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Bonnie's
Talk: The Bank of Time (Given at the Young People's
Act of Remembrance in 2001)
I want you to think very hard and imagine that there is a
magic money box in your house. It can be any shape or size you like
– can you see it in your head?
What is so special about this moneybox is when you wake up
every single morning and go downstairs to breakfast, you find that
it is filled with £86,400. How wonderful to have so much money and I am sure you will
all have lots of ideas of exactly what you would buy first.
However,
as with everything these days, there are conditions that come with
this gift, as this is very special money:
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if you don’t spend all of the money by the end of that day,
whatever is left in the money box just disappears,
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you can’t spend more than the £86,400
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and you can’t borrow from the money that is coming tomorrow.
That
takes quite some thinking about doesn’t it?
I am sure that by now your thoughts are trying to work out
how you would make the most of the money that arrives every day.
What
if I were to tell you that we are all given a gift of 86,400 each
and every morning to every person here
– it isn’t pounds, but instead 86,400 seconds, the number
of seconds in a whole day – 1,440 minutes.
When
we go to sleep tonight, we will lose whatever time that we haven’t
used from those 86,400 seconds we were given. We can’t borrow time
from tomorrow, or save it up for another day in the future when we
think we shall be very busy and could do with some extra time. I am sure you have heard people saying that they could do
with 25 hours rather than 24 in a day at hectic times.
What
a responsibility we all have. We all go through each and every day
not really thinking about how we use our time, and how precious it
really is.
What
we have to do from this moment forward is to think about how we use
our time and to make the most of it.
Think about what you are going to achieve during the day and
make sure that you use your time wisely so that you get the utmost
in health, happiness and success which are all essential for
everyone during our life time.
Remember
as with all things, time for us will stop and this could happen in a
millisecond and this is indeed what happened for people at the World
Trade Centre buildings in New York on September 11th and
as a result of the many wars and conflicts around the world that are
happening while we are all here together.
There
are thousands of families where today time will have stopped for
their loved ones as a result of a bullet, a bomb, a landmine,
hunger, famine, an accident and illness.
We
should all think very carefully about how incredibly lucky we are
here in Wivenhoe – we are safe, we can think about how we are
going to spend our time tomorrow, we are as sure as we can be that
we are going to have a tomorrow.
There are people around the world that are not sure if they
will have the next hour and we must be aware of that.
We
must also remember the men that went from Wivenhoe and died fighting
in two World Wars, and since, to make this country safe so that we
have the freedom to decide how to use our time.
Be thankful that they believed in that freedom to risk and
sacrifice years of their lives to enable us to make choices as we do
today.
Let’s
take a minute to think about the value of time:-
To
realise how precious one month is – ask a mother who has given
birth to a premature baby
To
realise the value of one week – ask an editor of a weekly
newspaper
To
realise the value of one minute – ask a person who has just missed
a train
To
realise the value of one second – ask a person who has just
survived an accident
To
realise the value of one millisecond – ask the person who won the
silver medal instead of the gold at the Olympic Games.
Treasure
every moment you have and use it well.
Treasure
it because you shared it with someone special – your parents and
people that you love and are close to you.
Treasure
it so that you use some of it for doing good, making life better for
those around you and overseas in the wider world.
Time
waits for no one – think carefully before you waste it.
Bonnie
Hill
11th November, 2001
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