The
little girl lived in a small, very simple, poor house on a hill and as she grew
she would play in the small goldenand as she grew she was able to see over the
garden fence and across the valley to a wonderful house high on the hill – and
this house had golden windows, so golden and shining that the little girl would
dream of how magic it would be to grow up and live in a house with golden
windows instead of an ordinary house like hers.
And although she loved her parents and her family, she
yearned to live in such a golden house and dreamed all day about how
wonderful and exciting it must feel to live there.
When she got to an age where she gained enough skill and sensibility to go outside her garden fence, she asked her
mother is she could go for a bike ride outside the gate and down the lane.
After pleading with her, her mother finally allowed her to go, insisting that
she kept close to the house and didn’t wander too far. The day was beautiful
and the little girl knew exactly where she was heading! Down the lane and
across the valley, she rode her bike until she got to the gate of the golden
house across on the other hill.
As she dismounted her bike and lent it against the gate
post, she focused on the path that lead to the house and then on the house
itself…and was so disappointed as she realized all the windows were plain and
rather dirty, reflecting nothing other than the sad neglect of the house that
stood derelict.
So sad she didn’t go any further and turned, heart broken as
she remounted her bike … As she glanced up she saw a sight to amaze her…there
across the way on her side of the valley was a little house and its windows
glistened golden …as the sun shone on her little home.
She realized that she had been living in her golden
house and all the love and care she found there was what made her home the
‘golden house’. Everything she dreamed was right there in front of her nose!
"A good character is the best tombstone.
Those who loved you and were helped by you will remember you when
forget-me-nots have withered. Carve your name on hearts, not on marble."
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