Cheerfulness As A Life Power

Orison Swett Marden

Contents

Foreword

1. What Vanderbilt Paid For Twelve Laughs

2. The Cure For Americanitis

3. Oiling Your Business Machinery

4. Taking Your Fun Every Day As You Do Your Work

5. Finding What You Do Not Seek

6. "Looking Pleasant"—Something To Be Worked From The Inside

7. The Sunshine-Man

Foreword

The soul-consuming and friction-wearing tendency of this hurrying, grasping, competing age is the excuse for this booklet. Is it not an absolute necessity to get rid of all irritants, of everything which worries and frets, and which brings discord into so many lives? Cheerfulness has a wonderful lubricating power. It lengthens the life of human machinery, as lubricants lengthen the life of inert machinery. Life's delicate bearings should not be carelessly ground away for mere lack of oil. What is needed is a habit of cheerfulness, to enjoy every day as we go along; not to fret and stew all the week, and then expect to make up for it Sunday or on some holiday. It is not a question of mirth so much as of cheerfulness; not alone that which accompanies laughter, but serenity,—a calm, sweet soul-contentment and inward peace. Are there not multitudes of people who have the "blues," who yet wish well to their neighbors? They would say kind words and make the world happier—but they "haven't the time." To lead them to look on the sunny side of things, and to take a little time every day to speak pleasant words, is the message of the hour.


The Author.