{"id":4147,"date":"1975-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1975-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-56-no-9-september-1975-a-wise-persons-opportunities\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:23:49","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:23:49","slug":"vol-56-no-9-september-1975-a-wise-persons-opportunities","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-56-no-9-september-1975-a-wise-persons-opportunities\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 56, No. 9 &#8211; September 1975 &#8211; A Wise Person&#8217;s Opportunities"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Opportunity is a special arrangement of                     circumstances offering a person the chance to step in with                     ideas for something new, something better, something unique.                     It can show itself as a favourable occasion, time or place                     for learning or saying or doing a new thing. It offers a means                     of self-expression.<\/p>\n<p> We may with safety assume that nothing being done in any                     business or profession or government today is being done as                     well as it might be done. Anyone who doubts this should listen                     to the conversations going on at cocktail parties and coffee                     sessions and the speeches being made at political rallies                     and community meetings.<\/p>\n<p>Superficial people remain indifferent spectators of events                     which, did they seize the opportunity to take part in them,                     might become the agents of their prosperity. It is a sad fact                     of life &#8211; but one that is serviceable to the ambitious person                     &#8211; that most people do not seek ideas or opportunities to put                     ideas into use. If everyone had the urge and the intelligence                     to seize opportunities, your task to excel would be much more                     difficult.<\/p>\n<p>A spirited mind will not be content to remain within itself.                     It will reach out for chances to prove its worth. In looking                     for and seizing opportunities we come alive, vitally aware                     of ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>We find great satisfaction in doing something beneficial                     that has not been attempted before, or has been attempted                     and given over, or only partly achieved.<\/p>\n<p>Having looked at the meaning of opportunity, it is well                     to decide what wisdom is. The wise person chooses and follows                     what contributes most certainly to his lasting happiness.                     He avoids shallow judgments and irrelevant issues. Professor                     Alfred North Whitehead wrote: &#8220;It is the function of wisdom                     to act as a modifying agency on the intellectual ferment so                     as to produce a self-determined issue from the given conditions.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>While it is true that people are wise only in things of                     which they have knowledge, information is not wisdom. Information                     should be used for thinking. Science and study give us knowledge,                     but only philosophy can give us wisdom, and so the person                     seeking to prepare for opportunity will find it valuable to                     read books that contain a flavour of wisdom rather than only                     those that communicate a substance of knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>Opportunities do not arrive labelled with your name and                     accompanied by instructions for making use of them. An opportunity                     does not always present itself rounded out and complete. It                     is not a beautiful butterfly attracting admiring attention,                     but more frequently a larva which the ignorant crush underfoot                     and the indolent squirm away from.<\/p>\n<p>Opportunity is to be grasped when offered. A condemned man                     about to be hanged was given the usual opportunity to say                     a few words. &#8220;Not just now,&#8221; he said. As Francis Bacon said                     in his picturesque way: &#8220;Opportunity turneth a bald noddle                     after she hath presented her locks in front, and no hold taken.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Not many opportunities are of the &#8220;sometime&#8221; sort, to be                     attended to when you get around to them. The credit for achievement                     goes to the person who does things, not to the person who                     first thought of them.<\/p>\n<p>A wise person will not despise an opportunity merely because                     it seems small. Write it down, make a note of the advantages                     it offers, and assess its potentials. They may expand under                     your close inspection.<\/p>\n<p>A person of small mind and limited imagination wastes time                     waiting for big opportunities: the successful person uses                     his time taking advantage of the little opportunities as they                     come along. He catches up trifles and makes something worthwhile                     out of them, finding in them the beginnings of great enterprises.<\/p>\n<p>The world is well stocked with people who enjoy knocking                     things down, but changing one small thing for the better is                     worth more in satisfaction of achievement than proving a thousand                     things faulty.<\/p>\n<h3>Opportunity in business<\/h3>\n<p>Opportunity to improve their lives crowds upon people who                     wish to take advantage of it, but they are people who do not                     passively wait for Opportunity with a capital &#8220;O&#8221; to come                     into their offices or workshops. They look around. They have                     the quality of discovering and utilizing previously undetected                     relationships among the things and conditions of their environment.<\/p>\n<p>An opportunity in business consists of certain conditions                     which, if detected and handled properly by the right person,                     may be made to yield a profit or win promotion.<\/p>\n<p>Business exists to supply people&#8217;s wants, and these wants                     are insatiable. Every one gratified gives birth to two more                     wants, thus new opportunities are endless. New trends and                     new goods come into being; changing conditions bring wants                     to be satisfied; unusual happenings offer unexpected opportunities.<\/p>\n<p>Consider Thomas A. Edison&#8217;s coup. In 1862 he was a Detroit                     newsboy of 15. A report of a battle appeared in a newspaper.                     Edison bought a thousand copies on credit, hopped on a train,                     sold the papers at railroad stops for 25\ufffd a copy, and finished                     the day with $250 in his pocket, representing several hundred                     per cent profit. He detected a public want, he determined                     to satisfy it, he invested capital, and he went to work.<\/p>\n<p>No person need travel far to find a starting point. Opportunity                     is likely at his side. It is not a rule, as some persons think,                     that one must change his job in order to find opportunity.                     It may be earned by producing beyond your rated capacity in                     the job you hold. The wise person will seek a new working                     environment only when opportunity has made the change practical                     and profitable.<\/p>\n<h3>Have you an idea?<\/h3>\n<p>Every achievement is first of all an idea in the mind of                     a person who sees a favourable chance to improve things. Then                     follows venturesome thinking, which is a potent force in bringing                     to light all the possibilities inherent in the idea.<\/p>\n<p>One needs to have a generous open-mindedness to new notions                     and ideas. Day-dreams can be a source of pleasure to the dreamer                     and valuable to society, provided they are used to furnish                     goals and to spur effort toward achievement. When you are                     daydreaming do not be content to imagine obstacles away: think                     of ways to remove them or get around them.<\/p>\n<p>Phantasy will be generous in revealing opportunities, but                     remember that you have to come back to the beginning to put                     a solid foundation under your dream castle. After the flash                     of inspiration comes sober inquiry and planned activity.<\/p>\n<p>To every person each opportunity is worth exactly what he                     is prepared to make of it. Unless you have some sort of plan,                     you are like a person having a heap of bricks without any                     blueprint for using them. Develop the idea into a mental picture                     of the benefits to be derived, the progress to be made, the                     profits to be earned, or the satisfactions to be enjoyed.                     Then will follow projects, plans, methods and proposals.<\/p>\n<h3>Be a devil&#8217;s advocate<\/h3>\n<p>After putting your idea into written form, play the devil&#8217;s                     advocate: attack it as it will be attacked by persons affected                     by it. Having looked at the idea from all sides you have tested                     its soundness, explored its operational aspects and anticipated                     objections.<\/p>\n<p>Look problems steadfastly in the face and measure your strength                     against their difficulties. Make sure that the opportunity                     is one you can do something about. There is no more frustrated                     animal than a cat watching a mouse through a closed window.<\/p>\n<p>The process may be summed up in this way: locate the need,                     validate the need, ascertain the difficulties, set down the                     benefits, collect information, and produce the answer. Consider                     all the possibilities that exist under circumstances as they                     are. It is a defeatist attitude to reject an idea on the grounds                     that it might have been a good idea if things had been otherwise.                     You cannot <em>wish <\/em>the environment of your detected                     opportunity into changing, but you can go to work improving                     it.<\/p>\n<p>While not underestimating or over-emphasizing your ability,                     make a list of your skills that are appropriate to the task                     you face. A person&#8217;s capability is not measured by the number                     of things he can do, but by his competence in concentrating                     the skills on one purpose at a time.<\/p>\n<p>Think things through. Here is an opportunity. Your resolve                     to take advantage of it must be specific, concrete and definite.                     Put a frame around your purpose: even the greatest artists                     do not try to paint all creation on their canvases. Form a                     clear opinion of what is wanted or needed. It may be a completely                     new installation or system, but quite often a change will                     only involve doing something in addition to or instead of.<\/p>\n<p>If you cannot develop a clear consciousness of what the                     result will be, try to judge its nature and to estimate its                     effects by following it in your mind into the situations where                     it leads. Do not forget, in this exercise, to consider in                     addition to what problems your idea will solve what new problems                     it will raise.<\/p>\n<p>Many good plans fail because their presentation is ill-timed.                     There is a right time to present your idea to those who will                     be responsible for approving it. In the ancient Greek games                     those who beat the starting signal were flogged: but those                     who lagged behind it did not win the crowns.<\/p>\n<h3>Qualities you need<\/h3>\n<p>To make the best use of opportunities requires several qualities:                     alertness to see, quick comprehension, initiative, patience                     and industry.<\/p>\n<p>Seizing opportunities is one way to find out the full range                     of your talents. Count your mental resources and acquaint                     yourself with your skills. The exercise may throw light upon                     qualities you have hitherto overlooked, in addition to asking:                     &#8220;What is different about this situation which seems to offer                     me an opportunity to do something distinctive?&#8221; ask yourself                     &#8220;What is different about me that makes me believe that I am                     the person to do this new thing?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A person of ordinary ability with keen perception can accomplish                     much, but opportunity has no meaning to the clumsy or the                     indolent or the light-minded person. An excellent opportunity                     may exist in the presence of hundreds of persons and yet not                     be seen by any of them. Or, if they see it and recognize it,                     they may not have the ambition to take advantage of it.<\/p>\n<p>To detect opportunity one must keep in touch with what is                     going on. Put yourself into contact with events and people                     so as to have a hundred eyes on the look-out for opportunities.                     Wherever you touch the vital stream of life you will be enriched.                     Every experience, every person you meet, has something to                     impart to you. Do not limit your acquaintances to people in                     the same line of business or profession or art. Your big opportunity                     may be elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p>You concentrate your thought and effort best on something                     in which you are interested. Notice that when a crisis occurs                     your interest deepens and your creative talent is driven into                     high gear.<\/p>\n<p>Learn by rapid reasoning the thing that is necessary to                     do in order to meet the crisis or take advantage of the opportunity.                     Your good judgment will take note of all the circumstances                     and prevent your dissipating your energy on something impossible.<\/p>\n<p>Determination is a big asset. No matter how full a reservoir                     of maxims we possess, and no matter how good our intentions                     may be, if we do not take advantage of every favourable opportunity                     to act, our condition remains unaffected for the better.<\/p>\n<h3>Really want an opportunity<\/h3>\n<p>Desire for opportunity can stimulate the search for it.                     Desire is not just a milk-and-water wish. The person who <em>really                     wants <\/em>something in his working life can usually get it.<\/p>\n<p>To the person who has worked hard for thirty-five years                     that may seem to be an extravagant statement, but Dr. Joseph                     F. Johnson explained it in <em>Business and the Man<\/em>,                     a volume in the Alexander Hamilton Institute <em>Modern Business                     <\/em>library. That person, he said, does not know the meaning                     of <em>really wants<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;In the thirty-five years of his business life&#8221;, asked Dr.                     Johnson, &#8220;has he ever voluntarily gone without food or sleep                     in order to further the interests of his employer or himself?                     Has he turned his back on all pleasures which killed time                     that might have been profitably devoted to the study of his                     business, or to the seeking of opportunities to increase his                     business or his own usefulness in business?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is necessary, as it was for Napoleon, to sacrifice all                     secondary views, and to incur all lesser hazards, to secure                     what you consider to be fulfilment of your great opportunity.<\/p>\n<p>Success in any enterprise depends upon courage. There is                     something frustrating to the person who sees six opportunities                     but has not the gumption to seize one of them. Fortune does                     not love, nor does she lavish gifts upon those who hesitate                     to seize the opportunities she offers. The person with mind                     open for an opportunity to do something new is one who is                     not afraid to contemplate a break with what is normal.<\/p>\n<p>Make up your mind to try. If you wait until the outcome                     of your effort is certain, you will never move. If it is some                     rule or custom that prevents your taking advantage of an opportunity,                     muse upon the &#8220;Distinguished Order of Disobedience&#8221;, a high                     Austrian military decoration. It was awarded only to an officer                     who won a battle by disobedience.<\/p>\n<p>Learn to take risks intelligently. Courage does not imply                     rashness: a brave person knows that some things are truly                     to be feared. He takes the dangers into account.<\/p>\n<h3>And so: to work<\/h3>\n<p>An opportunity is something to work at, and the emphasis                     is on &#8220;work&#8221;. An opportunity deprived of the energy to make                     use of it is an idle dream.<\/p>\n<p>Translate your plans into action as soon as possible. Seize                     the opportunity and work at it with ardour. That word, seldom                     used nowadays, means &#8220;great warmth of feeling, fervour, zeal&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Being on the alert for opportunities to do something worth                     while will be effective in preserving us from indulging in                     sterile activity, and being active constructively is one of                     the best ways to replace the scarecrows of fear, worry and                     anxiety.<\/p>\n<p>Do something beyond the sphere of your assigned duties.                     Sometimes opportunities are found through &#8220;the little extra&#8221;.                     Many a person can say that the work that has been of most                     benefit to him was work for which he was not paid a wage.<\/p>\n<p>When an opportunity shows itself do not let your present                     load of work put you off. A crowded life is most happy. To                     have many things to do every day, and somewhat more than you                     can do at all times, tends to arouse your energies and sharpen                     your faculties.<\/p>\n<p>Sir Walter Scott, while fulfilling his duties as sheriff                     and clerk of court, produced his 18-volume <em>Dryden <\/em>and                     an edition of Swift, and wrote <em>Marmion <\/em>and <em>Lady                     of the Lake<\/em>. He said: &#8220;There was a wonderful exhilaration                     about it all; my blood was kept at fever pitch. I felt as                     if I could have grappled with anything and everything.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Something about ambition<\/h3>\n<p>Everyone may be the architect of his own fortune if he makes                     use of his advantages and seizes his opportunities, but he                     must be willing to deserve success.<\/p>\n<p>While doing your best within the limits of your vocation                     &#8211; no ambition can cancel out that obligation &#8211; scan the horizon                     for the opportunity to display the full extent of your ability.                     Having vision means doing some long distance thinking, looking                     out frequently over the broad world of human activities.<\/p>\n<p>A person&#8217;s most precious gifts may be spoiled by unimaginative                     handling, and out of the least brilliant an immortal work                     may be shaped. Alfred Armand Montapert, founder, owner and                     president of seven large corporations operating for more than                     forty years in the western United States, prefaces his inspiring                     <em>Success Planning Manual <\/em>(Prentice-Hall Inc. 1967)                     with this illustration: &#8220;You set your destiny by what you                     make of yourself. Example: a bar of iron is worth $5. If made                     into horseshoes it is worth $10. If made into needles it is                     worth $40. If made into balance wheels for watches it is worth                     $250.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A great idea is worth to a person exactly what his preparations                     enable him to make of it. The ability to originate, to seize                     an opportunity, rests solidly upon a person&#8217;s readiness. Unless                     he is prepared, the opportunity might just as well not come.<\/p>\n<p>There is good authority for this statement. Pasteur wrote                     that &#8220;Chance favours only the prepared mind.&#8221; Consider Newton                     and the falling apple. If that falling apple had not been                     noticed by a man well-equipped for study of the happening,                     nothing unusual would have occurred. But Newton was ready,                     and he put the results of his research into the law of gravitation.<\/p>\n<p>Put into action what your experience and study have taught                     you. As Francis Bacon, Lord High Chancellor of England, said                     in one of his essays: &#8220;Crafty men contemn [disdain] studies,                     simple men admire them, and wise men use them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Seeking versus waiting<\/h3>\n<p>Some people believe they would be equal to seizing an opportunity                     if it came along, but are too lazy to go looking for it. In                     another essay Bacon pin-pointed those who are superior: &#8220;A                     wise man will make more opportunities than he finds.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The ability to make opportunities and seize them is typical                     of the successful person. One who waits for opportunity to                     dragoon him into effort, or who leans heavily upon his friends,                     expecting them to find opportunity for him, or who does not                     use every moment of his time and every ounce of his energy                     and ability seeking what he wants, lacks the will for action                     and spurns his birthright.<\/p>\n<p>Brutus says to his fellow conspirator Cassius in Shakespeare&#8217;s                     <em>Julius Caesar<\/em>: &#8220;There is a tide in the affairs of                     men, which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; omitted,                     all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and miseries.&#8221;                     But the person who waits for some legendary seventh wave to                     toss him upon a delectable island will find that seventh wave                     a long time coming.<\/p>\n<p>The wise person is one who is determined to owe nothing                     to fortune except opportunity. Appealing to fortune is too                     often the resort of the idle-minded and the feeble, of those                     who want accomplished by chance the thing that they lack the                     initiative to do themselves. They are usually people who doubt                     their own capacity. They do not assess and believe in their                     own worth.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, fortune plays a less considerable part in life                     than many people believe. What a person does in spite of circumstances,                     rather than because of them, is the measure of his success                     ability. What is called &#8220;good fortune&#8221; is nearly always the                     result of a group of circumstances worked into productive                     soil by a clever and industrious person.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Four things come not back&#8221;, says an Arabian proverb: &#8220;the                     spoken word, the sped arrow, the past life, and the neglected                     opportunity.&#8221; It is easy to let life slide by, as children                     at the seashore fill their hands with sand and let the grains                     flow through their fingers until all are gone, but it is mentally                     unhealthy for mature people to let opportunities slip away                     like that.<\/p>\n<h3>Dealing with difficulties<\/h3>\n<p>Difficulties beset all beginnings. If ill success has attended                     your effort to make use of an opportunity, do not charge the                     failure to some shadowy being called &#8220;ill luck&#8221;, but examine                     carefully into the cause. Face failure with a stout heart,                     and try again. Disappointment in one effort often opens doors                     to wider fields, and, anyhow, it is more bearable to fail                     if we do our best in an effort than to not fail because we                     did not try.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons may say that advanced years prevent their seeking                     opportunity. The search need not cease at the end of one&#8217;s                     normal working life. A person must have some place to go in                     the mornings, even in retirement, and where better than into                     the search for opportunity.<\/p>\n<p>A person of 65 cannot be expected to carry the physical                     load he toted with ease when he was 35. He can, however, seek                     opportunity with the ardour of youth: opportunity to use his                     store of knowledge and experience in new situations.<\/p>\n<p>Any person can have, at any age, an objective, for objectives                     are endless. Every one you reach brings new objectives into                     view. &#8220;Endless ends&#8221;, said John Dewey, the philosopher who                     wrote <em>Human Nature and Conduct<\/em>, &#8220;is a way of saying                     that there are no ends &#8211; that is, no fixed self-enclosed finalities.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The secret of being productive through seizing opportunities                     lies in getting into the habit of living with expectancy.                     It will make your eyes sharper in their search for opportunity.                     Looking for opportunities and taking advantage of them makes                     life worth living. There are many tough questions plaguing                     business and society, but no matter how many answers have                     been turned up the best may have been left for you.<\/p>\n<p>Opportunities exist for you whatever your job is. Canada                     is advancing on many fronts. The small promise of a century                     ago has grown into great opportunity. The subsistence husbandry                     has developed into world-wide trade. Where there was one opportunity                     fifty years ago there are now fifty.<\/p>\n<p>Vigilance in watching for opportunity, tact and courage                     in seizing upon opportunity, force and persistence in crowding                     opportunity to its utmost of possible achievement: these qualities                     promise successful living.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[55],"class_list":["post-4147","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-55"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 56, No. 9 - September 1975 - A Wise Person&#039;s Opportunities - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-56-no-9-september-1975-a-wise-persons-opportunities\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 56, No. 9 - September 1975 - A Wise Person&#039;s Opportunities - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Opportunity is a special arrangement of circumstances offering a person the chance to step in with ideas for something new, something better, something unique. 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It can show itself as a favourable occasion, time or place for learning or saying or doing a new thing. It offers a means of self-expression. 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