Help Wanted in the Workforce

Lindzi Bel
Over the door of virtually every business at one time or another is a sign looking for that perfect person. Every profession, every occupation, over their door has a standing advertisement stating that they are, "Now Hiring."

Wanted: An individual who is larger than his calling, a person who considers it a low estimate of their occupation to value that it merely means way of making a living. Someone who sees self-development, education and culture, discipline, character and manhood in his occupation. An individual who is well balanced, who is with little defect of weakness.

Wanted: A person who is symmetrical, and not one-sided, one who is broad, who does not take half views of things, one who mixes common sense with theories, and one who does not let a college education spoil them for practical, everyday life.

Wanted: A person who is full of life, but whose passions are trained to heed a strong will. One to hate all vileness, and to respect others as himself. One who is educated all over, and nerves are brought to their acutest sensibility and is cultured.

The world of business is looking for such an individual. Although there are thousands out of employment, yet it is almost impossible to find just the right person in almost any department of life, and yet we see this advertisement. According to the order of nature, individuals being equal to their common vocation is the profession of humanity. Whoever is well educated to discharge the duty of an individual can not be badly prepared to fill any of those offices that have a relation to them.

Nature has designed us to the offices of human life antecedent to our destination concerning society. It is sad sight to see thousands of students graduating every year whose object is to make independent, self-supporting individuals, turned out into the world helpless of self-supporting and instead of being strong, they are weak. The character sympathizes with this and unconsciously it takes on the nature of our body. A peevish, snarling, ailing person can not develop the vigor and strength of character which is possible to be a healthy person.

There is an inherit love in the human mind for wholeness, a demand that people can come up to the highest standard. There is also an inherent protest or contempt for preventable deficiency. Nature, too, demands that individuals be ever at the top or their game. People are second in becoming the next great thing in the universe. All ages have been trying to produce a perfect model. Only one complete man has yet to evolve. The best of us are but prophesies of what is to come.

Published by Lindzi Bel

BS in "Animal Science," Minor in "Animal Husbandry." Published novelist and freelance writer.  View profile

1 Comments

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  • Steven Mottor2/7/2007

    You have great writing skills. I plan to read more of your articles in the future. Make sure to check out some of my newest work!

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