The Disciple MD
Habits…we all have them. Both good and bad. As I have aged, I find myself saying “What?” to my wife, just out of habit. It is super annoying to her, and I don’t blame her at all. I hear and understand what she is saying, but before I know it, “What did you say?” comes out of my mouth. It’s become a bad habit of mine. Good and bad habits are hard to break. ”The carI have been driving for a number of years has a nice feature on it that Ienjoy. The lights are automatic! That is, they can be set to turn on and off,automatically, according to the darkness of the surrounding atmosphere. Forinstance, they will automatically go on when going through long tunnels andthen turn off when I drive out of it. The same can be said for day vs nightdriving. I have become accustomed to driving without regard to my headlightsbeing on or off. They will, “automatically” take care of me, including turningthemselves off after I take the keys out of the ignition. Thus, I am not in thehabit of turning them, “on” or “off”. The habit that I have developed in ignoring my headlights hasbeen causing me problems as not too long ago I rented car which was notequipped to do this. One night I left the headlights on as I got out of the carto go inside to bed. The next day the car was “dead as a door nail” when I gotup. I had to call on a family member to give me a jump and vowed to myself thatI needed to remember to check the lights manually each time I drove it. Severaltimes during the next few days, upon arriving at my destination, I had to goback to the car and turn the lights off. Each time I told myself I wouldn’t doit again. Late one night on my way to visit my sister’s house, I stopped forgas. I filled the car up and started driving down the main street of the localtown. I hadn’t gotten far when I saw, in my rearview mirror, the lights of apolice car flashing behind me. I pulled over and started thinking to myself,“What have I done wrong?” I rehearsed in my mind my driving the last few milesand could think of nothing. So when the officer came to my window, I wasinterested at what he was going to say. He said, “Sir, you are driving withoutlights!” “I am?,” I said. I looked at the switch to the lights and sure enough,they were on “off.” I quickly turned them on and while sheepishly grinning,told the officer, “This is a rental car. My car has automatic lights so I’m notused to turning them on after I stop.” He smiled pleasantly and replied as hewalked away, “It happens!” I think being pulled over has jarred me enough tocure me of my bad habit of not checking my lights. Perhaps! One of David O. McKay’s favorite sayings was “We sow ourthoughts, and we reap our actions; we sow our actions, and we reap our habits;we sow our habits, and we reap our characters; we sow our characters, and wereap our destiny.” (C. A. Hall, The Home Book of Quotations, New York: Dodd,Mead & Company, 1935, p. 845.) Habits! They can be the greatest blessings in our lives or thegreatest curse! Some of our habits are so ingrained into our character that wescarcely know they are habits. Let us examine our habits! Let us put a“headlight” on them and examine if they are worthy of change. There is at leastone bad habit in each of us worthy of discard and probably more. “What didyou say?”
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