Good Fortune Deceives, but Bad Fortune EnlightensBy Jon Miller | Post Date: June 3, 2010 9:18 PM | Comments: 1
Do you think it is of small account that this harsh and terrible misfortune has revealed those friends whose hearts are loyal to you? She has shown you the friends whose smiles were true smiles, and those whose smiles were false; in deserting you Fortune has taken her friends with her and left those who are really yours. So you are weeping over lost riches when you have really found the most precious of all riches - friend who are true friends. These are timeless words. I could stop here and Boethius would have given us enough. But let's make time for just a few more insights. In the closing lines of the Consolation, after some heady language meant to reconcile human free will with God's foreknowledge of events, we are given through the words of Philosophy: God receives this present mode of knowledge and vision of all things not from the issue of future things but from His own immediacy. In English we have an expression "the customer is always right". In Japanese they say "the customer is a god". Not to suggest that the customer is in fact divine, but in matters of judgment of the quality services rendered by the provider, the customer possesses this "mode of knowledge and vision" from their immediacy. Boethius then goes on to write that prayers and efforts made with virtuous intent are bound to be answered because God is present in the moment.
These words can be reminders to us and to our leaders. We must work on the right things at this moment, yet keep our hopes and intentions focused on on virtuous long-term goals. All the while, we must remember that the our customers both internal and end-user are with us in their immediacy, giving and withdrawing their currency of trust. Fortune and her friends may come and go, but it is up to each of us to make and care for those friends who are truly ours. |




Dear Jon, Yes, trying times do bring out the best in us. Only under extreme pressures are diamonds created and shines in its full splendor...We learn to appreciate in these difficult times what we tend to overlook during our days of bounties. It's a real eye opener.