Category Archives: flaws

>Search Others For Their Virtues, Thy Self For Thy Vices

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I was midway through drawing this napkin this morning when I realized I have a problem.  No, not my ‘have to run to the bathroom problem’, another problem.  This one revolves around this quote. Within a well-balanced person this quote can take hold and be of value.  You try to find the best in others, but because you want to be improving as you move forward in life, you know it’s a good idea to be aware of and figure out how to cope with, your vices.  You already know your virtues, you don’t really need to go searching for them.


But I don’t live in a world of well-balanced people.  I live in a world of terribly imbalanced people.  How so you ask?  Because so many of the people I know are already obsessed with their vices and ‘flaws’. That is all they see in themselves. They see the speck of dust in the corner of the room, not the entire beautiful home they live in.  They see the pinch of fat on their tush, not the great shape they are in. They are obsessed with guilt about what they did or didn’t do, how they don’t match up, why they haven’t accomplished what they want, how they let someone down, how they look.


They don’t see their value, their contribution, their beauty (inner and outer), their humor, their impact, their wisdom, their sexiness, their progress.  The reflection in their mirror is not the flower they are.


Can I, or you, do anything about this?  I sometimes think I can, and other times I think whatever I do will be minimal at best.  But we really only have 3 choices, right?  1) we can ignore it, just let it be.  2) we can agree with them, backing up their skewed version of reality. 3) We can do our best to help them see what they can’t see themselves, yet.  


I choose #3.  I will always choose #3.  If I am successful in helping them, cool. If I am not, I know I have tried and perhaps my effort might still help out further down the road, the way lessons to a child often are understood many years later in life.


Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily


Quote by Benjamin Franklin, 1706-1790, American printer, publisher, writer, politician, scientist, inventor, statesman, soldier, and diplomat.  If you want to read of a great man, you can do no better than finding out more about Mr. Franklin.  I recommend the biography ‘The First American‘ as a good starting point.

>A Diamond With A Flaw

>The point being….
“Better to be a strong person with a weak point than a weak person without a strong point”.

It is another way of saying…move forward! Take that step even if you aren’t the expert, the experienced one.

Be strong and volunteer for that new assignment. Be strong and submit that drawing to the competition. Do NOT wait until you have no flaws. You remove the flaws or weaknesses by the act of doing, not by waiting around for the flaw to leave of its own accord.

Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily.

Quote (including the part in quotations in the commentary) by William J. H. Boetcker, 1863-1962, German-born American Presbyterian Minister

>Every Person Should Have

>Or else you will end up in a cemetery with no one visiting. Forgiveness and tolerance are the key to love among friends.

So, what faults do those letters represent in your mind?

Drawing by Marty Coleman, The Napkin Dad
http://napkindad.blogspot.com
http://www.martycoleman.com

quote by Henry Brooks Adams, 1838-1918, American Writer

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