Seven Things To DO
Inside my wallet is a piece of paper which I have handled so many times it is worn and ragged. It was given to me by my father when I graduated from the eighth grade of an old country school in Centerton, Indiana.
My Father in his simple way as a most remarkable man who believed that one needed a philosophy of life if here were to amount to anything. On the paper he gave me for graduation, Dad had listed the following creed, which he had entitled “Seven Things To Do”
1. To thine own self be true, and it must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.
2. Make each day your masterpiece.
3. Live each day as it should be lived. Never leave until tomorrow what can be done today
4. Help others. A perfect life can be lived in helping others
5. Drink deeply from good books
6. Don’t take friendship for granted. Study friendship and make it a fine art.
7. Most important of all, pray for guidance each day and Divine guidance will come in some way.
I’ve found these guides to be meaningful in every phase of my life. During the 18 years I have coached basketball at UCLA, they have helped me develop a balanced attitude toward victory and defeat. We play to win, of course, but more important to me is what the boys learn about life. That is why I stress the same principles Dad did.
Wooden’s remarkable success stemmed primarily from his values and his consistency in living by those values. He abided by his pyramid. He was not sidetracked by the passing glories of triumph, many as there were. He was selfless in example and in demeanor. He enjoyed the simple daily routine of hard purposeful work. And he took pride in it. Money was incidental---his highest annual salary was 32,500 in 1975. Lavish offers did not detour him.
----Taken from Beyond Winning (john Wooden)
Compliments of Reedy Basketball
Inside my wallet is a piece of paper which I have handled so many times it is worn and ragged. It was given to me by my father when I graduated from the eighth grade of an old country school in Centerton, Indiana.
My Father in his simple way as a most remarkable man who believed that one needed a philosophy of life if here were to amount to anything. On the paper he gave me for graduation, Dad had listed the following creed, which he had entitled “Seven Things To Do”
1. To thine own self be true, and it must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.
2. Make each day your masterpiece.
3. Live each day as it should be lived. Never leave until tomorrow what can be done today
4. Help others. A perfect life can be lived in helping others
5. Drink deeply from good books
6. Don’t take friendship for granted. Study friendship and make it a fine art.
7. Most important of all, pray for guidance each day and Divine guidance will come in some way.
I’ve found these guides to be meaningful in every phase of my life. During the 18 years I have coached basketball at UCLA, they have helped me develop a balanced attitude toward victory and defeat. We play to win, of course, but more important to me is what the boys learn about life. That is why I stress the same principles Dad did.
Wooden’s remarkable success stemmed primarily from his values and his consistency in living by those values. He abided by his pyramid. He was not sidetracked by the passing glories of triumph, many as there were. He was selfless in example and in demeanor. He enjoyed the simple daily routine of hard purposeful work. And he took pride in it. Money was incidental---his highest annual salary was 32,500 in 1975. Lavish offers did not detour him.
----Taken from Beyond Winning (john Wooden)
Compliments of Reedy Basketball