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Today
By Vickey Pahnke-Taylor

Editor's note: If you've always wanted to sail the Mexican Riviera, you can do it in the company of Vickey Pahnke-Taylor, John Bytheway, and Meridian Magazine. Click here for details.

Today is a good day.  So far.  There have been no major glitches, no major whammies, no surprises that suck the wind out of the lungs or cause us to fall to our knees.  We are grateful. 

But then, we have had days when darkness hung around like low-drooping limbs of thick, mossy trees, clouding over our skies and seeming to block the warming rays of the sun.  At those times, when we were up to the task, we have felt the warming, healing blessings of the Spirit.  Although there may have been a glitch or wall into which we smacked, it was — after all — a good day.

How do we navigate so that today is good?  Every single day? Here are a few thoughts that might assist us in making each ‘today’ count:

    1. Make a decision that, regardless of what comes today, we will “do good” rather than be negatively reactive. The following counsel from President Harold B. Lee is worth looking at every single morning:  “There is only one day that you and I have to live and that’s today.  There is nothing we can do about yesterday, except repent; and there may be no tomorrows.  The thing for us to do when we arise from our beds as God gives us a new day, is to pray that whatever comes to our hands, we will do it to the best of our ability.”
    2. Pray.  First thing, ask for help in making today count.
I love this poem.  It makes me smile, and packs a great message punch:
Dear God
So far today I
Haven’t been grumpy,
Judgmental, mean spirited,
Or thoughtless to anyone.
But I will be getting
Out of bed in a minute,
And I might really need you then.
  1. Make service a part of each today.  There is a Hindu proverb that says, “Help thy          brother’s boat across, and lo, thine own has reached the shore.”
  2. Grit teeth, bite tongue, count to ten, or whatever is needed to refrain from using ugly, hurtful, or damaging words.  In a sea of commotion, it can be a lifesaver — for the speaker of the words and the hearer as well.  It may save arguments, hurt feelings, or rifts that could turn into canyons.  Watch your words.  In Matthew 12:36, we read the Savior’s warning that “every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of Judgment.”  Caustic comments, proliferation of profanity, murmuring mumblings are idle words.
  3. Choose.  Choose to create a good day today.  Choose to make it count, regardless of the life lessons we are given to learn.  Simply, it is taking the words from Joshua 24:15 and keeping them in our hearts:  “Choose you this day whom ye will serve;.but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.”

Okay!  There we go!  Just five little things that we can do.  Graphs to chart that we can work on and note progress.

So, good people, today is a gift.  Have a good day!

 

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© 2006 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

About the Author:

Vickey is a songwriter/producer, vocalist, and professional speaker, and has performed and/or taught in numerous venues. Her compositions include the theme songs for the Special Olympics program (state by state selection), the Make A Wish Foundation, the Especially For Youth program of the Church, and the Families In Focus program. She is a Billboard award winning songwriter, with hundreds of songs to her credit.

She has enjoyed participation in the Church Education System’s youth and family programs for almost two decades, having taught for Know Your Religion, Campus Education Week at BYU-Provo, BYU-Hawaii, and BYU- Idaho, Especially for Youth, Best of Especially for Youth, and BYU Conferences and Workshops.

Studying musical theater at BYU, she has used that learning experience in the music field as a way of enhancing the teaching of correct principles. Her latest gospel works include the collaborative projects "Women at the Well" with Kenneth Cope and "My Beloved Christ" with Randy Kartchner. Vickey has contributed to numerous EFY albums over the years and as a chapter contributor for many yearly EFY books; and as contributor the best selling LDS compilation, Sunshine for the Latter Day Saint Teenage Soul. She authored the book K.I.S.S.: Gospel Guidelines for Better Relationships for Bookcraft Publishing Company. For two years she was editor and columnist for "Gems for Youth" on the web at LDSWorld.com, formerly the Church’s electronic arm.

Vickey’s performance/teaching experience includes venues from participation with a nationally touring Repertory Theater Company to Symphony Halls to corporate conventions throughout the U.S. She has been commissioned to write scripts for the Faith & Values Channel; and created and directed the Bi-Centennial celebration for the Hampton Roads, Virginia area.

She holds a masters degree in interpersonal communications and currently resides in Salt Lake City, Utah. She is married to Dean Taylor and together they have eight children and two grandchildren.

Related Resources:
Can Do Youth Archive
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