NO MATTER HOW DIFFICULT IT IS, DON'T GIVE UP!

Posted by Unknown On Saturday, June 13, 2009 6 comments
At my age, it is quite difficult to sustain zeal and zest in a task because it can be physically draining. I am still in my forties and yet, I can feel age catching up on me. When I look at people who are older and wiser, it always inspires me to plod on and this story is one of them...Be inspired and whatever situation you are facing - don't give up. I am telling myself the same thing. Have a nice day!

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Paul Rokich is my hero. When Paul was a boy growing up in Utah, he happened to live near an old copper smelter, and the sulfur dioxide that poured out of the refinery had made a desolate wasteland out of what used to be a beautiful forest.

When a young visitor one day looked at this wasteland and saw that there was nothing living there -- no animals, no trees, no grass, no bushes, no birds...nothing but fourteen thousand acres of black and barren land that even smelled bad -- well, this kid looked at the land and said, "This place is crummy." Paul knocked him down. He felt insulted. But he looked around him and something happened inside him. He made a decision: Paul Rokich vowed that some day he would bring back the life to this land.

Many years later Paul was in the area, and he went to the smelter office. He asked if they had any plans to bring the trees back. The answer was "No." He asked if they would let him try to bring the trees back. Again, the answer was "No." They didn't want him on their land. He realized he needed to be more knowledgeable before anyone would listen to him, so he went to college to study botany.

At the college he met a professor who was an expert in Utah's ecology. Unfortunately, this expert told Paul that the wasteland he wanted to bring back was beyond hope. He was told that his goal was foolish because even if he planted trees, and even if they grew, the wind would only blow the seeds forty feet per year, and that's all you'd get because there weren't any birds or squirrels to spread the seeds, and the seeds from those trees would need another thirty years before they started producing seeds of their own. Therefore, it would take approximately twenty thousand years to revegetate that six-square-mile piece of earth. His teachers told him it would be a waste of his life to try to do it. It just couldn't be done.

So he tried to go on with his life. He got a job operating heavy equipment, got married, and had some kids. But his dream would not die. He kept studying up on the subject, and he kept thinking about it. And then one night he got up and took some action. He did what he could with what he had. This was an important turning point. As Samuel Johnson wrote, "It is common to overlook what is near by keeping the eye fixed on something remote. In the same manner, present opportunities are neglected and attainable good is slighted by minds busied in extensive ranges." Paul stopped busying his mind in extensive ranges and looked at what opportunities for attainable good were right in front of him. Under the cover of darkness, he sneaked out into the wasteland with a backpack full of seedlings and started planting. For seven hours he planted seedlings.

He did it again a week later.

And every week, he made his secret journey into the wasteland and planted trees and shrubs and grass.

But most of it died.

For fifteen years he did this. When a whole valley of his fir seedlings burned to the ground because of a careless sheep-herder, Paul broke down and wept. Then he got up and kept planting.

Freezing winds and blistering heat, landslides and floods and fires destroyed his work time and time again. But he kept planting.

One night he found a highway crew had come and taken tons of dirt for a road grade, and all the plants he had painstakingly planted in that area were gone.

But he just kept planting.

Week after week, year after year he kept at it, against the opinion of the authorities, against the trespassing laws, against the devastation of road crews, against the wind and rain and heat...even against plain common sense. He just kept planting.

Slowly, very slowly, things began to take root. Then gophers appeared. Then rabbits. Then porcupines.

The old copper smelter eventually gave him permission, and later, as times were changing and there was political pressure to clean up the environment, the company actually hired Paul to do what he was already doing, and they provided him with machinery and crews to work with. Progress accelerated.

Now the place is fourteen thousand acres of trees and grass and bushes, rich with elk and eagles, and Paul Rokich has received almost every environmental award Utah has.

He says, "I thought that if I got this started, when I was dead and gone people would come and see it. I never thought I'd live to see it myself!"

It took him until his hair turned white, but he managed to keep that impossible vow he made to himself as a child.

What was it you wanted to do that you thought was impossible? Paul's story sure gives a perspective on things, doesn't it?

The way you get something accomplished in this world is to just keep planting. Just keep working. Just keep plugging away at it one day at a time for a long time, no matter who criticizes you, no matter how long it takes, no matter how many times you fall.

Get back up again. And just keep planting.

Just keep planting.

Taken from THIS LINK.

6 comments to NO MATTER HOW DIFFICULT IT IS, DON'T GIVE UP!

  1. says:

    Tiger A post combining 2 of my favorite topics, perseverance and greening the earth!

  1. says:

    Unknown Hi Tiger,

    Glad you like the post. Oh - I did not know you are a greenie too :-). Check out my other blog at The Motion of My Thoughts where I have articles on the environment.

    Thanks for stopping by. Take care and have a nice weekend with your family.

    Cheers!

  1. says:

    Doc Hi Paula,
    awareness on environmental issues is rather negligible. Other than the NGOs and some concern citizens, it almost absent.

    This is rather worrism as it effects the check and balance elements on environmental issues, i.e: the cyanide gold mining in Raub.

    Malaysians are unaware of the scale of environmental damage we might be facing if Malaysia proceeds with its plan to erect a nuclear power plant. Malaysia is known for its corruption and lack of quality control. Imagine a Kuala Terengganu stadium like disaster occuring at the power plant. Remember Chernobyl? This would be much worse.

    cheers

  1. says:

    Unknown Hi Dr. Saravanan

    You are right. Many are very narrow minded in their perspective of life and concentrate on only socio-political issues when there are many more issues that concern and affect us far and wide.

    Yet, because environmental issues are less popular and garner less support, many choose not to read up and to be concerned about it.

    Things are expected to worsen in the next couple of years where our environment is concerned. One example is the deforestation issues in our country and even in the Amazon and Africa are very serious indeed.

    Thanks for being of the same mind in this and other issues.

    Always a pleasure to read your comment and a blessing to know you.

    Take care and warmest regards to you and your lovely family.

  1. says:

    edward This story is just amazing. Thank you. Dare to dream the impossible. Reminds me of the song from "Man of La Mancha"

    Regards,Edward

    To dream the impossible dream
    To fight the unbeatable foe
    To bear with unbearable sorrow
    To run where the brave dare not go

    To right the unrightable wrong
    To love pure and chaste from afar
    To try when your arms are too weary
    To reach the unreachable star

    This is my quest
    To follow that star
    No matter how hopeless
    No matter how far

    To fight for the right
    Without question or pause
    To be willing to march into Hell
    For a heavenly cause

    And I know if I'll only be true
    To this glorious quest
    That my heart will lie peaceful and calm
    When I'm laid to my rest

    And the world will be better for this
    That one man, scorned and covered with scars
    Still strove with his last ounce of courage
    To reach the unreachable star

    from MAN OF LA MANCHA (1972)
    music by Mitch Leigh and lyrics by Joe Darion

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Edward,

    How lovely to see you again. Thanks for your comment and the lyrics of "The Impossible Dream".

    The Man from La Mancha is one of my favorite movies and I remember I had to do an assignment on it for one of my courses on Media and Society...

    You are welcome - it is my pleasure to share...

    Indeed this story is simply amazing. I was so inspired by the fact that he persevered no matter how tough it was - just so he could chase his dream, never giving up no matter how difficult.

    Lives like that of Paul Rokich give us that oomph to press on.

    Take care and may God bless you and yours always.

    Cheers

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