The
other day I ran across the story of a man who had a great opportunity that he missed. His friend took him for a ride one day
way out in the country. They drove off the main road and through a vast grove of trees to a large uninhabited expanse of land.
A few horses were grazing and a couple of old shacks were all that remained of what appeared to be an old farm.
The friend, Walter, stopped the car, got out, and started to describe vividly the wonderful things he was going to build.
He wanted his friend Arthur to buy some of the land surrounding his project to get in on the ground floor.
But Arthur thought to himself, Who in
the world is going to drive twenty-five miles for this crazy project? The logistics of the venture are staggering.
And so Walter explained to his friend Arthur, "I can handle the main project myself,
but it will take all my money. But the land bordering it, where we're standing now, will in just a couple of years be jammed
with hotels, restaurants, and convention centers to accommodate the people who will come to spend their entire vacation here
at my park." He continued, "I want you to have the first chance at this surrounding acreage, because in the next five years
it will increase in value several hundred times."
"What could I say? I knew he was wrong," Arthur related the story later. "I knew
that he had let this dream get the best of his common sense, so I mumbled something about a tight-money situation and promised
that I would look into the whole thing a little later on."
"Later on will be too late," Walter cautioned Arthur as they walked back to the
car. "You'd better move on it right now."
And so Art Linkletter turned down the opportunity
to buy up all the land that surrounded what was to become Disneyland. His friend Walt Disney tried to talk him into it, but
Art thought he was crazy.
Perhaps you and I did not miss that kind of opportunity this past year. If we did, it probably seems too late for anything
but regrets!
But that's not so. Yesterday's opportunities are gone, but so is its failure and
disappointment! The New Year is an open door to possibility, and it is filled with hope and optimism.
By Robert Passmore