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The
Daffodil
Principle
Several times my
daughter had
telephoned to
say, "Mother,
you must come to
see the
daffodils before
they are over."
I wanted to go,
but it was a
two-hour drive
from Laguna to
Lake Arrowhead
"I will come
next Tuesday", I
promised a
little
reluctantly on
her third call.
Next Tuesday
dawned cold and
rainy. Still, I
had promised,
and reluctantly
I drove there.
When I finally
walked into
Carolyn's house
I was welcomed
by the joyful
sounds of happy
children. I
delightedly
hugged and
greeted my
grandchildren.
"Forget the
daffodils,
Carolyn! The
road is
invisible in
these clouds and
fog, and there
is nothing in
the world except
you and these
children that I
want to see
badly enough to
drive another
inch!"
My daughter
smiled calmly
and said, "We
drive in this
all the time,
Mother." "Well,
you won't get me
back on the road
until it clears,
and then I'm
heading for
home!" I assured
her. "But first
we're going to
see the
daffodils. It's
just a few
blocks," Carolyn
said. "I'll
drive. I'm used
to this."
"Carolyn," I
said sternly,
"Please turn
around." "It's
all right,
Mother, I
promise. You
will never
forgive yourself
if you miss this
experience."
After about
twenty minutes,
we turned onto a
small gravel
road and I saw a
small church. On
the far side of
the church, I
saw a hand
lettered sign
with an arrow
that read,
"Daffodil
Garden." We got
out of the car,
each took a
child's hand,
and I followed.

It looked as
though someone
had taken a
great vat of
gold and poured
it over the
mountain peak
and its
surrounding
slopes. The
flowers were
planted in
majestic,
swirling
patterns, great
ribbons and
swaths of deep
orange, creamy
white, lemon
yellow, salmon
pink, and
saffron and
butter yellow.
Each
different-colored
variety was
planted in large
groups so that
it swirled and
flowed like its
own river with
its own unique
hue. There were
five acres of
flowers.
"Who did this?"
I asked Carolyn.
"Just one
woman," Carolyn
answered. "She
lives on the
property. That's
her home."
Carolyn pointed
to a well-kept
A-frame house,
small and
modestly sitting
in the midst of
all that glory.
We walked up to
the house.
On the patio, we
saw a poster.
"Answers to the
Questions I Know
You Are Asking",
was the
headline. The
first answer was
a simple one.
"50,000 bulbs,"
it read. The
second answer
was, "One at a
time, by one
woman Two hands,
two feet, and
one brain." The
third answer
was, "Began in
1958"
For me, that
moment was a
life-changing
experience. I
thought of this
woman whom I had
never met, who,
more than forty
years before,
had begun, one
bulb at a time,
to bring her
vision of beauty
and joy to an
obscure
mountaintop.
Planting one
bulb at a time,
year after year,
this unknown
woman had
forever changed
the world in
which she lived.
One day at a
time, she had
created
something of
extraordinary
magnificence,
beauty, and
inspiration. The
principle her
daffodil garden
taught is one of
the greatest
principles of
celebration.Carolyn
down the path.
Then, as we
turned a corner,
I looked up and
gasped. Before
me lay the most
glorious sight.

That is,
learning to move
toward our goals
and desires one
step at a
time--often just
one baby-step at
time--and
learning to love
the doing,
learning to use
the accumulation
of time. When we
multiply tiny
pieces of time
with small
increments of
daily effort, we
too will find we
can accomplish
magnificent
things. We can
change the world
...
"It makes me sad
in a way," I
admitted to
Carolyn. "What
might I have
accomplished if
I had thought of
a wonderful goal
thirty-five or
forty years ago
and had worked
away at it 'one
bulb at a time'
through all
those years?
Just think what
I might have
been able to
achieve!"
My daughter
summed up the
message of the
day in her usual
direct way.
"Start
tomorrow," she
said.
She was right.
It's so
pointless to
think of the
lost hours of
yesterdays. The
way to make
learning a
lesson of
celebration
instead of a
cause for regret
is to only ask,
"How can I put
this to use
today?"
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Use
the
Daffodil
Principle.
Stop
waiting
Until
your
car
or
home
is
paid
off
Until
you
get
a
new
car
or
home
Until
your
kids
leave
the
house
Until
you
go
back
to
school
Until
you
finish
school
Until
you
clean
the
house
Until
you
organize
the
garage
Until
you
clean
off
your
desk
Until
you
lose
10
lbs.
Until
you
gain
10
lbs.
Until
you
get
married
Until
you
get
a
divorce
Until
you
have
kids
Until
the
kids
go
to
school
Until
you
retire
Until
summer
Until
spring
Until
winter
Until
fall
Until
you
die...
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There is no
better time than
right now to be
happy.
Happiness is a
journey, not a
destination.
So work like you
don't need
money.
Love like you've
never been hurt,
and, Dance like
no one's
watching.
If you want to
brighten
someone's day,
pass this on to
someone special.
I just did!
Wishing you a
beautiful,
daffodil day!
Don't be afraid
that your life
will end, be
afraid that it
will never
begin.
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Activated 0ctober 200
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