"Of all the challenges that have been faced in the past, the ones we have today, I believe, are most easily handled. I say that because they are manageable. They largely involve individual behavioral decisions, but those decisions can be made and followed. And when that happens, the challenge is behind us."
Many
years ago I worked for a railroad in the central offices in Denver. I
was in charge of what is called head-end traffic. That was in the days
when nearly everyone rode passenger trains. One morning I received a
call from my counterpart in Newark, New Jersey. He said, “Train number
such-and-such has arrived, but it has no baggage car. Somewhere, 300
passengers have lost their baggage, and they are mad.”
I
went immediately to work to find out where it may have gone. I found it
had been properly loaded and properly trained in Oakland, California.
It had been moved to our railroad in Salt Lake City, been carried to
Denver, down to Pueblo, put on another line, and moved to St. Louis.
There it was to be handled by another railroad which would take it to
Newark, New Jersey. But some thoughtless switchman in the St. Louis
yards moved a small piece of steel just three inches, a switch point,
then pulled the lever to uncouple the car. We discovered that a baggage
car that belonged in Newark, New Jersey, was in fact in New Orleans,
Louisiana—1,500 miles from its destination. Just the three-inch movement
of the switch in the St. Louis yard by a careless employee had started
it on the wrong track, and the distance from its true destination
increased dramatically. That is the way it is with our lives. Instead of
following a steady course, we are pulled by some mistaken idea in
another direction. The movement away from our original destination may
be ever so small, but, if continued, that very small movement becomes a
great gap and we find ourselves far from where we intended to go.
Have
you ever looked at one of those 16-foot farm gates? When it is opened,
it swings very wide. The end at the hinges moves ever so slightly, while
out at the perimeter the movement is great. It is the little things
upon which life turns that make the big difference in our lives, my dear
young friends.
No comments:
Post a Comment