The 10-10-10 rule
I heard this on the
107.3FM radio station, Madison, Wisconsin, with John Tesh as the announcer. He
gives little tid bits of more than grand info to all us listeners. He always
was the all-American boy next-door apple-pie guy. Anyway...John Tesh says.... whenever making
any sort of decision it is best to use the 10-10-10 rule. I was ready for the
rule when then the station took a commercial break and luckily, I was still
around after it. John says when making any decision think about what the
consequences will be in 10 minutes, in 10 months, and in 10 years. Then he gave
this brilliant but average example. If your child calls you at work crying and
carrying on because s(h)e needs you to be home for a special homework project
they forgot to tell you about, or the need for a special dinner, or their
boyfriend broke up with them, you must think how you will feel and how it will
affect your life in 10 minutes if you leave work. How your child will feel or
how your decision will affect your life and theirs in 10 months if you leave
work and do what they wish, and considering that your boss may disagree is a
concern also. Then how this will affect you in 10 years? Could leaving work
early to amend the emotions of a child cause you any regrets? In 10 minutes
will the child be over it? Probably not. Will the child forget all about this
one evening? In 10 months? Probably. And in ten years could you have lost that
promotion and all that goes with it, and the child has absolutely no
recollection of the issue. Such as a large raise in salary that could change
your life and allow that child that called with the tantrum a college
education! Just an example of how making decisions on emotions can affect/ruin
a life or two. Me, I am old enough to know that I wish I had known about the
10-10-10-Rule. I didn't and it did affect my life and my children's. Not that I
ever left work early for a child throwing a tantrum.... but I do have 10-10-10-
regrets. As we all do, I am sure and have made the best of it. The key is from
now on I shall use the 10-10-10 rule for sure. A good rule indeed. Almost as
good as the Golden Rule so, put the 10-10-10-Rule and the Golden Rule in a jar
and shake them up and you have good decisions without a doubt. But do realize
this. If the child needs you to be at a special athletic dinner or important
live celebration in his or her honor and you chose work over them, that is a whole
different bag of potatoes! Like John T says, 10-10-10 again and again.
atlantachristianweb.com/celeb_features/tesh.asp
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