Bucket
& Dipper
There
is no effect more disproportionate to its cause than the happiness bestowed by
a small compliment. ~Robert Brault
I am
an avid reader and I love to read books that give me a different perspective on
life. I read a book several years ago
called “How Full Is Your Bucket?” by Tom Rath and Donald Clifton. Their theory is that each of us is a bucket
with a dipper and the things people say or do to us can either fill our bucket
or empty it. When our bucket is full we
are more positive and we have a tendency to fill other’s buckets. But, when our bucket is empty we become
negative and dip from other’s buckets.
A
full bucket makes us stronger and more optimistic but an empty bucket poisons
our outlook and takes away our energy.
Every time someone dips from our bucket, it hurts us.
There
was a case study done after the Korean War.
They studied 1,000 American prisoners of war detained in a North Korean
camp. The study focused on the most
extreme and effective cases of psychological warfare. There was a 38% death rate among American
soldiers-the highest in US military history.
The
odd thing about this was that the American soldiers were given adequate food,
water and shelter. They weren’t
subjected to common physical torture.
They were not surrounded by barbed wire and none tried to escape. When
they were released and offered an opportunity to call loved ones very few
did.
What
occurred was what the soldiers called “give up-itus.” One of the most critical and destructive
tactics used was the North Koreans withheld any positive letters from home and
only gave them negative letters. These
were the ones where relatives had passed away or in one case a wife writing to
her husband that she had given up on him ever returning and was
remarrying. They received overdue bill
notices from collection agencies. The
soldiers basically gave up on living and gave in to the hopelessness of their
situation. The soldiers died because
they gave up.
If
we apply this to our own situation under the theory that we each have a bucket
and a dipper, we learn that each time we dip into someone else’s bucket and
take from it, this reduces what is in our own bucket. On the other hand, when we add to someone
else’s bucket it increases what is in our bucket. How many times do we empty other people’s
buckets without even thinking about it?
Then when we empty theirs we start to feel worse because our bucket is
empty too.
I
challenge you to fill someone’s bucket today.
Prayer
for the Day: Heavenly Father, I want to fill other
people’s buckets. When I say a harsh
word to someone it empties their bucket and then they in turn empty someone
else’s bucket. We are taught by you to
love each other and build each other up, not tear each other down. Help me to be an encouragement to
others. I praise You today for filling
my bucket.
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