The following lecture was given at the February's second Sunday Service:
In
our lives we have several chances to encounter our best friends. Unfortunately in my life, I have moved over 20
times because of my father’s job and my job, but I made many good friends and
at the same time lost contacts and cannot contact some of them. Friendship is very important in human
lives. Because of my friends and our friendships
I have been able to have a beautiful, successful life. These friends and our
friendships are the power to create my abundant and fulfilling life.
Rev.
Masaharu Taniguchi, founder of Seicho-No-Ie, wrote, “As implied in the
statement that man is a social animal, man cannot live without others. What is particularly important is to have
good friends. Good friends are essential
throughout life, but people who are good friends from childhood and youth have
the opportunity to discover the good points of each other, praise each other,
comfort each other, and help each other. Through such efforts, they are enabled
to develop tremendously.” (For Young People, p. 76)
Regarding
the friendship Rev. Taniguchi explained the following things in the same book:
1.
Have good friends, especially from youth.
2.
A good friend will have faith in us.
3.
Even with ordinary material success, much has to be credited to the power of
good friends.
4.
An important thing is that our friends have an influence on our personality.
5.
How can we get good friends?
6.
At times the best friend for us is a good book rather than a human being.
I
think the first and second ones do not need an explanation. The third one Rev. Taniguchi emphasized how
important it is to have a good friend in order to be successful. He wrote:
“Let us say that someone opens a law office. He
has graduated from a law school and passed his bar examination, but he has no
contacts. No one knows what his capabilities might be...If he has good friends
or acquaintances who praise his talents and ability and recommend him to
others, he may in due course become a famous lawyer and come to enjoy wealth
and reputation abundantly. Through the recommendation of a friend he might be
appointed a judge, a presiding judge, a chief justice of a higher court, and
perhaps in time a chief justice of the Supreme Court. In life it is difficult
to be recognized just because one is capable. There are such things as
influence and connections and, through the good offices of another, a person
who is somewhat less talented than the best may still get ahead. That is an
advantage enjoyed by those who have good friends.” (pages 77-78)
To
be successful, we need good friends, but a more essential thing for us to have
good friends is to affect our personality. Rev. Taniguchi said, “As just
discussed, friendship is necessary even for material success, but much more
important is its influence on personality. Wealth and reputation may be lost over time
but an influence on personality stays for a lifetime and becomes a treasure or
a handicap.” (p. 79)
Then,
how can we have good friends? I would
like to introduce some concrete ways sharing a book, How to Make Luck 7
Secrets Lucky People Use to Succeed, by Marc Myers. In this book he introduces some concrete ways
to become successful, and he especially mentioned that our friends sometimes
become gate persons (key persons) to bring us luck.
1)
Loyal: Become known for being loyal to your friends. When you
develop a reputation for sticking by your friends, you win the respect of
important people. Being known as a loyal friend shows that you stand by those
who help you and that you know how to reciprocate when a favor is done for you.
As a result, you make life look easy and you become someone people want to
help. (p. 97)
2)
Naïve: No matter how knowledgeable or experienced you think you
are, you need something extra to make people want to go out of their way for
you. For some lucky people, that something extra is an ability to be little naïve. (119)
3)
Find out how smart others are: A childlike curiosity is nothing more than being fascinated
by what’s being said and showing it. Instead of trying to show how
smart you are, it’s far more productive and beneficial
to find out how smart others are. (124)
4)
Do not expect repayment: When
you make sacrifices for people without expecting or asking for repayment, you
double your chances of receiving good fortune. (129)
5)
When you become generous to your friend:
a) To be
truly generous, don’t spend too much time thinking about
what you’ve done for others, only about what others are doing with
the gifts you’ve given them.
b) Give
when your generosity will build high-quality friendships.
c) Give
when people are down on their luck. One of the best times to offer assistance
is when people are facing hard times.
d) Giving
is important, but so is following up with additional help.
e) Give
something else if you can’t give what was requested. (134-135)
6)
Do not count on too much: Don’t get greedy. A big mistake many people make when friends or
contacts provide them with help is expecting a miracle. They count on their key
contacts to give them whatever they want whenever they need it. The problem is
that people put too much faith in too few key contacts. They expect these
influential people to make their lives easier on demand. What impatient people
fail to remember is that key contacts are busy. (153)
By
using these techniques we will be able to find lifelong friends and enjoy our
friendship. If we have these good
friends, we can have great treasures better than material treasures. In my very first lecture of this year I
shared my personal experience how my Seicho-No-Ie friends helped me to come to
the United States. Before working at the
local Seicho-No-Ie Chiba Missionary Area, I had worked for the Hilton Hotel for
8 years. In the first 6 years I worked
in the Tokyo area. While working at the Tokyo
Hilton Hotel, I lost my father in 1987.
I was devastated and I lost a big guidance in my life. When my father was collapsed, I visited him
and helped my mother to take care of him for almost 30 days. My father died on
April 17, 1987, but my grandfather had died March 3, 1987. So, I took about 4 or 5 days of for the
funeral. After a few weeks, I was able
to take 4 weeks days off because of my accumulated paid vacations; however, if
my friends did not cooperate to assist my shift for a month, I would not be
able to take these paid vacations. When I left the Hilton Hotel at the end of
December 1990, I had the accumulated vacations and my last day of working at
the hotel was November 3, 1990. It was usually difficult for us to take paid
vacation fully, but I had been able to take days off about 5 weeks within 2 months
because of my friends helping me.
In
addition to this, one of my best friends at that time was head hunted for the
new opening Hilton Hotel near Tokyo Disneyland and thought that it was good for
me to work with him in a new environment.
He asked me to work with him at the new hotel but I was not
interested. He strongly suggested his
recruiter to recruit me to work there with the exact same conditions including
the salary. In this way I was promoted
under this great condition without any effort.
The most important thing was that I moved to Chiba because I was able to
meet one of my mentors who is Rev. Nanao Yamato. Because of his influence and support, I was
able to work at the Seicho-No-Ie Chiba Missionary Area. If I had not moved to the new hotel, I would not
have come to the United States because Rev. Yamato gave me a chance to study at
UCLA and 6 months vacations. Without my
friends present, the Mario Kawakami would not exist and you would not be able
to listen to my lecture. Now, I believe
you understand how important it is to have good friends.
Some
of you may say that some people do not have a chance to meet a good friend. In my case as I explained that because of my moving
over 20 times, I had difficult times to have friends especially when I was
young. Fortunately, my parents guided me to Seicho-No-Ie and I read many SNI
books. They became a part of my life, my
philosophy and became very good friends. Rev. Masaharu Taniguchi wrote the benefit of
having good books which might become one of your best friends in For Young People:
“At times the best friend for us is a good book
rather than a human being. Henry Beecher
observed that people who read Ruskin change completely after reading his works.
Books are live expressions of the writer
and they can give their readers the same influence as living people. Not only that, books ask for nothing except
the small amount to be paid for their purchase; yet they joyfully wait for you
to use your entire faculties to absorb and take away any amount of the good
things they contain.” (p. 84)
We
are often easily affected by our friends.
Depending on our friends we may become cheerful or gloomy, rude or
gentle. If we have bad, insincere
friends, we might do bad things without feeling guilty and become
insincere. If we are surrounded by
people who delight in finding fault and poking fun, we might do the same thing
to others. If we are surrounded by
people who are gentle, tolerant, sincere and industrious, those characteristics
will be implanted in us and we will be a very delightful person who attracts
many good friends. Thank you very much.
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