Most worries don’t happen.

Most worries don’t happen.

The story’s told of a clock that spent a great deal of time worrying about its future, reasoning that it had to tick twice each second.
‘How much ticking might that be?’ the clock thought.

🎯So it began to calculate that it would tick 120 times each minute, which is 7,200 times each hour.

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💥That meant in a twenty-four-hour day it would have to tick 172,800 times, and 63,072,000 times every year.
💥By this time the clock began to get overwhelmed and sweat profusely.

💥Finally, it calculated that in a ten-year period it would have to tick 630,720,000 times, but then it realised it had forgotten about the leap days—and at that point the clock collapsed with a nervous breakdown.

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🎯We often wear ourselves down unnecessarily with worrying

🎯Psychologists have observed that about 95 per cent of all we worry about never happens.
What about the other 5 per cent?

🎯Four out of five times things turn out better than we anticipated, including a lot of outright blessings!

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🎯In the end, only 1 per cent of all the bad we think might happen actually does and, of this, it’s rarely as bad as we feared.

🎯That’s why Jesus said, ‘Don’t be anxious about tomorrow. God will take care of your tomorrow too. Live one day at a time.’

🎯He also reminds us about the lives of the birds that have nothing to worry about because of the provisions of their creator: “ Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?”

– With Bob Gass Ministry

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