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The Castaway
In the recent movie, "The Castaway," Tom Hanks played the role of a FedEx
delivery man. His job was to fly all over the world making sure that
the packages were delivered on time.
One fateful trip found his cargo
plane flying through a nasty storm somewhere in the middle of the
South Pacific Ocean. The plane crashed near a tiny, deserted island. The
only survivor was Hanks.
Upon awakening the next day, Hanks found
himself all alone. Alone with nothing except the clothes on his
back.
So picture this: no matches, no tools, no food, no shelter,
no communications, only 1 small flashlight along with a few packages
containing some useless items that had washed up on shore.
He learned
to survive a meager existence sleeping in a small dark cave. His food came
from coconuts and the few fish he managed to catch.
Tom Hanks was
captured and held prisoner on an island with seemingly no hope of ever
escaping. Every day the island dictated to him how he was to live.
He
was trapped on that island because he saw no way of escape.
His
fears of losing what small sense of security the island provided, as
despicable as it was, prevented him from trying to escape to a
better life. A life he knew existed, but now only dreamed
about.
Looking out over the vast expanse of the ocean, he constantly
thought about that better life. But those thoughts soon returned to seeing
the opposition and competition that prevented him from returning to what
was rightfully his.
4 long years later, Tom Hanks made a
decision.
He had grown sick and tired of having a nothing life.
It
was either die a nobody, going no place, on a nowhere island, continuing to
live a struggling and pitiful hand to mouth existence, or......die trying
to escape to a real life.
The Pacific Ocean was the obstacle. His
opponent was his own fears of overcoming that obstacle.
He made a
plan to escape. The day arrived and Hanks set sail aboard a makeshift, rinky
dink raft of logs tied together with tree bark and video tape.
He met
every adversity the South Pacific could throw at him. It wasn't easy, but
finally, the rescue came.
The movie portrayed a very intense drama. An
analogy of what life is like for many people. Thousands of folks every day
feel trapped in a nowhere life. They feel like their life is being wasted,
like they are going nowhere, on a nowhere island with little hope of
escape.
Every day these people trudge off to a boring and hopeless job
that offers only an existence but no real sense of satisfaction in life as
accomplishing anything.
These people know there is a better life out
there, a life they so desire, yet it seems so far away. They are trapped
on their own island of despair.
Held there, not by the island itself, but
by their own fears of not being able to overcome the adversity and
opposition that lies between them and their dreams.
A few do escape
from that island. They are the ones who finally become sick and tired of
living a wasted life, they are the ones who overcome the fear
inside.
They start out from their island, not really knowing if they
will make it or not. But they look that sea of difficulties square in the eye
and say, in the unforgettable words of Admiral David Farragut, "Damn the
torpedoes, full speed ahead."
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