I received a PM from Hoytman yesterday about this thread. I actually kind of forgot about what I had written in it so I came to it this morning to read over it. Brings some warm, fuzzy feelings with a full body shiver and hairs standing up on my arms and neck reading the part (and remembering) where my grandmother talked to me about paying it forward as a young lad. Oh how I miss her...
There was so much more involved in the way I ended up at this shop that I could probably write a book about it. Looking back over the past few years and thinking about the people who graced my life along the way makes me think about "coincidence" or "luck".
I had met a wonderful man named Dr. Rodney K. Hough who had become a mentor, a father figure, a motorcycle riding partner, my doctor and my best friend. When I would speak to Rod about coincidence or how bizarre or unexplainable some chance happenings were to me , he'd say "Dave, coincidence is God's way of remaining anonymous". I had come to refer to these unexplainable happenings as "God Shots". There were many of these "God Shots" along the way for me and a lot of folks around me.
My father, who perhaps has his feet a little more firmly planted on the ground concerning such things would say to me...
"Dave...Branch Rickey used to say...."Luck is the residue of design", so keep doing what you're doing and great things will come to pass for you".
I guess my beliefs fall somewhere in between what my father always said about Branch Rickey, and what the late great Dr.Rodney K. Hough said about coincidence. My great friend Dennis that I met back in 1978 always says "You got what you got, because you do what you do".
A quote from a philosophical writing by James Allen that I read and re-read over the years comes to mind, and really supports what my friend Dennis and my father said, and what I wrote in the original post of this thread, or perhaps what we all said supports what James Allen wrote. (He wrote it before we said it.) Here's the quote....
"Men do not attract that which they want, but that which they are. Their whims, fancies, and ambitions are thwarted at every step, but their inmost thoughts and desires are fed with their own food, be it foul or clean. Man is manacled only by himself; thought and action are the jailors of Fate--they imprison, being base; they are also the angels of Freedom--they liberate, being noble. Not what he wished and prays for does a man get, but what he justly earns. His wishes and prayers are only gratified and answered when they harmonize with his thoughts and actions".
Little did I know that auto detailing as a side living would actually be the stepping stone to that which is currently providing the majority of my income. Through the relationship that Tim (my landlord at the shop) and I are building, I've been given the opportunity to direct my efforts from something that is wanted to something that is needed.
Everyone likes a beautifully polished car or truck, but the various institutions that I'm currently providing mobility services to need their wheelchair lifts and their vans or buses to be in good working condition. This opportunity affords me the ability to stay busy all year round, and to incorporate my detailing skills into the mix of offered services. The mechanical experiences of my past employments are being offered as well, pretty much providing my clientele with a "One Stop Shop" concerning the maintenance, service and repair of their vehicles.
They can have their vans washed, lifts serviced or repaired, any wear and tear items replaced and through my network of other service providers, have their state inspections carried out, their vinyl graphics needs met, tires replaced etc. etc.
I really don't have time to schedule any detailing work, though the calls are starting to come in more and more as warmer weather approaches. I try to book what I can and farm the work out to other guys who I can trust to provide quality work under my business name. It's really hard to find these kinds of folks who aren't already busy doing their own thing. It seems that those who aren't busy doing their own thing, aren't busy for reasons related to James Allen's above quote.
It looks as if I may have to start turning away the detailing related work all together, though I do have a couple really loyal customers that I'll try to service around my normally scheduled affairs.
It is pretty interesting thinking about the fact that things today are different than they were when I came to this shop, and that things into the future will change as I see fit. It's one thing to read and think about that quote from James Allen's masterfully written "As A Man Thinketh" , it's a whole nother thing to consciously combine thought and action and watch the seeds take form and flower.
OK, enough rambling from me about me....
Thanks for reading and commenting in this thread..TD