street for exam- ple. Watch him go plodding along — no spring, no elasticity, no vim. He is in check-rein- — ^how can he laugh when his pep is all gone and the sand in his craw isn't there any more? What he needs is spirit! Energy — the power to force himself into action! For him there is no hope unless he wiU take up physical training in some "WHISTLE AND HOE— SING AS WE GO" 13 form that will put him in normal physical condi- tion — after that everything simplifies itself. The brain responds to the new blood in circulation and thus the mental processes are ready to make a fight against the inertia of stagnation which has held them in bondage. And, mind you, physical training doesn't neces- sarily mean gomg to an expert for advice. One doesn't have to make a mountain out of a mole- hill. Get out in the fresh air and walk briskly — and don't forget to wear a smile while you're at it. Don't over-do. Take it easy at first and build on your effort day by day. A little this morning — a little more tonight. The first chance you have, when you're sure of your wind and heart, get out upon the country road, or cross-country hill and dale. Then run, run, run, until you drop ex- hausted upon some grassy bank. Then laugh, loud and long, for you're on the road to happi- ness. Try it now — don't wait. Today is the day to begin. Or, if it is night when you run across these lines, drop this book and trot yourself 14 LAUGH AND LIVE around the block a few times. Then come back and you'll enjoy it more than you would other- wise. Activity makes for happiness as nothing else will and once you stir your blood into little bubbles of energy you will begin to think of other means of keeping your bodily house in or- der. Unless you make a first effort the chances are you will do very little real thinking of any kind — we need pep to think. Think what an opportunity we miss when stripped at night if we fail to give our bodies a round of exercise. It is so simple, so easy, and has so much to do with our sleep each night and our work next day that to neglect to do so is a crime against nature. And laugh ! Man alive, if you are not in the habit of laughing, get the habit. Never miss a chance to laugh aloud. Smil- ing is better than nothing, and a chuckle is better still — but out and out laughter is the real thing. Try it now if you dare ! And when you've done it, analyze your feelings. I make this prediction — if you once start the habit of exercise, and couple with it the habit While Sludio Di) Ydu Krer LciiKjh? "WHISTLE AND HOE— SING AS WE GO" 15 of laughter, even if only for one short week — you'll keep it up ever afterwards. And, by the way, Friend Reader, — don't be alarmed. The personal pronouns "I" and "you" give place in succeeding chapters to the more con- genial editorial "we." I couldn't resist the temp- tation to enjoy one brief spell of intimacy just for the sake of good acquaintance. Have a laugh on me. CHAPTER II TAKING STOCK OF OURSELVES Experience is the real teacher, but the matter of how we are going to succeed in hfe should not be left to ordinary chance while we are waiting for things to happen. Our first duty is to pre- pare ourselves against untoward experiences, and that is best done by taking stock of our mental and physical assets at the very outset of our jour- ney. What weaknesses we possess are excess baggage to be thrown away and that is our reason for taking stock so early. It is likely to save us from riding to a fall. There is one thing we don't want along — fear. We will never get anywhere with that, nor with any of its uncles, aunts or cousins — Envy, Malice and Greed. In justice to our own best interests we should search every crook and cranny of our hearts and minds lest we venture forth with any 16 TAKING STOCK OF OURSELVES 17 such impedimenta. There is no excuse, and we have no one to blame if we allow any of them to journejr along with us. We know whether they are there or not just as we would know Courage^ Trust mid Honor were they perched behind us on the saddle. It is idle to squeal if through association with the former we find ourselves ditched before we are well under way — for it is coming to us, sooner or later. We might go far, as some have done, through the lanes and alleys of iU-gotten gains and luxurious self-indulgence, but we would pay in the end. So, why not charge them up to "profit and loss" at the start and kick them off into the gutter where they belong ? They are not for us on our eventful journey through life, and the time to get rid of them once and for all is when we are young, and mentally and physically vigorous. Later on when the fires burn low and we still have them with us they will be hard to push aside. "To thine own self be true," says the great Shakespeare and how can we be true to our own 18 LAUGH AND LIVE selves if we train with inferiors ? We are known by our companionships. We will be rated ac- cording to association — good or bad. The tv/o will not mix for long and we will be one sort of a fellow or the other. We can't be both. There was a time, long years ago, in the days of our grandfathers, when men went to the "bow- wows" and, later on, "came back" as it were, by making a partial success in life — ^measured largely by the money they succeeded in accumu- lating. That was before the "check-up" system was invented. Today things are different. Questions are asked — "Where were you last?" — ■ "Why did you leave there?" — "Have you creden- tials?" — and when we shake our weary head and walk away, we fondly Avish we had "taken stock" back there when the "taking" was good. "To thine own self be true; and it must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man." When we can analyze ourselves and find that we are living up to the quoted lines above we may TAKING STOCK OF OURSELVES 19 safely lift the limit from our aspirations. Right here it is well to say that success is not to be com- puted in dollars and cents, nor that the will to achieve a successful life is to be predicated upon the mere accumulation of wealth. First of all, good health and good minds — then we may laugh loud and long — we're safe on "first." So, with these two weapons we may dig down into our aspirations, and, keeping in view that our policy is that of honesty to ourselves and toward our fellow man, all we need to do is to go about the program of life cheerfully and stout of heart — for now we are in a state of preparedness. We are at the point where vision starts. Along with this vision must come the courage of convic- tions in order that we may feel that our ideas are important, and because we have such thoughts, we shall surely succeed. It has often been noticed that when we have had a large con- ception and have with force, character, and strength of will carried it into effect, immediately thereafter a host of people have been able to say : "I thought of that mj^self!" Most of us have 20 LAUGH AND LIVE had the same experience after reading of a great discovery that we had thrown overboard because it must not have been "worth while" or someone else would already have thought of it. The man who puts life into an idea is acclaimed a genius, because he does the right thing at the right time. Therein lies the difference between the genius and a commonplace man. We all have ambitions, but only the few achieve. A man thinks of a good thing and says : "iSTow if I only had the money I'd put that through." The word "if" was a dent in his cour- age. With character fully established, his plan well thought out, he had only to go to those in conmiand of capital and it would have been forth- coming. He had something that capital would cheerfully get behind if he had the courage to back up his claims. To fail was nothing less than moral cowardice. The will to do had not been efficient. There was a flaw in the character, after all. Going back, therefore, to the prescription, we \ TAKING STOCK OF OURSELVES 21 find that a sound body, a good mind, an honest purpose, and a lacJc of fear are the essential ele- ments of success. So, when we have conceived something for the good of the world and have allowed it to go by default we have dropped the monkey-wrench into the machinery of our pre- paredness. We must look about us for a reason. Have we fallen by the wayside of carelessness? Have we allowed ourselves to be discouraged by cowardly "if s"? Did me lack the sand? Exactly so; we didn't have the courage of our convic- tions. Life is the one great experience, and those who fail to win, if sound of body, can safely lay the blame to their lack of mental equipment. What does it matter if disappointments follow one after the other if we can laugh and try again? Fail- ures must come to all of us in some degree, but we may rise from our failures and win back our losses if we are only shrewd enough to realize that good health, sound mind, and a cheerful spirit are necessary adjuncts. As Tennyson says: 22 LAUGH AND LIVE "I held it truth, with him who sings To one clear harp in divers tones, That men may rise on stepping-stones Of their dead selves to higher things." All truly great men have been healthy — other- wise they would have fallen short of the mark. Prisons are filled with nervous, diseased crea- tures. There is no doubt but that most of these who, through ignorance, sifted through to the bot- tomless pits could have saved themselves had they realized the truth and "taken stock" of them- selves, in time — of course, allowing for those, who are victims of circumstantial evidence, The prime necessity of life is health. With this, for mankind, nothing is impossible. But if we do not make use of this good health it will waste itself away and never come back. It often disappears entirely for lack of interest on the part of its thoughtless owner. A little energy would have saved the day. A little "pep" — and we laugh and live. Laughter clings to good health as naturally as the needle clings to the magnet. TAKING STOCK OF OURSELVES 23 It is the outward expression of an unburdened soul. It bubbles forth as a fountain, always re- freshing, always wholesome and sweet. In taking stock of ourselves we should not for- get that fear plays a large part in the drama of failure. That is the first thing to be dropped. Fear is a mental deficiency susceptible of cor- rection, if taken in hand before it gains an ascen- dency over us. Fear comes with the thought of failure. Everything we think about should have the possibility of success in it if we are going to build up courage. We should get into the habit of reading inspirational books, looking at inspirational pictures, hearing inspirational music, associating with inspirational friends and above ali, we should cultivate the habit of mind of thinking clean, and of doing, wholesome things. "Guard thyself!" That is the slogan. Let us "take stock" often and see where we stand. We will not be afraid of the weak points. We will get after them and get hold of ourselves at the same time. Some book might give us help— a fine play, or some form of athletics will start us to 24 LAUGH AND LIVE thinking. Self-analysis teaches us to see our- selves in a true light without embellishments or undue optimism. We can gauge our chances in no better way. If we grope in the darkness we haven't much of a chance. "Taking stock" throws a searchlight on the dark spots and points the way out of the danger zone. CHAPTER III ADVANTAGES OF AN EARLY START It is the young man who has the best chance of winning. Then why shouldn't youthf ulness be made a permanent asset? We have recovered from the idea of putting a man into a sanatorium just because a few grey hairs show themselves in his head. We should not ask him how old he is ... we should ask: ''What can he do?" The young man may have the advantage of years but the older one has the advantage of experience and knowledge. Now if this older man could carry along with him that spirit of youth which actuated his earlier activities he would be pre- pared against incapacity. Our fate hangs on how we conduct ourselves in youth. The world has great need of the sober, thoughtful men above the fifty line. By right of experience and knowl- edge they should become our leaders in the shap- 25 26 LAUGH AXD LIVE ing of our policies. It is all a matter of how a man comes through, mentally, physically and spiritually. Age should not count against him. The first thought is to keep healthy. In fact, we cannot harp on this too much. The second requirement is confidence in ourselves, without which our career is short lived. Already we perceive that one must keep track of his inner self. This breeds confidence. The very fact that one stops to probe into that hidden land of thought shows that he is keeping tab on himself with a sharp eye. That's the stuff! We mustn't fool oiir selves. The majority of failures come as a result of not being able to trust one's self. The moment we doubt, or acknowledge that we cannot conquer a weakness, then we begin to go down hill. It is a subtle process. We hardly realize it at the time but as the days go by, the years roll on, the final day of reckoning draws near and relentlessly we are swept along as drift- wood toward the lonely beaches of obscurity. And all because we lacked self-confidence! We did not realize it until it was too late. We Avere ADVANTAGES OF AN EARLY START 27 too busy with self-indulgence to struggle for success. IMost of our troubles in later life started with failure to take hold of ourselves when we were young. It may be that we put off making our choice of something to do. If we had been com- panionable to ourselves we might have thought out the proper course while taking long walks in pursuit of physical development. That would have been a fine time in which to fight out the whole problem — the time when optimism and the •will to do are as natural as the laughter of a child, or the song of a bird. That was the tim.e when the world appeared roseate and beautiful, when success lay just beyond the turn of the road, when failure seemed something illusory and im- probable. Then was the time to jump in with both feet and a big hearty laugh to solve the problem of what to do and how to go about it. It is surprising how readily the world follows the individual with confidence. It is willing to be- lieve in him, to furnish funds, to assist in any way within its power. And that is where the man 28 LAUGH AND LIVE with a smile is sure to win — for the man who smiles has confidence in himself. So long as we carry along with us our atmos- phere of hearty good will and enthusiasm we know no defeat. The man who is gloomy, taci- tiu-n and lives in a Avorld of doubt seldom achieves more than a bare living. There have been a few who have groaned their way through to a com- petence but in proportion to that overwhelming niunber of souls who carry cheer through life they are as nothing — mere drops in the bucket. If the truth were told their success came probably through mere chance and nothing else. Such people are not the ones for us to endeavor to follow. We cannot afford to allow our visions to sour. Beginning early takes away timidity and builds for success while we are young enough to enjoy the benefits. Although it is never too late to start a cheerful life we don't have to kill our- selves in the attempt. There is no necessity for throwing all caution to the winds, but we should press our advantages. With self-analysis comes ADVANTAGES OF AN EARLY START 29 a certain poise, a certain dignity and kindliness that tempers every move with precision. Once we get the proper start we have only to take stock now and then in order to keep our machinery in a fine state of repair. If we have chosen wisely we love our work and stick to it closely — not forgetting the home duties and our share in its success. Right here we run up against the danger signal if our business success wins us away from the hearthstone. Love of home is a quality of the workers of the earth. "What doth it profit a man to win the whole world if he loseth his own soul?" To sum up the case — once we have made up our minds to win and how we are going to do it, the next step is to act. Health is synonymous with action. The healthy man does things, the unhealthy man hesitates. And when we get ready to act we will act with the air of a conqueror. We must supply from our own store our atmos- phere of confidence in order to win confidence. The successful man is the one who knows he is right and makes us realize it. 30 LAUGH AND LIVE It is always worth while to study the successes among our acquaintances. Are they gloomy, morose and irritable? If they were to that extent they would not be successful. On the contrary, they are robust, confident individuals who have taken advantage of every rightful opportunity and possessed the power to smile when all about them were in the dumps. When everyone else thought that there wasn't a chance to win these fellows stepped in and took charge. When we interview the failures we find that all of them give one excuse: ^'I didn't have the confidence." They may not say it in exactly these words but the meaning is plain. They ran through the whole gamut of self -distrust which is the natural result of not having started early in the study of self — the serious realization of their own capabilities. This makes it easy to understand their plight. If we know ourselves we are strengthened that much, because we can bolster up our weaknesses. We will know enough to combat timidity. We can then know what we are capable of, and thus Preparing in Pair With the Prickly Pear ADVANTAGES OF AN EARLY START 31 become conscious of our innate powers that only need to be called into action in order to become useful. We cannot imagine for an instant a great violinist going out on the concert platform in ignorance of the condition of his instrument. And yet failures go out on the stage of life know- ing nothing of their strengths and weaknesses — and still expect to win! If we are to become successes we must keep success in mind. — banish all thought of losing. Success is just as natural as anything else. It is only a matter of the mind anyhow. We are all successes as long as toe continue to think so. Self- depreciation is a disease. Once it gets a hold on us — good-bye ! And that is why it is wise to begin early — to take hold of affairs while we are young. Superi- ority over our fellow man comes from a superior- ity of mind and body. A healthy mind breeds a healthy body. The most superficial study will convince us of this fact. Appearance counts for much in this world. We judge largely by appearances. We haven't time 82 LAUGH AND LIVE to know everyone we meet intimately and as a result must base our opinions upon first impres- sions. The fellow who comes in an office with his head hanging down between his shoulders and a frown upon his face doesn't get far with us. We find ourselves looking over his sagging shoul- ders toward the individual behind him who comes in with a swinging step and the confidence born of health and good spirits. Self-confidence in youth makes for self-con- fidence in after years. This is far from meaning that one can be brazen and inclined towards freshness and get away with it. It merely means the marshalling of one's forces, the command of one's self and the ability to make others recog- nize that we are on the map because we belong there. And one of the quickest ways to accom- plish this is to have a smile tucked away for instant use. Again, this does not mean that we are to carry round a ready-to-wear grin which we wear only as we are ushered into the presence of another. A real smile, or a hearty laugh, is not to be counterfeited. We easily know the genuine ADVANTAGES OF AN EARLY START 33 from the sptirious. A real laugh springs nat- urally out of a pure, unadulterated confidence and a good physical condition. What triumphs, what splendid battles, have been won through the ability to laugh at the right moment. Whenever we find that we are losing our ability to smile let's have no false notions. We are neg- lecting our physical well being. Let us then and there drop the sombre thoughts and get out into the open air. Run down the street and if pos- sible out into the country. If we see a tree and have the inclination to climb it — well, then, climb it. If we are sensitive about what our neighbors might say — too bad ! But we can romp with easy grace. If we but knew how gladly our zieighbors would emulate our gymnastics if they knew the value of them the laugh would be on us for dread- ing their opinion. One thing we do know — they will envy us our good health and spirits. CHAPTER IV PROFITING BY EXPEEIENCE Experience comes by contact. There is no way we can have experiences without passing di- rectly through them. If we are up and doing they come thick and fast into our hves, some of them weighted down by the peculiar twists and turns of circumstances, others simple, easily un- derstood, and still others complicated to the point of not being understood at all. People are divided into two classes — those who profit hy experience and those who do not. The unfortunate part of it all is that the latter class is by far the larger of the two. The man of vigorous purpose, fine constitu- tion, and the full knowledge of self, sees through an experience as clearly as through a window. The glass may be foggy, but he knows what lies beyond. Self-reliant and strong he seeks knov.l- 34 PKOFITING BY EXPERIENCE 35 edge through experience, while the weak man, the unhealthy-minded, the inefficient, stands aside and gives him the right of way. In later years, however, they bitterly complain that they were not given the same chance to succeed. The man of experience having long since passed through the stages of indecision has, through careful self -analysis learned to bridge difficulties that would make others tremble with fear. He knows that every lane has a turning. He may not see it at the moment. He may not know where it is. But that doesn't worry him. He picks up his bundle and trudges ahead, con- fident that victory awaits him somewhere along the line. The fact that he believes in himself, sets him apart from ordinary mankind. Many great men have been at loss to understand why they attained success. It is well nigh impossible for them to outline the causes that led them to the top rungs of the ladder. The reason is that their lack of fear of experiences was an unconscious one, rather than a conscious one. However, they are 36 LAUGH AND LIVE willing to admit that acting on the principle of profiting by experience loaned them imtiative with which to proceed. They soon came to know opportunity at sight and had only to look around to find it. The young man standing on the threshold of life is, from lack of experience, puzzled over the future. He looks above him and sees the tower- ing successes. He reads in the papers of the massive characters who have risen from the bot- tom to the top. Naturally he would like to meet one of these giants of success and hear what he has to say. The interview is quite needless. "Get hu.sy and profit hy experience" is about all the advice one man can give to another. There is no way to profit by experience until we have had experience so there is nothing to do but get busy and experience will come as fast as we can absorb it. Our duty is to strive for success and not expect to attain it except by successive steps. A wholesale consignment would be our undoing. Quick successes through luck or good fortune have not the lasting value of those won by virtue PROFITING BY EXPERIENCE 37 of knowing how— of accomplishing what we started out to do. Faith in one's self does not come from the outside — it must spring up naturally frovi within. A healthy body and a sane mind are the best foundations for this. The young man who be- gins his career with these facts in mind is given a running start over his competitors. Poverty and failure are the result of an ignorance of the value of earperience. Worry, anxiety, fear of not doing the right thing, lack of insight into charac- ter . . . these, too, are the result of a lack of experience. Good health is necessary to experience, but a majority neglect to take care of it. If we are to profit by what we learn we must have the vim with which to push forward. We must have every ounce of vitality we possess at command — ready for use. This we conserve for the hig emergency which we know is coming. New ex- periences are pushing us forward and previous experiences are helping to move the load. Ex- perience tells us what to do at this point and that 38 LAUGH AND LIVE — and at last puts its shoulder to the wheel and "over she goes!" Every mind is in possession of an enormous amount of dormant power and only experience can release it into proper action. We often hear a fond mother say that her son is full to bursting with the old nick, which means that the young- ster is overflowing with pent-up energy. With experience he could find good use for it — but without it this surplus may turn out to be a dan- gerous possession. Young men of this type should be guarded most carefully and advised to "get busy" early in life at something worth while. Many a bright fellow brimming with excess power has gone as a lamb to the slaughter into the maelstrom of vice because of being held back from legitimate occupation. He just had to blow off steam so he did it in a gin mill rather than a rolling mill. This dynamo called the mind can be trained to do anything. Not only can it be guided at the start but it can be guided by all that follows. It can be used for building additional dynamos A Little Spin Among the Saplings PROFITING BY EXPERIENCE 89 to be called into action in times of need. This statement may seem at first far-fetched. If we think so it is proof that we have not pro-jited by our experiences and should get down to "stock taking" before it is too late. The practical man, after all, is only one who takes advantage of opportunities. He could double and triple his power if he only realized how superficial the average setback really is. The young man has just as much chance of being considered practical as the so-called older one, always provided that he has a store of experiences to profit by. The first big experience of life usu- ally makes or breaks us. For this experience we need to be prepared. We must have a strong heart that we may bear defeat nobly from this is not to be our last kick — our last breath — not by a jugful! We are going to start all over again after our setback and we are not going to wait any longer than it takes to bury the dead. This will be done decently and in good order — our training will admit of no indecorum. If the smash was a bad one we wdl assume the liability, nevertheless, and 40 LAUGH AND LIVE get back on the job. We are out to win and eventually ive will win. And that is what we mean by taking profit from experience. The powers that break down are also the powers that build up. The electrician who handles the motor could just as well end his own existence by that mysterious current as he could make use of it for the good of humanity. He spends years of conscientious study and mas- ters the knowledge of it so that its uses are as simple as his A B C's. There is no doubt in the world but that he had to learn by experience. He had to go into the shop and climb up from the bottom. There was no other way by which he could come to know how to turn a deadly force into a well-trained necessity. Yet the average man goes into life with as little knowledge of its forces as the baby who puts its foot upon the third rail. That fact keeps the thoughtless man down until experience comes to the rescue. When it does come, if he has the sand, the common sense, the will to do, there is naught to hold him away from his goal. CHAPTER V ENERGY, SUCCESS AND LAUGHTEE There are many essentials to success, but there is one that is of such importance that without it all the others become as naught. The man who wins success is invariably impelled to do the great work allotted him by something within that tells him he can. He may not know exactly what it is, but he knows he possesses it and is able to act on that faith, accomplishing things which seem utterly impossible to other people. This inner determination, once firmly implanted in one's nature, cannot be destroyed or conquered. And this element is energy — energy of mind, which rules the body. But where does this come from? How do the great minds generate this glorious means of self -propulsion ? The answer is that in a healthy body it is inherent horn 41 42 LAUGH AND LIVE birth, and proper care of the body therefore ac- centuates withm their minds the will to do. If the preceding chapters have been carefully read we may readily believe that the successful youth must start with a wholesome, generous viewpoint, a good constitution, and a clean mind. We have had an inkling by this time of what one must do to achieve success in a world where competition is keen. We are beginning to realize that these matters are of vital importance and that we are face to face with a problem. Energy is the natural outpouring of a healthy body. It must be directed, it must be controlled, the same as any other living force. Not only is it a positive necessity to the winner, but it must grow and become a natural quality. It does not stand after years of abuse. It does not spring up in the night after a long season of neglect and ill-health. All of us possess it in varying ways. That fact ought to convince us that we can get hold of ourselves and build up that which nature has given us, rather than allow it to die away. We all have a certain amount of energy . . . ENERGY, SUCCESS AND LAUGHTER 43 tvhy shouldn't we all he successes? We might to a certain extent, but that doesn't mean that we shall all get rich in the money sense of the world. When we say: "Why shouldn't we all be suc- cesses?" we do not mean that everybody in the world must be greedy for money, nor for power and position. It does not mean that we should be selfish and eager to take everything away from the other fellow. On the contrary, it means that, with energy, we shall be successful according to our brain tendency. Going back to our second chapter we find the phrase "taking stock" of ourselves. Done rightly that alone will inspire success. Now if we are a little farther along on the way towards sane living and the ability to laugh and we know that after this struggle is over the battle is won we must use the powers that self-analysis gives us — to fight. The mere recognition of them is power and we must not let them go to waste. Energy is like steam — it cannot be generated under the boiling point. In other words, half- hcartcdness never produced it nor made it a prac- 44 LAUGH AND LIVE tical working tool. We must be energetic in order to augment energy. We must have con- fidence along with it . . . the more the merrier. The greater the confidence in ourselves the greater the energy which brought it about. Some minds naturally feel confident. These are the lucky ones, the slender few who have grasped life's meaning at the start by "taking stock" be- fore they were threatened with defeat. Success comes to them as easily as rolling off the pro- verbial log. They come sweeping along, con- quering, sure of themselves, confident, aspiring, true to their inner selves, ready for work, un- afraid of experiences, and sure of a smile 'when the clouds are darkest. This does not mean that these successes have exceptional ability. If that were the case we would not waste time either in reading or writing about the matter. If we didn't feel that we were potentially able to become successes and pos- sessed the elements of victory in our present make-up not another moment would be spent on the subject. The very simplicity of this use of ENERGY, SUCCESS AND LAUGHTER 45 energj^ proves to us that it is a quality bubbling forth in the least of us and the strongest. It only needs to be put to work and it becomes self- strengthening. Living in the open air, sleeping out of doors, taking the proper exercise, look- ing wholesomely upon life, believing in ourselves, are all parts of the sane existence which leads to success and laughter. We ought to feel that everything in life pos- sesses elements akin to human feeling. We should not arrogate to ourselves the sole right to rule and reason. And what has this to do with energy? It is only one of the many vistas that open to us when we learn how to laugh anc? live. And man alive! If we never learn to laugh we will never learn to live. We must not forget that there can be more than one use made of energy. In the same way that electricity might be misused so might energy be placed in the wrong service. We must not waste any time, therefore, in getting this energy of ours worked into enthusiasm . . . enthusiasm for our life work, for our fellow man, for the 46 LAUGH AND LITE zest of life. We must throw ourselves into the battle and carry the standard. We must leap to the front, not waiting for the other fellow to show the way. Spend your enthusiasm freely and be surprised at how it thrives on usage. Enthusiasm being produced by energy must of ft necessity depend largely upon that. jNTow the point is, how shall we guard and keep fresh this element in ourselves? We know that the body is producing this quality. Like the steam engine we are keeping the fires going by exercise, whole- some thinking and sincerity of purpose. We are the engineers. Our hand is on the throttle. Sharp turns lie ahead but our eyes look forward fearlessly. We glance about us to see that we are in the pink of condition. We know that our mind is functioning properly and that the awak- ened confidence is already inherent in our na- tures and stands beside us night and day like the officer upon the bridge of the ship. Indeed toe are on our ticay! Out of energy and enthusiasm comes some- thing else that must not be neglected ... in fact Over Ihe JliUs ami Far ^lirai/ — Father and San ENERGY, SUCCESS AND LAUGHTER 47 it must be cultivated and guarded from the very begimiing . . . laughter. The mere possession of energy and enthusiasm makes us feel like laughing. We want to leap and jump and dance and sing. If we feel like that don't let us be afraid to do it. Get out in the air and run like a school hoy. Jump ditches, vault fences, swing the arms! Never fail to get next to nature when responsive to the call. Indeed we may woo this call from within ourselves until it comes to be second nature. And when we rise in the morn- ing let us be determined that we will start the day with a hearty laugh anyhow. Laugh be- cause you are alive, laugh with everything. Let yourself go. That is the secret — the ability to let one's self go ! If we follow this religiously we will be sur- prised how successful the day will be. Every- thing gives way before it. CHAPTER VI BUILDING UP A PEKSONALITY More and more personality is coming into its own as man's greatest asset. There was never a day when it was not, but in former years this essential quality was not listed under the name . . . personality. Had we lived in the days of our fathers' youth we would have heard about "remarkable men," "men of big caliber," "large character," "splendid presence," and the like. But it remained for our day and generation to discover the real word — personality — ^meaning the most perfect combination possible of mans highest attributes. At least that would be the definition in its fullest sense. Of course everyone has a certain personality and, no matter in what degree, its possession is valuable. Personality is an acorn, so to speak, 48 BUILDING UP A PERSONALITY 49 which may be cultivated into a sturdy oak. Per- sonahty is one's inner self outwardly expressed. It represents the conquest of our weaknesses and naturally impresses our strength of character upon others. With personality our foundation is firm. On this pedestal we may stand squarely and face life with equanimity. For such there is no end to achievement while good health and youthful spirit remain. It is impossible to come into the presence of a personality without becoming immediately aware of it. It is reflected by people of small stature . . . poor physiques . . . homely visages, as well as men of the highest physical develop- ment. The great Napoleon was just above five feet while Lincoln towered over the six-foot line. ]\Ien of personality are the last to say die. Their store of comhativeness carries them beyond their real span of existence either in years or achieve- ment. Thus, the mind shows its mastery over matter. Alexander Pope was still writing while propped upon the pillows of his death bed. Mark 50 LAUGH AND LIVE Twain joked with friends when he knew his hour was at hand. Personality is magnetic. It can charm the friend or put fear into the heart of the enemy. Joan of Arc, a frail woman, won battles at the head of her troops. History is filled with inci- dents where men of personality have turned de- feat into victory by leading their soldiers back into the fray. Wholesome personality is the fulfillment of self-development — physically, mentally and spir- itually. But all personality is not wholesome for it often shows in the face of the man who is a rogue at heart. Therefore, all personality is not for the good of the world. It is only of the whole- some kind that we speak. To such as possess it the goal is divine. Personality could never be perfected without living a life of preparedness backed up by our most earnest and honest con- victions. Personality is made up of many quali- ties and differs in man only as man is diiferent from his brother man. Perfect personality re- quires constant care in its development and con- BUILDING UP A PERSONALITY 51 stant guard for its safety. It cannot be pur- chased in the open market. It must be built upon piece by piece and everything we are becomes a part of it. Personality would be indeed imperfect if it did not give us full poise. If we neglect our physical poise we pull down our mental poise, likewise our spiritual poise. That is why person- ality must be kept constantly protected against encroachment; but this can be so fixed by pur- pose, plan, and power of will that it becomes au- tomatically safeguarded. Once in possession we have only to make it part of our natural selves and wear it unconsciously to the last breath of life. Then the question is, why should we allow our- selves to be satisfied with an imperfect person- ality? It only reflects back upon ourselves. Haven't we often heard a man say: "He is all right but . . . !" Perhaps the personality in question was untidy, or that his walk was that of a laggard, or that he afl^ected an egotistical air 52 LAUGH AND LIVE of superiority — whatever the impairment it should have been done away with. A man of personality should never be haunted with worry from the sneers of his inferiors be- cause of their own laxity. Some men perfect their manner of speech to a degree which takes it above that of their weaker fellows, others de- velop fine qualities which are viewed by ordinary individuals as affectations but which are in real- ity the result of innate refinement. The man of no refinement has indeed an up- hill fight but with persistence and ambition to succeed he can win. Lincoln, the rail splitter, is the most shining example of the power to will victory. For him to have fallen by the wayside would have caused no comment for it would have been expected in those early days of struggle, but to those who have the benefit of inherited tendencies toward personality, to fail in its de- velopment is in the nature of a crime. Personality does not mean over -refinement. Sturdy qualities are the necessary ones. Over- refinement leads to the softer life and ofttimes to BUILDING UP A PERSONALITY 53 degeneracy. Exalted ego is an indication of degeneracy and may have been inherited. Of those things we inherit that are good we must hold, and everlastijigly must we watch those which are bad. It is never wise to wander far away from basic principles into preachment. What we need is guidance along the road to the goal of personality. First of all we need health and second, the iiill to do. Next, we must use these weapons in the right direction, for person- ality is at its zenith when backed up by strong physique and hrain power. From previous chapters we have learned that success of any kind is predicated upon keeping ourselves in trim, and in good humor. Keeping in trim is no trick at all. We can make it a part of every phj'^sical action and as keeping in trim means perfection of body and soundness of mind we should never neglect to utilize any effort that will help us toward bodily efficiency. There is exercise in stooping over to pick up a pin if we will go about it the light way. We can correct an ill-formed body by adopting and maintaining 54 LAUGH AND LIVE a certain carriage. We may hold our chin in such a way as to provide against stooped shoulders. We have opportunities both morning and eve- ning to indulge in various forms of light, sys- tematic exercises which will push forward the day's work with zest and vim. Poise has everything to do with personality, therefore the physical structure must come in for its share of proper attention. No man of refined personality would walk the streets with a soiled face or uncombed hair. Such things do not give poise. They are the evidences of a laggard spirit. The more we exercise the more energetic we be- come, the surer we are of ourselves, the farther we get in the development of our personahty. CHAPTER VII HONESTY, THE CHARACTEB, BUILDER Just as the straight hne is the shortest dis- tance between two points so is honesty the only proper attitude of one person toward another. Without it there is no understanding possible. It must always remain supreme as a quality with- out which character becomes a sham, a superficial thing that has no basis in fact. The ability to look the other fellow in the eye is as necessary to character as the foundation is to a house. It comes out of that "great mthin" which we are now exploring. It arises from the courageous facing of our weaknesses and becomes a part of the man who knows himself and laughs with life, at the mere joy of living, doing, accomphshing . . . winning against all odds. Honesty accompanies a proper self-esteem and its cultivation should become a part of our ear- 55 56 LAUGH AND LIVE liest education. It doesn't grow anywhere except within ourselves and will never be handed to us on a silver platter. If we fail to find it when we are young it will have small chance of ob- taining a grip on us later. It is the one quality xdth which to crown our highest attributes. It is final proof that we are capable of just thought and square dealing, and is proof positive that we are part and parcel of the wholesome spirit which rules the universe. Its possession is greater than riches for its dividend is happiness and content- ment and we cannot go wrong if we so live that we can look any man in the eye and tell him the truth. To live in the full sense means to he alert. Whatever high moral plane we shall achieve must be held against all temptation. There is no com- promise. Self-deceit is nothing less than self- stultification. We only fool ourselves and soon find ourselves slipping down hill. It will be hard climbing getting back. And what of the wear and tear on our ambitions meanwhile ! Honesty does not grow naturally out of a HONESTY, THE CHARACTER BUILDER 57 dull, uninspired life. It goes with the energetic, the forceful. The dull soul who is content to plod along year after year in the same rut may be honest, and this one redeeming feature may be of such inestimable value to him that it sweet- ens and softens his entire days. It will bring him friends . . . true-blue friends, who will excuse all other shortcomings because of Jiis honesty. It gives him the unadulterated trust of his employer and it arouses a certain admiration among his narrow circle of acquaintances. If this is true with the dullard, the weakling, then what must it mean wheri possessed by the great? We know, for instance, how the nation instinctively turned to General Washington when it came to choos- ing their President after the Revolutionary War. He may have been gifted, he may have been one of the world's greatest caj)tains, but the one quality which endeared him to his countrymen was a tremendous moral superiority. "He fiever told a lie" rang around the world. Summed up, his virtues amounted to those five words. Some statesmen may have been more astute but Wash- 58 LAUGH AND LIVE ington was honest — "he never told a lie." The people knew they could trust this man so they elected him to fill the highest place within their gift. Honesty with ourselves is the first thing to remember. Unless we are, it will be impossible for us to enter into that spiritual contentment en- joyed by those who are honest with themselves. If we are untrue to ourselves how can we be true to others? The framework of a man's moral being must be that of honesty. It must become his very nature and become automatic in its processes. It belongs to the healthy, those who keep themselves well through vigorous exercise and temperate living. It is not a quality set aside for the lucky few. Every man, woman and child possesses it in some degree and only its constant neglect trims it to a minimum. It is one of those fundamentals of life, one of those pow- erful and moving forces that rule society. We are either honest or we are not. We cannot be nearly honest and get away with it. When one stops to consider honesty, even for a HONESTY, THE CHARACTER BUILDER 59 moment, its full importance is realized. For ex- ample, imagine having a dishonest friend. Could we go to him with the secrets of our heart? Could we trust him? Would we trust anyone who might turn traitor? Again: suppose we were untrue to ourselves, and the fact became known. Could we blame others if they passed us up as a companion? Never in a thousand years. We must sleep in the beds we prepare for ourselves. Men have grown accustomed through the years to certain standards. These are now the moral laws which control and guide the destinies of entire races, whole generations. There must have been a good reason for these laws or they could never have come into being. Society does not adopt many urmecessary rules, but among the vital laws honesty stands out in bold relief. It has become deeply imbedded in the minds of man- kind that everyone must be true to himself. It is taken for granted that those who are not would naturally be false to everybody. The reason for this lies in the fact that society 60 LAUGH AND LIVE will not proceed ■with any course of action with- out being able to trust its members. The general in charge of an army would have a hard time of it if he were unable to place faith in the subordinate to whom he gave instructions that might lead to a crisis in the battle. Society would dash itself upon the rocks were it not conscious that certain people are courageously honest, and in these it finds its leaders. To rise in life means that our fellow man be- lieves in us and wishes us to do so. Without his co-operation it would be futile to arouse our own ambitions. We could not hope to win a vic- tor}^ all alone and against the great majority who believe in certain standards and conditions. We might fool ourselves into thinking that because of some stroke of fortune we had established an immunity for ourselves. But some day our con- sciences would tell us how feebly we had suc- ceeded. There is only one method, only one way . . . rise througli honesty and an optimistic belief in self. And let us not plume ourselves because HONESTY, THE CHARACTER BUILDER 61 of our virtue. Personal honesty is our due to ourselves and our felloto man. One of the distinctive elements in the honest man's make-up is that of laughter. The ones who live up to their ideals, do not feel that life is such a dark place, after all. It may mean hard work, little play and often delayed rewards but the fact that there is a world, and that it is filled with other honest souls is reward enough to give us courage to laugh as we go along. We can alzvays afford to laugh — when we're honest. The man who is innately honest has no reason to fear the snares of fortune. He knows that he can win the trust of men; he knows that he already has it. He has no dread of looking into the other fellow's eye. He knows where he stands in life. He has won that which he has through struggle, and he does not intend to lose it. He does not intend to fail. He cannot fail — he can- not lose. No matter how things might go at this moment or that the next will find him on the rising tide of new opportunities — new chances. His reputation travels before him like 62 LAUGH AND LIVE the advance agent. His coming is heralded and he is welcomed into any community. It isn't as though there were ozily a few honest men. This welcome, this "glad hand," is always extended by society to the honest man as a token of approval. The world's work is a tremendous matter. There is always room for another worker to handle some part of it. And only the true, the sincere, are capable of doing this in the proper way. The leaders of society in the broader sense are those who win the faith of the average man. We look up to Lincoln because we know that he was the one man in a million to accomplish the greatest task ever set before a human being. We realize that he was honest — honest in the huge sense so necessary to the accomplisliment of big ideals. And we know that in order to win some part of that great trust we must obey the stand- ards of honesty and decency that lie below the surface and only need to be called to life and action in order to be used. And laughter will arouse that sense as quickly as anything else. The man who is capable of HONESTY, THE CHARACTER BUILDER 63 laughing heartily is not apt to be the one who carries some conscience-stricken thought around with him. It is the easiest thing in the world to detect an untrue laugh. The real laugh springs out of the depths of being and comes with a ringing sense of security and faith in one's self. It goes with the workman in the early morning w^hen he swings along the road to the factory. It accompanies the soldier into battle. It arouses the clerk from lethargy. It brightens the sick room. It raises us all to unexplored heights, and as evidence of our state of mind it can only mean one thing — honesty and sincerity. No character can exist without this outward exhibition of an inward honesty. The mere cultivation of laugh- ter would eventually lead to honesty. The fact that you are laughing, enj oying life, awakens you to a spirit of security and a feeling of the joy of living. Gloomy men are the ones whose tend- ency is toward crime and trouble. Laughing men are the ones who stir the world with new desires and make life worth living. Therefore we say — laugh and live! CHAPTER VIII CLEANLINESS OF BODY AND MIND If we interview many of life's failures we will find that the overwhelming majority went down because of their neglect to get out of an environ- ment that was not stimulating and because their ambitions had grown rusty and inefficient to cope with depressing circumstances. The prisons and other institutions are filled with people who did not make any attempt to get away from the vi- cious surroundings in which they lived. They were like tadpoles that had never grown to frogs . . . they just kept swimming around in their muddy puddles and, not having grown legs with which they could leap out onto the banks and away to other climes, they continued to swim in monotonous circles until they died. In other words, the failure is a man who dwells in muddy atmosphere all his days, who is content to remain 64 CLEANLINESS OF BODY AND MIND 65 a tadpole and who never attempts to take advan- tage of any opportunity. He becomes unclean, so to speak. And that is what we mean by this chapter heading "Cleanliness of Body and Mind." It was not intended to point out the proper way to keep our faces and hands clean, or as a sermon, but rather to show ourselves that the clean body begets the clean mind, the two together constituting compelling tendencies toward the clean spirit. A move in the direction of these takes us out of the rut of life. No matter what cause we dig up with which to explain our success in life we cannot neglect this most important one — the careful selection of our acquaintances. And this doesn't mean that one must be a snob. Far from it. It only means that the successful man, the man who wishes to rise in life, should not spend his days in the company of illiterate companions who do not possess ambition of heart or the will to do the work of the world. It means that hfe is too short to hang around the loafing places with the driftwood of humanity listening to their stories 66 LAUGH AND LIVE of failure and drinking in with liquor some of tlieir bitterness against those who have toiled and won the fruits of their toil. It means that we will not go out of our way to seek the friend- ship of men and women who are simply endeav- oring to gain happiness in life without paying for it. It means that we will do all in our power to win friends M'ho aspire nohly and by so doing inspire those with whom they come in contact. Such men are naturally clean of mind and body. We must remember always to live in a world of clear thought that will stimulate our ambitions. Dwelling in the dark corners of life and traveling with the debris of humanity will not arouse us to action and give us that swinging vigor of heart and mind so necessary to the accomplishment of great things. While we will ever lend the help- ing hand to those who need it we will naturally associate with those who have vim and courage. We will not be dragged down by our associates. Until we meet the right kind we will hold aloof, and we will not be morose and gloomy because it happens that at this moment our acquaintance- CLEANLINESS OF BODY AND MIND 67 ship does not include these successes. When Ave have succeeded in doing something big they will come to us and if we think big things we are likelj/ to do them. It is all a matter of the will to do. "Nothing succeeds like success," said some very wise man and if there ever was a phrase that rang with truth this does. It means that the thought of success, the courage that comes tvith success, leads to more and more success. It means that the thinker of these thoughts is liv- ing in a clean, wholesome atmosphere along with those who are determined and in earnest. It means that they have caught the fervor of true life ... a healthy, contagious fervor which per- meates the blood swiftly once it gets a hold, and like electricity it vivifies and stirs the spirit with renewed energy da?/ after day, year after year. Once it wins us it will stick with us. The success of those about us will shake our lethargic limbs and stimulate us to a desire to do as they do. We will be in a world of clean thought and action and our lives will mirror their lives, our thoughts 68 LAUGH AND LIVE will be filled with wholesome things and with good health. We will win in spite of all ob- stacles. Cleanliness is the morale of the body and the mind. The man who is careful of his linen and who does not neglect his morning plunge is not apt to be gloomy and morose. We notice him in the car or on the s' reet in the morning. He comes striding along, fresh and full of the zest of living. His mind is clear and unclouded. His eyes are full of that vigorous light of con- scientious desire to win and do so honestly. He has none of the hypocritical elements in his na- ture strong enough to rule him. There may be and probably are many weaknesses in his charac- ter. His very strength consists in his ability to crush them and make them his slaves. The man who has taken his morning plunge and dressed himself agreeable to comfort and grace, has his battles of the day won in advance. He knows the value of keeping himself in trim. He does it for the sake of his own feelings. Our approval of his appearance goes without saying. CLEANLINESS OF BODY AND MIND 69 If a man thinks well of himself in matters of ap- pearance his general deportment is likely to coin- cide. Such men never overdo. They are at ease with themselves and thus impart ease to others who come in contact with them. They have, in other words, a distinction of their own and their distinction is their power. They know that the highest moral law of nature is that of cleanliness, that filthiness should not be allowed to dominate any man's ethics or physical condition. They rule such things out of their lives. A vast magnetic force comes out of those friends of ours who are doing things and making the world sit up and take notice. The mere fact that we live near to them, know them and asso- ciate with them is proof -positive that we, too, shall go through life with clean minds and bodies. They would not tolerate us if we were to slip into shoddy ways. Nothing is revealed quicker to our intimates than the losing of ambition . . . the slipping into careless habits. We cannot con- ceal it from them. We fool only those who brush by. The loss of this self-respect has a terrible 70 LAUGH AND LIVE effect upon the system and every tendency toward success is thereby stunted and weakened. We have fallen into unclean ways! It will not be long before we sink to the bottom or else remain among the vast crowd who have neither the courage to fall nor the courage to rise. Nothing produces failure quicker than filthi- ness of mind and body. Those who are success- ful keep away from the very thought of such a condition. They live as much as possible in the open. They take morning and evening exercises. They read good books, attend good plays and are continually in touch with the finer develop- ments of thought and art in the world. Their faces are open and full of sunlight. They are determined that life will not beat them in a game that only requires sureness of aim and the ability to take advantage of the thousand and one oppor- tunities that surround them on every side. Cleanliness stands paramount in its unportance to success. Perhaps no other one thing has so vital a hold upon the individual who succeeds. The general of an army first looks to the morale Tria7igle-Fine-Arls Taking on Local Color CLEANLINESS OF BODY AND MIND 71 of his troops. He knows that with clean minds and bodies his soldiers are capable of doing big things. The battleship, that efficient and highly- developed instrument of war, is so immaculate that one could eat his meals on its very decks. Its officers are wholesome, athletic fellows; its crew consists of hardy men who live sanely and vigorously and who have plenty to occupy their minds. And if cleanliness is fundamental in their case why not in our own? ^Vhen we come to analyze ourselves we find that we are like a great institution of some kind. Here is the brain, the heart, the lungs, the stom- ach, the nerves and the muscles. Each depart- ment acts separately and yet is connected abso- lutely with all the others. The entire system is under one supreme department . . . the mind. Now if this ruling department is kept clean and full of kindly, beautiful thoughts does it not seem natural that the rest will follow its lead being so completely in its power? We reahze this and the mere realization is something done 72 LAUGH AND LIVE towards the accomplishment of an ideal life in a world of cleanliness and beauty. System is one of the finest tools in existence with which to build one's life into something worth while. The body must be run on a system as well as the mind. The stomach must not be overloaded with unnecessary food. The lungs must not be fiUed with impure air. The nerves must not be worn threadbare in riotous and ri- diculous living. The muscles must be kept in trim with consistent exercise of the proper sort. AVe must recognize the wants, the needs of the physical system and see that they are supplied. Roosevelt, perhaps more than any other living man today, has given vitality to the supreme necessity of cleanliness of mind and body. He has, by reason of his great prominence, been able to emphasize these two vital essentials. He called a. spade a spade and his message went far. From those who knew the value of his words came nods of approval — others took heed. From boy- liood he has systematized his life, taking the exer- cise needed, filling his mind with the learning of CLEANLINESS OF BODY AND MIND 73 the world, winning when others would have failed, profiting by experience allotted to him through fate's kindly offices and association with the healthy, true men. What has been the result? He has risen to the very pinnacle of human en- deavor . . . no honors await him. He has lived consistently and cleanly and he can look any man in the eye and say honestly: ''I have lived as I have believed." It is not necessary to become President in order to live sanely, to gain from circumstances the fruits that are ours for the asking and which have fallen into Roosevelt's hands with such profu- sion. We cannot all become Presidents but we can all emulate a shining exavij^e of mental and bodily morale. Just as we plunge into the cold water in the early morning so should we regularly during the day plunge into the society of those whose splen- did enthusiasm is helping to make the world a better place to live in. They are the kind wlio go into the struggle with heads high and with clean hearts. Their eyes see beyond the dailj^ toil 74 LAUGH AND LIVE of life. They are in touch with the big things and it is up to us to keep step with them. They want us and they will give us the "glad hand." All they want to know is whether our courage is equal to our ambitions and whether our house of life is kept in good order. And so we journey along together in all good nature, not forgetting to laugh as we live. CHAPTER IX CONSIDERATION FOR OTHERS Consideration for others is man's noblest atti- tude toward his fellow man. For every seed of human kindness he plants, a flower blooms in the garden of his own heart. In him who gives in such a way there is no hypocritical feeling of charity bestowed. His very act disarms the thought. It is as natural for an honorable man to show consideration to others as it is for him to eat and sleep. Acts of kindness are the out- Ward manifestations of gentle breeding — a refine- ment of character in the highest sense of the word. What would we do in this world without the helping hand, the friendly word of cheer, the thought that others shared our losses and cheered our victories? If consideration for our feelings 75 76 LAUGH AND LIVE and thoughts did not exist on this earth we would never know the depths of the love of our friends. There would be no such thing as an earthly reward of merit. We know that no matter what happens to us in the battle of life there will be someone to cheer us on our way. We may be strong and thoroughly able to rely upon ourselves but there comes a time when we need friendship and sympathy. Society would crumble into dust without these influences. The family circle would degenerate into a hollow mockery if consideration each for the other was absent. It sweetens and makes wholesome what otherwise might only be an existence of monot- onous toil. Consideration for others is the milk of human kindness. For what we do for others our recom- pense is in the act itself . . . we should claim no other reward. Observation brings to view that they who give in real charity cloak their acts from the eyes of all save the recipient. Givers of this type rise to the supreme heights of greatness. It is a part of their wisdom to Ivnow what is best CONSIDEKATION FOR OTHERS 77 to be done and they go about it as a pleasure as well as a duty. Consideration for others pays big dividends. It is a virtue that makes for strong friendships and true affections. Those who possess it have a hard time hiding their light under a bushel. In teaching fortitude to others they partake of the same knowledge. In the hours of their own affliction they retain their courage and keep their minds unsoured. They are the sure-enough, "good fellows" of life and their presence is the signal for instantaneous good cheer. We all know them by their gentle knock at the door. In a thousand ways they impress themselves upon our lives, have entered into our councils, have given us the right advice at the right time — and when the sad day comes along their strong shoul- ders are there for us to lean upon. Consideration for others is apt to be an inherent quality, but like everything else it can be accentu- ated or modified according to our own determina- tion. It is a growth that should be inculcated early in the lives of children — the earlier the bet- 78 LAUGH AND LIVE ter. A child's most impressionable age is said to be between its fourth and fifth years. Then is the time to teach it the little niceties of life — the closing of a door softly — tip-toeing quietly that mother may not be awakened from her nap — tidiness — cleanliness — good morals — all of which are to become vital factors in a life of con- sideration for others. A great many of us have the desire to be of service to others but timidity holds us back. Say, for instance, one might see a person in great dis- tress and because of diffidence withhold the prof- fered hand — someone we've known who comes to the point of penury but has too much pride to ask assistance — we pass by fearful that we might offend. How many times has this happened to us? Who knows but the best friend we have at this very moment would give anything in the world if his pride would let him bridge that dis- tance between us. Nevertheless the desire to do the right thing was in itself helpful. The thought of doing something for someone was a correct impulse and Oh a. Co CONSIDERATION FOR OTHERS 79 should have been carried into action. Early in life we should have started our foundation for doing things in the cause of others. Putting off the time when we shall begin to obey our higher impulses toward helpfulness to our fellows is but a reaction in our own characters which dulls de- termination. We want to do but we don't. As time goes on we just don't — that's all. Our good intentions have gone to pave the bottomless pits containing our unfulfilled heart promptings. We meant well — hut we failed to act — we didn't have the courage. Our failures spread a gloom before us. We lost our chances for a happy life! The man with the ability to laugh has little diffidence about these matters. Having confi- dence in hunself and being happy and alert he goes to the friend in need with courage and the kind of help that helps. If he doesn't do it di- rectly he finds a way to reach him through mutual friends. He does not go about parading his kindness, either. He has gained a sincere and beautiful pleasure out of aiding an old friend and he can go on his way rejoicing that hfe is worth 80 LAUGH AND LIVE living when he has lived up to its higher ideals. Consideration for others does not necessarily involve only the big things. It is the sum and total of numberless acts and thoughts that make for friendships and kindliness. People who are thoughtful surely brighten the world. They are ever ready to do some little thing at the correct moment and after a time we begin to realize how much their presence means to us. We may not notice them the first time, or the third, or the fifth, but after a while we become conscious of their persistence and we esteem them accordingly. Such men are the products of clean, straightfor- ward lives. They are never too busy to exchange a pleasant word. They do not flame into anger on a pretext. Their code of existence is well ordered and filled to the brim with lots to do and lots to think about. The old saying: "If you want anything go to a busy man," applies to them in this regard. The busier men are the more time they seem to have for kindliness. Another word for consideration is service. Nothing brings a greater self -reward than a serv- CONSIDERATION FOR OTHERS 81 ice done in an hour of need, or a favor granted during a day's grind. The generous man who climbs to the top of the ladder helps many others on their way. The more he does for someone else the more he does for himself. The stronger he becomes— the greater his influence in his com- munity. Doing things for others may not bring in bankable dividends but it does bring in hap- piness. Such actions scorn a higher reward. We have only to try out the plan to learn the truth for ourselves. A good place to begin is at home. Then, the office, or wherever life leads us. And in doing these things we will laugh as we go along — we will laugh and get the most out of living. Our little day-by-day kindnesses when added together constitute in time a huge asset on the right side of our ledger of life. We should start the day with something that helps another get through his day . . . even if it isn't any more than a smile and a wave of the hand." And he will remember us for it. It is said that advice is cheap and for that 82 LAUGH AND LIVE reason is given freely. But the proper kind of advice is about as rare as the proverbial hen's tooth. In order to give real advice we must un- derstand the man who asks for it. If what we say to him is to become of value we must see to it that his mind is put in proper shape to receive advice. Be sure that he laughs, or smiles at least, before we seriously take up his case. And when we have done our stunt in the way of advice let's send him away with a fine good humor. A friendly pat on the back as he goes out our door- way may mean a bracer to his determination. "You'll put it over," we shout after him — and thus we have been of real help. He needed sym- path}'^ and courage. He needed a cheerful spirit — so came to us and we didn't let him go away until we gave him all these. Bidly for us! Consideration for others does not admit of os- tentation and hypocrisy. We never allow our left hand to know what our right hand does in charity, nor do we boast of our helpful attitude toward our fellow men. It is well to make a point of this fact— in this world are many "ne'er- CONSIDERATIOxV FOR OTHERS 83 do-wells" who fail to profit by advice and thereby become professional in the seeking of favors. Consideration owes them nothing and to with- stand their persistent appeals would in time dull our natural tendencies toward helping others. The world helps those who help themselves. We have little admiration for the man who is forever whining. Society has no work for such people as these. When we have exhausted every means of helping such a man we must in self- defense pass him up before he contaminates our sense of justice. We must keep our visions clear. Consideration for others is a prime refinement of character. To be able to use it in our daily lives becomes one of our greatest consolations. Sympathy begets affection and kindly deeds — in a relative sense it binds together the properties which go to make the soul within us. Brow- beating, scolding, u'ascibility and the like are microbes which react against the milk of human kindness, to which, if we succumb, leaves us stranded and alone amid a world of friendliness and good fellowship. CHAPTER X KEEPING OURSELVES DEMOCRATIC Big words and pomposity never were designed for the highest types of men. Our great national figures have aknost without exception had one quality which was a keynote to their ultimate success — this was their simplicity. Next was their accessibility. There are numberless big- hearted and big-brained individuals in the world whose duties are so manifold that in order to accomplish what has been placed in their hands they must be saved from interruption, but the truly great individual is never hidden away en- tirely from his fellow man. He never becomes such a slave to detail that he does not find time to fraternize with ordinary mortals. We do not find him concealed behind impenetrable barriers, guarded and pampered by courtiers like unto a king on his throne — or tucked away in some dark 84 KEEPING OURSELVES DEMOCRATIC 85 office. He wants to know everybody worth while and everybody worth while is welcomed by him. He doesn't affect to know so much that he can- not be told something new. He is not the sort to refuse to see us at any reasonable time. We should not confound greatness, however, with notoriety. A man who by virtue of large publicity has compelled public notice isn't neces- sarily a great man no matter how hard he may strive to make himself appear so. Especially is this true of the man who does not make a personal success corresponding to his advertised fame. In time he may have the "ear-marks" of notabil- ity but, as Lincoln said: "Vou can't fool all of the people all of the time." It is to be noted with satisfaction that the big captains of industry keep themselves free from petty details. "I surrounded myself with clever men," said Andrew Carnegie in accounting for his success and by the same token the men who took over his great affairs and gave them larger scope and power surrounded themselves with still other clever men, thus reserving their judgment 86 LAUGH AND LIVE and thought for the higher policies of their insti- tutions. Thej'- keep themselves in readiness for consultation, and having men of initiative and self-reliance underneath them, they find time to take in hand other affairs than those of the tre- mendous businesses they manage. Men of this type often become prominent in public affairs and develop into highly important citizens. The bigger the man, the less he encimibers himself vi^ith matters which can be delegated to others. His desk is clear of all litter and minutia — likewise his mind. Such men keep their physiques and mentalities in fine working- order and are not to be goaded into ill temper. A refinement of mind is supremely essential to the man who desires to climb to the very top of the ladder. He cannot afford to close his brain to outside information. He is forced to keep it open in order to let in continuous currents of new thought. He doesn't want his visage to "cream and mantle as a standing pond" as Shakespeare aptly puts it — ^therefore the windows of his thinking department are kept open for TnaHi^le- Fine-Arts Douglas Fairbanks in ''The Good Bad-Man" KEEPING OURSELVES DEMOCRATIC 87 refreshing draughts from the outside. He rea- sons that always there are new guests, new faces, new things to talk about at the banquet board of life. And here is the point — if men who carry on the great industries of the world find a way to keep themselves democratic surely men of less impor- tance should be able to do the same? The snob is about as offensive a person as could be de- scribed. He is usually a hypocrite or an igno- ramus — sometimes both. His pomposity is nat- urally repellent. We easily become accustomed to dodging such characters. The detriment is theirs — not ours. They are left by the wayside and sooner or later wake up to the fact that they stand alone in the world. The world loves the man with an open mind. This is the usual spirit of the progressive citizen. He wants to know — and by reason of his acces- sibility knowledge is brought to him. No one cares to take up the task of informing the ego- tist who already knows it all. Such is his inherent cussedness that we would rather let him warp in 88 LAUGH AND LIVE the oven of his own half-baked knowledge. Life is too short to waste our time in educating him. "How can I see Mr. So-and-so?" says one man to another. "Don't try," is the answer. "He's not worth seeing. You can't tell him anything." And this sort of a chap misses the big oppor- tunities just because he chooses to build up a reputation for being exclusive. He digs himself a hole and crawls into it and pulls the hole in after him. We can safely imagine him treating the members of his family as though they were serv- ants, and his employees as though they were slaves. He may succeed in small things but in the big game of life we may write him down as a failure. If we have a big idea we take it to a big man — the man of vision. Anything less is to putter around aimlessly. The bigger he is, the more democratic. He will not look for imperfections in our personal make-up when we show him the new process we have discovered. To be democratic is a triumph of the soul — KEEPING OURSELVES DEMOCRATIC 89 tending to bring us in close touch with the throb- bing heart of humanity. There is no isolation for those of unaifected charm and manner — no bar- rier in the way of friendship worth having. It is our lack of judgment if we hide ourselves so that we cannot be approached. No matter how high we rise, for the sake of our own brains we must allow men of ideas to get to us. We must not allow our minds to become stagnant. If we fail to get into daily contact with other people, we soon grow dull and uninteresting even to our- selves. Great men may have no time to fritter away but they have plenty of leisure for men worth while — the pushers and tJie thinkers. A democratic spirit does not come to the selfish man. He is absorbed in himself and is quite a hopeless case. He is a natural born faultfinder and grouchy by nature. For him life holds no joy save the one in sight. Taking the big look at the man of this type we can only be sorry for him because of his lack of early training. He started off on the wrong foot and thereafter drifted along. Seldom do we overcome the habits 90 LAUGH AND LIVE with which we arrive at man's estate. Those wh» do are entitled to a right hand seat among the chosen. Being democratic is another phrase for being human and hind. It means that we ought to be able to see behind CA^ery face and find the truth of that individual's existence. It means that life is largely a matter of how we look at it and being human is one way to get the proper slant at things. The human mind has great adaptive power and can be molded into a thousand ways of thinking. The intelligent man, the man who has taken stock of himself, is able to smile and extend a hearty handclasp whether he feels tip-top or not. He doesn't have to look glum simply because the world hasn't thrown itself at his feet. He has only to persevere and success will come event- ually. We must correct our failings as we go along or we will slip down into the rut and stay there. It is a simple matter to be good natured and full of the zest of life if we poise ourselves right — - KEEPING OURSELVES DEMOCRATIC 91 heep ourselves democratic. It is this great soul quality which brings us true friends and boosts us into the fulfillment of our ambitions. Thea we may truly laugh and live. CHAPTER XI SELF-EDUCATION BY GOOD READING The character of a man expresses itself by the books he reads. Every well-informed man since the invention of printing has been a close reader of a few books that stand out from among the many. We read of Lincoln devouring the few books he had, over and over again and studying from cover to cover and word for word the Web- ster's dictionary of his day. We know that Grant had his favorite volumes from which he drew inspiration and solace. These men made eternal friends of certain great thinkers and drank in their learning with all the fervor of their natures. "A few good books, digested well, do feed The mind." "Feed the mind!" That's the idea — but how shall we feed it? The answer is easy — with some- 92 SELF-EDUCATION BY GOOD READING 93 thing worth while — something that will inform and inspire. We can cram our minds to the point of indigestion with useless, frivolous information just as easily as we may cram our stomachs with certain foods that tear down rather than build up. The habit of reading the right sort of books should begin early in life and continue through- out our days. Good books are real . . . and as we read we feel, hear, see and understand in the way the author did. If what is said appeals to our way of thinking a new world is unfolded to our vision filled to the brim with things we can think about and add to our stock of knowledge. While we are buried in its leaves we may live over the thoughts that the writer lived. For the time be- ing he becomes as real and vital to us as the dear- est friend we possess. Gradually, as the time passes by, he creeps into our affections until our lives would not be complete without the com- radeship of his cherished book. Books that become our "pals" are not neces- sarily books of the so-called classical type. Lit- 94 LAUGH AND LIVE tie known volumes may prove to have enough thought stored away between their covers to keep us interested all our days. The great books will prove their worth in a short time no matter how poor the binding, how bad the type or how cheap the paper. These things are after all only the outward manifestations and though we like to see our friends dressed well yet we know that the clothes do not make character unless there is character there in the first place. And so it is with books. These little ungainly volumes which we purchase on the stands may be the classics of tomorrow . . . who knows? We select our library carefully. No matter if we live in a tiny hall bedroom on the top floor of a boarding house we have a shelf somewhere with a few good books on it. Emerson's "Essays" can be had in one volume and are well worth having. No other American writer has been so inspiring, so invigorating as this thinker of Concord. One cannot read his essays without having a desire to get up and do. It is like a breath of fresh fiiv . . . a tonic ... a stiff morning walk. It Triangle-Ftne-Arts Squaring Tiling-^ With Si.ftcr — From "The Habit of Ilappinesa" SELF-EDUCATION BY GOOD READING 95 stirs the mind to action and inspires us to lift ourselves out of the rut into which we have fallen. One returns to them time after time, each reading opening up new vistas of thought, new lines of mental development. As a man's stomach is ivhat he eats, a man's mind is what he reads. It goes without saying that no healthy, active mind could exist without the companionship of Shakespeare. Nowadays it is possible to secure the entire works of the immortal poet in one volume. There is a special Oxford University edition which can be had for a small sum. The type is large, the paper good and there are many notes to help one over the rocky places. There is no doubt of the truth of the saying that a man who reads Shakespeare con- sistently and with understanding needs no other education. Like the philosopher Emerson he boiled down the world's thoughts into terse sen- tences and one goes into a new universe when reading any of the plays. It is a good thing to learn parts of them by heart so that we can apply them to our ovv'n lives. They strengthen 96 LAUGH AND LIVE the mind . . . their beautj^ lifts us into a great realism of splendid thought . . . and they fill the heart with a longing to do something great. Such books should become steady companions through life. No matter where our duties call us we should see to it that we do not leave be- hind the thoughts of this master mind of Shake- speare. The very fact that we have them near us lifts us out of the monotony of nothing to do. Among the books about America for Ameri- cans perhaps Roosevelt's "Winning of the West" is among the best. Not only has he thrown the whole vigor of his interesting personality into the writing of it, but he has given us a vivid pic- ture of the conquest of the States by the set- tlers. No man could read it without being thrilled at the dangers our forefathers faced . . . at the great courage they possessed ... at their hardihood . . , their bulldog tenacity. The reading of such a book is like going back over the years and living with them, sharing their troubles and their, enthusiasms. The man who contemplates gathering a small library could not SELF-EDUCATION BY GOOD READING 97 afford to do without the inspiration of what his countrymen have done for him. In choosing our books we must bear in mind one thing — let them be inspiring. Let them be of such a nature that when we read them we will feel like going out into the world to accom- plish something big! That is probably the mission of great books — to inspire and uplift. The world's greatest men have been readers — would they have cared for books unless they were inspiring? It is said that when Napoleon was being taken to St. Helena he advised one of the officers never to stop reading. JMost of the things worth while are at some time or other stored away in books by the think- ers. Every phase of history, every movement to better mankind and lift it above the drudgery of mere toil, every beautiful thought is to be found in them and the better the book the more will be found in it of these very things. When we have finished the day's work we can pull down a volume from the shelf and in a moment be lost 98 LAUGH AND LIVE in an entirely different world. The man who neglects to read surely misses the one best means of broadening his mind. All books of the better class furnish food for thought and are excellent tools for the man of initiative. To read means keeping in touch with the big visions. We cherish these dreams and make them real in plans of our own. Aspiration is behind the pages of every worth-while volume. It was the motive power which drove the author to produce it and it should become a part of the forces which drive us on to victory. Without such inspiration we grope as children in the dark. We are without a light to guide us on our way. Books by such men as Marden and Hubbard are great generators of the electricity of doing things. They have put into words those inner- most emotions which are the instruments of suc- cess. They point out a way we may safely fol- low. They loan us inspiration which causes us to act for ourselves. They give us thoughts that are useful and practical which we never would have gained by virtue of our own I'easoning SELF-EDUCATION BY GOOD READING 99 power. They made it a life work to coin into phrases words that inspire. Out of their large experience came the logical sequences of cause and effect. Not to profit by their teachings is a crime against our own prospects — without them we lag behind. Instead of progressing we look on in wonder at what is going on in the world. Somehow we cannot connect ourselves with the big enterprises. And all because we failed to feed our minds properly. There is much to be gained both in pleasure and knowledge by reading historical novels, and the lives of great men. The books of Sir Walter Scott and James Fenimore Cooper are rated among the best in the world. Grant's autobiog- raphy and the personal stories of other famous Americans provide fascinating material with which to establish and fortify our test for good literature. The tales of modern American finan- ciers is another field of absorbing interest. The man with small means can provide himself with a working library for a very little money. Books are cheap. The public library is always 100 LAUGH AND LIVE nearby and there is hardly a town of any size but what has one. When we purchase a book we should be sure to obtain the best edition and be careful that it is printed from good type and on clear paper. Books are likely to become warm friends. We should never purchase an abridged edition. Binding is not such an important factor, although we like to have our favorite hooks put up in a handsome fashion. With Shakespeare, Emerson, Roosevelt, Scott, Cooper, Marden and Hubbard one would have quite a representative collection for a start. It would be easy to expand the list into many more. Of course, those collect- ing a small library who have a specialty, will want books dealing with the subjects in which they are interested. However, every practical library in- cludes books of inspirational character, and if one makes a study of the books written by great authors it will be found that all of them profited by the reading of books which caused them to think. The Bible causes Jis to thinkl^and no library is complete without it. CHAPTER XII PHYSICAL AND MENTAL PEEPAEEDNESS It is not the object of this chapter to deal with a set course of physical culture, but rather to emphasize the necessity of keeping our physical house in order. There are plenty of books on physical culture which can be relied upon and also any number of physical instructors who are able to advise and help along a set program. There are hundreds of places, institutions, clubs, Y. M. C. A.'s, and the like, which provide gj^m- nasiums and every other facility for those who determine to build themselves up through con- sistent physical exercise. That is all very well to begin with, but afterward we must have some simple methods of our own which will not make it a hardship or a chore to keep ourselves in trim — a state of physical preparedness. It should become a part of our daily scheme to obey cer- 101 102 LAUGH AND LIVE tain, simple rules which tend toward an auto- matic effoi't instead of a discipline, and we should persevere in these until they become fixed habits. It is no trouble at all to take exercise uncon- sciously, and we only arrive at this by turning into an exercise any of our ordinary physical ac- tions during the day as we go along. For in- stance, we can sit down in a chair and in so doing can add a certain amount of exercise to the ac- tion itself — also in rising. With very little effort we can come into the habit of sitting correctly — posing the body as it should be — ^holding the shoulders in proper position — also the chin so that it becomes a hardship to sit improperly. All of this has to do with general physique. In walking we can go along with a spring, elas- ticity, and vigor of motion which forces a fine blood circulation throughout the entire system. We can stoop over in the act of picking up some object from the floor and at the same time make it a matter of physical exercise, and we may take a hat from the rack while standing away from it, thus stretching ourselves, as it ArUroft SlU'ii' A Scene frnin "In .{(jniu — Ont Again' PHYSICAL AND MENTAL PREPAREDNESS 10;/ were, into a little needful action. Putting on an overcoat, or any part of our clothing, may be done in such a way as to set the blood to racing through the body. Morning and night — upon getting up and upon retiring — there is every rea- son to make it a rule to exercise freely. The morning exercise wakes us up and sits us down finally at the breakfast table with a zest for the food set before us. Tlie morning bath is an agency for good in this direction after we have given ourselves a good shake-up from head to foot. By the same token, exercises at night be- fore retiring induces sound sleep and takes away the strain of the preceding day. A very successful system is that of exercising in bed. Instead of immediately jumping to the floor in the morning it is very inviting to go through some simple form of gymnastics in which the physical structure is brought into play. Physical exercise is something which can be carried to extremes. We can go at the work so intensely that we become muscle-bound and de- velop some structural enlargements that we do 104! LAUGH AND LIVE not need. This happens very often among ath- letes. The ordinary man should fight shy of such plans. Superfluous strength is only for those who have need of it. What we really want IS strength enough to carry us through our daily rounds with comfort and a feeling of efftciency. In a sense we all live by our wits and these decline when not properly fed by our general physical organization. Prize fighters are not the longest lived people, nor are the professional athletes. Their calling requires extra building up which would be a positive handicap to the av- erage man whose manner of life doesn't require this super-development. In other words, there are intemperate, methods of exercising just as there are of eating and drinking. We may easily go too far. Again, we can sin just as greatly by not going far enough. There was a time when men of forty were as worn and old as men of sixty-five and seventy are today. As a matter of fact, nowadays a half-century mark is no longer a badge of senility when a man has kept himself fit and treated himself right. PHYSICAL AND MENTAL PREPAREDNESS 103 We all have friends who are pretty well along in years by virtue of their carefully planned phj^sical training, plus their cheerful dispositions. They are as sprightly and companionable as though tliey were many years younger. We should come to know early in life what a large part good humor plays in physical fitness. In previous chapters hearty laughter was extolled as one of the very best of exercises. It is an organizer in itself and opens up the heart and lungs as nothing else will do. It makes the blood go galloping all through the system. It is one of the best automatic blood circulators in the business. Laughter takes the stress off of the mind, and whatever is ahead of us for the day that seems likely to become a burden is soon turned into an ordinary circumstance. We smile as we go about doing it. A friend once said to a banker : "How do you know when to lend money?" The banker replied: 106 LAUGH AND LIVE "I look a man in the eye and then I do or I don't." The friend said: "I would like to borrow ten thousand dollars — now !" "You shall have it, Sir," the banker replied. This meant that the man who asked for the loan was in a state of physical and mental pre- paredness. If he had gone into the banker's office looking like an animated tombstone he wouldn't have had much of a chance to borrow the ten thousand. It goes without saying that the open-faced, hearty fellow inspires confidence. There is nothing coming to the dried-up, sour chap, and that's what he usually gets. And what we get is largely a matter of our physical well being, A modern philosopher observed that "the blues are the product of bad livers" — and there is no doubt but that he was right. The problem of life is to fill our days with sunshine. In so doing we shall find that the "lit- tle graces" are those which will lend us the most help. Tiny favors extended, words of encour- PHYSICAL AND MENTAL PREPAREDNESS 107 agement, courtesies of all sorts, unselfish work carried out in an open manner, true friendships and love, a hearty laugh, a sincere appreciation of the other fellow's struggle to keep his head above water, the conscientious carrying out of all tasks assigned us — these are our helpmates and they are the products of our physical and mental equipment. Through these we come into our knack of detecting friends among those who are the salt of the earth. It is impossible for the person who desires good health to obtain it, or having it, to retain it, with- out consistent effort. A watch will not run with- out the proper regulation of the mainspring. We must keep up our activities. We have taken the earth and are turning it into something to serve us — therefore the need of fine bodily prepared- ness. Nothing can take the place of achievement and it comes through physical and mental effi- ciency. The one must not be neglected for the other; both must be cultivated and developed alike in order that each may help the other. Happiness comes only to those who take care 108 LAUGH AND LIVE of themselves. It is the natural product of clean- mindedness. No pleasure can surpass that of a conscious feeling of our strength of character. It is an all important element in men who aspire to succeed. The man who rises in the morning from a healthy slumber and plunges into the bath after some vigorous exercise is prepared to undertake anything. His world seems fair, and though the sun may not be shining literally, it is to all intents and purposes. Thus, we go swing- ing along with a cheery smile, carrying the mes- sage of hope and joy to all those with whom we come in contact. Oh! it's fine to be physically and mentally fit ! CHAPTER XIII SELF-INDULGENCE AND FAILUEE The correct definition of self-indulgence is failure — because self-indulgence is comprised of an aggregation of vices, large and small, and failure is the logical sequence thereof. Even the habit of eating may be cultivated into a vice. Indeed, there are those who gorge without re- straint, which in itself is unchaste and immoral. We've often seen them as, with napkin under foot or tucked under the collar, they eat their way through mountains of food and wash it down as they reach for more. No use to say how and what we feel when we attend such performances. It is all right to say "Look the Other Way," hut it cant he done. It is human nature to gaze upon horror — some- times in sympathy, but more often in amazement. Sometimes a well staged scene of gormandizing 109 110 LAUGH AND LIVE viewed from a seat in the second or third row center of a softly lighted, thick carpeted food emporium saves us the price of our own meal. We no longer hunger on our own account. Our appetite is appeased by proxy, so to speak, and we calmly fix our eyes on the "big show" and s^igh for a baseball bat. No wonder a noted bachelor of medicine de- clares "People are what they eat!" The excla- mation point is our own. We quite agree with our medical brother for we have seen people eat until we thought xve would never be hungry again. But there is more to self-indulgence than the food specialist has to answer for, so we will be on our way. For instance, there is the spend- thrift; surely he is entitled to a short stanza. We all know him. He goes on the theory that he has all the spending money in the world, and that long after he is dead those on whom he spent it will remember his generosity. Vain hope! — Whatever memory of him remains will be of a different kind. Those who have been bored by SELF-INDULGENCE AND FAILURE 111 his gratuitous attentions will take up the threads of their existence where they left off when he drove them away from their usual haunts. No longer will they have to dodge down alleys and run up strange stairways in an effort to avoid his overtures. When alive and in full operation he knew more about what was best for us than we could pos- sibly think of knowing. Left to his own devices he would have us smoke his particular brands, drink his labels, eat his selections, wear his kind of a cravat, overcoat, cap, hat, shoes, and under- wear. And to make his proposition sound busi- ness like he would willingly pay the bills! In this little amusement we are supposed to play the part of receiver and praise Ms generosity. Whatever may be our verdict on this chap we must keep in mind that his inordinate desire to waste his substance was no less than a vice if for no other reason than its example upon others ; it is just as bad to be a "receiver" as it is to be a spendthrift. If we cannot build up a reputa- tion for generosity without becoming ostentatious 112 LAUGH AND LIVE we might better take lessons in refinement from someone "to the manor born." There is no desire to single out and set down by name and number every sort of self-indul- gence. Excesses of any hind are iTidulgences, and it is easy to fall into them if we have not built up our stamina to resist. Our failures are usually traceable to ourselves. No matter what excuses may be offered in our behalf we know in our owti minds that we are to blame. Somewhere along the line of our en- deavors we faltered — then we fell. Our conser- vatism reinforced by our strength of character finally gave way at a given point and put the whole plant out of business. Our system of in- spection had become cursory instead of pains- taking. Everything had been running along so smoothly we forgot that everything must wear out in time if it isn't looked after properly. A previous chapter entitled, "Taking Stock of Ourselves," has a specific bearing upon the sub- ject in hand. It emphasizes the necessity of tak- ing stock of ourselves early in life in order that SELF-INDULGENCE AND FAILURE 113 we may know our weak spots and take immediate steps to dig them out by the roots and replace them with "hardy perennials" which thrive on and on unto the last day. And that reminds us that it is well to take stock of ourselves every little while. Even "hardy perennials" have to be looked after — the ground kept fertile and watered against the draughts of forgetfulness and neglect. And so it must be with our mental and physical processes in order that each day of our lives we may go forth with renewed forcefulness — with every atom of character in full working order. Having started off on the right foot, we are less likely to have trouble with our higher resolves during the lean and hungry years of our youth when we go plunging headlong toward the goal of our ambitions. Usually it is not until we come into "Easy Street" that we find that we dropped something somewhere along the line which we must replace at once or we will be laid up for re- pairs. But lo and behold! "Easy Street" is fair to look upon. It dazzles the eye — it takes hold Hi LAUGH AND LIVE of the sensibilities. Everybody wears "Sunday clothes" on this street and seems to be superla- tively happy. Surely it Vvouldn't hurt to linger awhile and see what is going on. Why, this is the most talked about street in the world! Some of the people we have dealt with have told us about it. They said it was the only street for a man of means, for there could be found the very things for which v/e strive in life. They told us that the people we would meet represented the higher order of intelligence, brainy, alert, ac- complished — a grand thoroughfare for those who woiild know life in the fullness thereof. Now it is a fact that "Easy Street" may be crossed and recrossed in safety eveiy day of our lives if we do not tarry. Financial competence might permit of it, but competent efficiency de- mands that we trot along — keep moving — get away before we settle down into its ways. The action we need is not along this brilliant lane. But suppose we do take a chance just to test the serene confidence which we think is so safely nailed down within us. The very thought SELF-INDULGENCE AND FAILURE 115 of it makes the "caution bell" tinkle in our ears — but caution is a species of cowardice, after all, we say — a man of courage may dare anything once. And just at the moment we waver who comes along but our old friend Self-indulgence! — the well dressed, carefree fellow who once told us all about "Easy Street" and invited us to look in on him sometime, Nothing would please him more than to show us the whole works — and here he is shaking us by the hand and pulling us along — for he is an affable fellow and will not take "no" for an answer. Our struggle is feeble — a huge chunk of our strength of character falls off into space then and there. Even at the gilded entrance we try again to beg off — to slip away — but Self-indulgence will not hear. So together we go through the portals leading into a grandeur we had never known — be- yond our experience and power to believe. This is likely to become the turning point in our career. Bill Nye once said "Wlien we start down hill we usually find everything greased for the occa- sion." We might add — "except the bumps!" CHAPTER XIV LIVING BEYOND OUE MEANS Living beyond our means is a big subject that must be treated broadly, for circvmistances alter cases. There is a sane way to look at every prob- lem, and the matter of living beyond our means is one of the major problems we have to face. If every man was alike and every avocation in life was on a parity, it would be possible to dis- pose of this subject in a paragraph. But men are not alike. What one could do successfully might easily baffle another. Therefore, it seems advisable to consider the subject by looking into its depths. To most people debt is terrifying. To some it means nothing — and thus we have individual temperament as an angle from which to consider. Living beyond our ability to pay means going into debt via the shortest route. Getting out of 116 LIVING BEYOND OUR MEANS 117 debt means a revision of our code to the extent of ceasing to live beyond our means and saving something with which to pay off what we owe. Some men can do this successfully — others fail while seemingly trying their best to succeed — and still others do nothing to stem the tide. With these it is a matter of how the tide serves. If favoring winds should drive them to opulence they would more than likely pay up, particularly those imbued with sufficient personal honor to "make good." Such are the exigencies of life, we may as well concede that a vast majority at some time or other find it necessary to owe more than they can readily pay. Emergencies arise which force us into expenses that require credit, and if we have so ordered our lives that when the pinch comes tue have no credit established the fact that we pay out our last dollar and go hungry to bed does not bring us much sympathy. Th\is it would seem that to be able to say: "I pay as I go," or, "I owe no man a dollar," or, "I never live beyond my means" is not much of a boast, 118 LAUGH AND LIVE when, after a death in the family, or other un- foreseen circumstances, we find ourselves broke and nowhere to turn for accommodation. It has been aptly said that "People can save thernselves to death/' In other words, one may develop the saving habit to such an extent that "Laugh and Live" can find no room beside us on the perch of our existence. We must admit that the systematic saver of pennies misses a lot as he goes along, and, with time, degenerates into a sort of "Kill Joy." In the matter of regulating his family to his way of thinking he usually has an uphill job. Sons leave home as soon as they can; daughters marry and breathe a sigh of re- lief, leaving mother behind to slave on in order that the hoard may grow. While all of this is true it only represents ex- treme cases, therefore it should not be construed that this chapter is launched against the habit of saving. Rather, its purpose is to suggest the thought of not "over-saving" at the expense of personal welfare. Our best plan would be to save in reason, not forgetting that life is here to LIVING BEYOND OUR MEANS 119 enjoy as we go along. Then, too, we must have a credit rating among our fellow mortals, just the same as a business person must have credit rating among financial institutions. Credit in business is worth more than money because it allows for expansion whereas money in the bank is only good as far as it goes. Many a merchant who bought and sold for cash all his life found when he came to enlarge his business that one thing was lacking — credit. The fact that he had always paid cash threw a doubt upon his financial condition when he proposed to bor- row. He had neglected to build up a credit as he went along. The business world only knew him as a man who paid cash and exacted cash. Taken at his fullest inventory he had "scalped" a living out of the world for which he had done but little to make happier or better. One calam- ity might easily scuttle his prospects forever — for instance, a fire, or a bank failure. And with- out credit it would be difficult to start over again. By all means we must save something for the "rainy day" as we go along — and our savings 120 LAUGH AND LIVE can be made up of other things than actual cash in bank. One item of our savings is the habit of keeping up our appearances. Living beyond our means does not incorporate the thought that, in order to save every possible cent, we should become slipshod and shabby. Carelessness in dress takes away from our rating as nothing else will for it has to do with first impressions of those with whom we come in contact. Gentility pays dividends of the highest order, being, as it is, a badge of character. Neatness bespeaks char- acter, and it is just as cheap in dollars and cents to keep ourselves respectably clothed as to in- dulge in shoddy apparel under the delusion that we have saved money on the purchase price. Good clothing, costing more at the start, lasts long and looks well as long as it lasts. Shoddy apparel never is anything else but shoddy, and well might it proclaim the shoddy man. When we throw away our opportunity to pre- sent a genteel appearance, just for the sake of the bank roll, we doom ourselves to defeat in the pursuit of knowledge. We cannot get all we LIVING BEYOND OUR MEANS 121 want to know by the mere reading of books. We must mingle with people; we must interchange thought that we may crystallize what we know into practical knowledge so it can be made into tools to work with. While a man of brains is welcome everywhere the matter of his appear- ance has a lot to do with how he is received and with whom he may fraternize. "Isn't it a pity," we hear people say, "that, with all his brains, he hasn't sense enough to make himself presentable?" But the worst phase of the situation is that the unkempt man sooner or later loses faith in himself and either ceases to hoard at the expense of his gentility or he gives up his opportunity to mingle with others and lapses into habits consistent with miserly thoughts. The phrase "a happy medium" is well known and decidedly applicable to the subject of sav- ing as we go along so that we may avert the sor- rows which follow in the wake of living beyond our means. It suggests a desirable middle course 122 LAUGH AND LIVE which permits us to adopt a sane policy, rather than flying to an extreme. It cannot be said that we are living beyond our means when by reason of our association with men of affairs we need to spend more money and thereby save less in preparing ourselves for the larger opportunities which will naturally fol- low. Young men often go through college on their "uppers," so to speak. There is not a cent which they could honestly save as they went along without cheating themselves. The point is that their situations in life force them to spend rather than to save money. But in so doing the real saving was in the spending thereof. They enlarged their knowledge and decreased their bank accounts for the time being. What man parts with in an emergency is no license, how- ever, for him to fall back into profligacy. Never should a man entirely lose the idea of putting something by. The college boy in this case has simply invested his money in an education in- stead of a bank account. Once on the highroad of life with a plan of LIVING BEYOND OUR MEANS 123 action well defined and a regular income the habit of putting money away should become a ftcced 2)rocedure. In no other way do we accumulate except by investment, and investment means put- ting away money at interest or in some project which promises better returns. If we were to interview a thousand men on the subject of saving and draw upon their ex- periences we would find that by investing money at interest we pursue the safest course, far safer, in fact, than the seeking of outside investments that promise greater returns. The latter invites the mind away from the regular avocation and educates it in time to take chances that are likely to turn into setbacks. The mind, instead of ap- plying itself to the duty of making the most out of its regular employment, allows its interest to become scattered over too broad a field. It is not within the province of all men to be- come wealthy and, after all, wealth is not the only desideratum; the happiest of mortals are found in the middle walks of life and not in the ex- tremes. The struggle should be to escape the 124) LAUGfl AND LIVE life which saps our strength, keeps our nerves on edge and drives us away from the green pastures. CHAPTER XV INITIATIVE AND SELF-RELIANCE The late Elbert Hubbard defined the man with initiative as the one who did the right thing at the right time without being told. At this point it may be definitely stated that such a man would naturally be self-reliant. Such a man would not lean on his friends. He would stand up with them. . . . He would be found fighting his own battles without crying for help. Once a cub reporter was ordered by his city editor to go and interview a certain man. After an awkward pause the youngster inquired: "Where can I find him?" Smiling scornfully into his eyes the city editor replied: "Wherever he is." This would seem to have been the start and finish of this youngster's newspaper career, but quite the reverse was true. He took the lesson well to heart, thus starting himself on the road 125 126 LAUGH AND LIVE to self-reliance. If he had repeated the offense it is likely he would have lost his job and also his nerve — thereby spoiling his chances for a successful career. The fact that he did not, but went on and made of himself a famous news- paper man, proves that he lost no time in devel- oping initiative and self-reliance. There is no questioning the vast importance these two words mean to all of us. Many a man who did not grasp the significance of initiative became a "leaner" for the rest of his Ufe. Many a man also missed his chances by doing just as he was told and nothing more. His work ended there. In due course it is inevitable that such a man should become part of the great army of dis- contented ne'er-do-wells who help to block the pavements in front of the loafing places. Hesitation, vacillation and growing diffidence take the place of self-reliance. He falls to the bottom like a stone. And there he rests — a drag anchor in the mire. His job gets the best of him because he lacks initiative. Once stranded he INITIATIVE AND SELF-RELIANCE 127 becomes an arrant coward — afraid of his own shadow. We must make our own opporUmities other- wise we are children of circumstance. What be- comes of us is a matter of guesswork. We have no hand in compelling our own future. Diffi- dence is a species of cowardice. It causes a man's courage to ooze out at his toes faster than it comes into his heart. Such men often have big ideas, but having no confidence in themselves they lack the power to compel confidence in others. When they go into the presence of a man of person- ality they lose their self-confidence and all of the pent-up courage which drove them forward flies out at the window. Their weakness multi- plies with each failure until finally "the jig is up" — their impotency is complete. Very largely those who have big ideas to pre- sent expect to be taken in on them and to be given an opportunity to succeed along with their scheme. When a man becomes so unfortunate as to be unable through diffidence to explain him- self, his big idea goes into the waste basket and 128 LAUGH AND LIVE with it all of the hopes he has built upon it. An- othcr nail has been driven into his casket of failures. To such a man, all pity, but we will not allow him to escape until we have given him a pat on the back and pointed out the right road to travel. We mustn't preach to him or undertake to force him to do anything, but we will at least give him a helping hand and show him that there is a royal road to Ids goal. This man needs first of all to build upon his physique. Perhaps he has a had stomach, and likewise had teeth. Exercise — regular exercise, should be the first thing on his program. Fresh air, long walks, deep breathing, dumb bells, box- ing, rowing, skating in season — and wholesome covipanionsJiip day hy day. In the long run boxing will become his most efficient exercise. When a man can take a blow between the eyes and come back for more he has begun to fortify his own combativeness. That is what he needs in life's battles — the nerve to cotne back for more after a slam on the jaw that would lay another INITIATIVE AND SELF-RELIANCE 129 man low. And when it's all said and done and the exercise game has become a feature of his day's work, he must settle down to good plain food and plenty of sleep. There is nothing in all the world like these things combined for the upbuilding and upholding of health and courage. Our success is a matter of our courage. A man who can steel himself to be knocked down and get up immediately afterwards and hand the other fellow a ripping pimch has added to his own "pep." All courage is of the same cloth, whether physical, moral or spiritiial. To build upon one is to build up the otliers — the luiman system being constructed on such a basis that if one part is affected all the rest follow suit. A man who isn't afraid of a physical combat will readily match his wits with his fellow man. Physical training is therefore all important to initiative and self-reliance. Our natural aim is to make for ourselves a true personality that does not know defeat. When \ve come to an obstacle we must be able to hurdle it. It is all very well to say that the longest way 180 LAUGH AND LIVE around is the shortest way across, but it doesn't sound like initiative and self-reliance. There is one thing about men who rely upon themselves- — they make no excuses, nor do they puff up over victory. Posing for applause is as distasteful to them aa standing for abuse. All they ask is a square deal and the confidence of their associates. If they fall down on a proposition they get up and go at it again until success crowns their efforts. Such men have a way of turning defeat into victory. How immeasurably inferior to such a spirit is the fellow who whines and moans at every evil twist of fortune. He has no confidence in him- self and nothing else to do except confide his woes to all who will listen to his cowardly story of defeat. Such men are least useful in the im- portant work of this world. They are the hum- drum hirelings — ^the dumb followers. The piti- ful part of it all is that they could have succeeded had they but taken stock of themselves when the taking was good. But while there is life there i« hope — -likewise a chance. It is up to ttt. IWrriATIYE AND SELF-RELIANCE 131 One of the startling things about men of initia- tive is the way they come forward in times of trouble. We don't have to point to Andrew Jackson in the War of 1812. We can look around us. Take, for example, a great fire. Haven't we often read of the brave fireman who sprang forward and by doing the right thing in- stantly, saved a multitude of lives? Well, such a man is possessed of self-reliance. He is trained for the hazardous life he leads. When the emerg- ency arose he was ready in a jiffy to do the work expected of him. It is safe to say that without training such men would have botched the job and instead of being praised to the skies would have sunk into oblivion under the heap of public scorn. Some- times it happens that a man accidentally becomes a hero, but it was no accident that he was able to become one. He must have had initiative — he must have had self-reliance. Archibald C. Butt was such a man. He went down on the Ti- tanic. The last act of his life was to help women and children into the boats and cahn their minds 132 LAUGH AND LIVE as they were lowered away. Astor was of the same metal — both siihlimely oblivious to the ter- rible fate which hung over them. Here was initiative and self-reliance in its highest form. And this sort of man is everywhere. The car in which we ride to work every morning contains one or more of them. Let something happen and we will see them spring forward with a line of action already formed. At their word of com- mand we automatically obey — and then when the worst is over a kindly voice reassures us and we go on our way rejoicing. What would the world do without these men? History is filled with the tales of heroes and hero- ines. And for every Joan of Arc there are thou- sands upon thousands who have done heroic things without a word of praise. Moreover, the really brave soul declines all ovation. No real hero claims reward. To have done the right thing at the right time is reward in itself. This quality of self-strength and self-depend- ence is not confined to any race of people, but in nations where personal liberty survives initia- tive is at its best. Somehow, whenever the emerg- ency, the man comes forth to do and dare. The great world war, still raging as these lines are pemied, has furnished untold thousands of ex- amples of courageous action — enough to last un- til the end of human affairs, but they will go on and on in multiplied foi-m, each day's score super- seding those of the day before. It would be bully to know that we are doing our share in safe- guarding the supphj of Initiative and Self-reli- ance needed in this world. We must keep moving. The fellow who gets in a rut through lack of initiative finds that with advancing years it becomes harder and harder to get out of it, so that the best plan is to make the move now while there is time to succeed. When we come to think of it, there are plenty of posi- tions in the world for the right man, and if we have something to say for ourselves that lends credit to our ability we stand a chance for the job. CHAPTER XVI FAILURE TO SEIZE OPPORTUNITIES There is an old saying to the effect that "op- portunity laiocks but once at our door" — and that is all fol de rol. Opportunity knocks at some people's doors nearly every day of their lives and is given a royal welcome. That's what Oppor- tunity likes — appreciation. It goes often to the home where the latehstring hangs on the out- side. It's like a sign reading "Hot coffee at all hours, day or night" — very inviting. Very much different, however, from the abode whose win- dows shed no light and whose door is barred from mitfdn. "Nobody Home!" that's the sign for this door. Mister Numbskull lives here and most of the time he sleeps. When anyone knocks on his door he pulls the covers up over his head to shut out the noise. He's down on his luck anyhow, there- 134 FAILURE TO SEIZE OPPORTUNITIES 135 fore it would be a waste of good shoe leather for him to be up and puttering around. If Oppor- tunity ever laiocked at his door he could say in all truth that he never heard it. He had often heard of Opportunity being in the neighbor- hood, but one thing is certain — someone else had invariahly seen him first. He felt sure he would know Opportunity if ever he met him face to face, and if ever he did he would have it out with him then and there. Meanwhile — dadgast the luck! — always the fates pursued him with some sort of hoodoo. And his neighbors — well, some of them had sense enough to keep their distance and let him alone. Others, however, had not been considerate of the fact that a "Jinx" was on his trail, and were giv- en to making sarcastic remarks concerning him. And thus it was that Mister Numbskull spent his days, dodging his neighbors, sidestepping the highways and obscuring himself from the very individual he wanted so much to behold — Oppor- tunity. At last there came a time when, in de- spair, and in disrepute, he took to the woods and 136 LAUGH AND LIVE is yet to be heard from. Opportunity still visits the neighborhood, but the path leading to Mister Numbskull's home is grown up in weeds. The fact is that our real opportunity knocks from mithin. Through experience, built upon consecutively by continuous effort, our vision ex- pands and pounds its way out through the por- tals of our brain. We see the thing that we ought to do and we go to it! To the man who didn't see it the opportunity did not exist. "What we don't know doesn't hurt us any" — so runs the old saw. And here's a case where we who didn't see, were hurt, but we didn't know it. For those of us who have vision there are all sorts of opportunities, but many of them are not good for us. The ones we make for ourselves are the healthy ones, and generally they are the best for us. "Our own baby" is the one we will take the greatest pride in and enjoy the most. Then we become masters of our own destiny in a sense and can be more independent through having no senior partners in the enterprise. Often our dreams bring forth a need for many kinds of FAILURE TO SEIZE OPPORTUNITIES 137 special knowledge and for these we go into the open market offering opportunity to many others in return for their assistance. Thus we find that everything we do is in relation to other things and dependent in part on other people. This should make us careful and a wee bit wary. Opportunities are widely divergent in nature — through a stroke of hard luck one might have difficulty in finding employment. The first opportunity might lead to a job in a bar-room, but having fortified ourselves by developing our highest attributes such as honesty, integrity, cleanliness of body and mind — we are able to somehow or other pinch along until something better shows itself. First-class principles are not to be thrown away upon the first provoca- tion, therefore, in order to take away the tempta- tion, we might as well figure o\it that a great many employments in tlie world do not represent 7-cal opportunities and therefore should not be considered. Failure to seize such so-called opportunities be- comes a virtue in the same sense that the failure 188 LAUGH AND LIVE to seize a decent opportunity becomes a ^ame. Often opportunity comes through meeting men of affairs who have power and wealth at their command. These are usually in connection with enterprises of the greater magnitude. Those of us who have the power to control our destinies to a reasonable degree should not stand back in our support of these. If we have care- fully built up our initiative, self-reliance, pre- paredness in the way of efficiency, good health and the will to do, there is no reason why we should not aspire to take a hand in anything in which we are confident we can succeed. Among the men who control the big affairs of the business world we find a true democracj' — they "want the man. The fact that he appears be- fore them neatly attired, bright of eye and ready of wit will surely count in his favor. In other words, we should live up to the op- portunity in whatever form it presents itself after we have accepted its responsibilities. To make this perfectly plain "isue mitst live up to the job! If we are to be superintendent of a coal FAILURE TO SEIZE OPPORTUNITIES 139 mine "underneath the ground" we will put on our overalls and jumpers, but if we are to be man- ager of a grand opera house we will appear in our dress suits. The thought is obvious, but as we journey along we find many of our fellow mor- tals neglecting to live in line with what they are doing. We mention this fact hopeful that we will not fail to seize our opportunities by setting up ob- stacles whereby we may become persona tion grata through lack of discernment. Oppoi'tunity is within ourselves and when we have seized our rightful share, then we may look with pride upon our endeavor and proceed to laugh and live! CHAPTER XVII ASSUMING KESPONSIBIX,ITIES Those who fear to assume responsibility neces- sarily take orders from, others. The punisluiient fits the crime perfectly and being self-inflicted there is no injustice. It is true that many men possessed of great brain power play "second fid- dle" to shallow-minded men of inferior wisdom from sheer lack of forcefulness on their own part. They lack tlie full quality of leadership while possessing all save one essential — courage. Fear abides in their hearts and spreads itself as a mantle of gloom over their super-sensitive souls until finally they struggle no more. Henceforth they are doomed and become the subject of apol- ogy on the part of friends and relations. He's all right," they say, "but he suffers from over- refinement. He lacks something — we cannot make out just wliat. It is altogether too bad 140 ASSUMING RESPONSIBILITIES 141 for he is such a superior man among his social equals. We must take our hats off to those who have the goodness of heart to make allowance for our shortcomings. A disinterested listener, how- ever, is seldom taken into camp by such well intended argument. He knows that "friend hus- band" or "friend brother" as the case may be, needs some sort of swift kick that will stir his combativeness into action— that will cause him to turn upon his mental inferior and have it out with him then and there — once and for all. As a courage builder fighting for justice is not to be sneezed at. Courage can be built up just the same as any other soul quality. It is all a matter of early training as to which we start out with — courage or fear. Unthinking parents have a lot to do with the propagation of fear in the hearts of children. A neglectful father plus a fear-strick- en mother constitute the most logical forces wliich tend toward the overdevelopment of fear in a child. Once the seed is thoroughly implanted 142 LAUGH AND LIVE the growth can be depended upon. How to get rid of it later is not so easy to figure out. Had the child been born with a "clubfoot" these same parents would have spent their last dollar in an effort to straighten it into natural condition. They could see the unshapely foot day by day with their own eyes — and so could their neigh- bors. But the fear- warped little brain sti*uggling for courage with which to combat its weakness needs must battle alone with chances largely against it. The mere thought of what is in store for this little one as it stumbles along from one period to another, fearful of this, and fearful of that, is disconcerting to say the least. We can almost trace our friend "Second Fiddle" directly back to such a childhood. We can almost hear his fond mother shout, "Keep away from the brook, darling, you might get your feet wet and catch, your death of a cold." Another well known and highly respected admonition belonging to child- hood's hour is, "Come in, deary, it's getting dark »i«<«««te««s«*«»«Sm*««s^^ i«t«^!m^i* ' m