One of our members sent this to me earlier this week and I loved the story so much I included it in this weekends newsletter. I hope you enjoy this one! Every year a grandson would visit his grandfather’s farm during his vacation. On one particular visit to the farm, the boy’s grandfather was preparing to plant a few types of trees that he didn’t already have on his farm. They both went to the town to pick what trees they would plant. When they got home, the warm, kind, loving, and wise grandfather asked his grandson, "If I plant one of these trees inside and the other one outside, which do you think will be the biggest?" "I think the one inside will grow the biggest," answered the grandson, "because it won’t have to deal with the cold winters, the wind, and the burning sun. It will face fewer hard things." The grandfather took one of the trees and planted it indoors, and he planted the other outside. He turned to his grandson and said, "Let’s see what happens." For several years, the grandfather tended to both plants. It wasn’t until the third year that the boy asked about the trees, having remembered the experiment. The old man took the boy to the tree they had planted outdoors and then to the tree they had planted indoors. "Which of the two trees do you think is the biggest?" asked the grandfather. The boy answered, "The outside one, of course. But I don’t know why. It had to deal with so much more than the tree inside." "That is true," the grandfather said with a warm smile. "However, because the outside tree had to deal with so much more, it grew stronger and faster. Do you think it was worth it?" asked the Grandfather. "Definitely!" said the grandson, "Look at how its branches happily spread out to the sun and the sky." The old wise man then taught his grandson something he would never forget. "Learning works the same way, my boy. If you choose to do nothing, you will grow very little and will begin to whither, just as this indoor tree has. If you choose to always take the path of least resistance, you will always be mediocre and average. You will only reach your full potential by purposely choosing to do the hard things, even when you don’t feel like it that’s called discipline. This outdoor tree needed the hard things to become great." Thank you for reading Tony Parise
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