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Mar 15, 2017 1721 Alan Scott
Encounter

Where is Your Treasure?

For years I lived a life that was not very healthy. I am not talking about bad food and little exercise. I mean, sure, there is that, but that is not where I am going with this. What I am talking about is that I was leading a life that was not very conducive to maintaining a healthy soul. Although, we can use as a comparison consuming unhealthy food and drink: when we tend to over-indulge in too much red meat, too much sugar, or too much alcohol, the negative side effects creep up on us, and soon enough, start to take their toll.

Likewise, other things we put into our minds and into our hearts also tend to take their toll on our interior. Treasure that is not perhaps real treasure.

We Become What We Consume

We basically become what we consume on a daily basis.

Just as how we tend to become unhealthy if we eat too much unhealthy food, this is also true in regards to the shows we watch, the books we read, the music we listen to, and the Internet we often spend countless hours on. All of this, our supposed treasure.

Each of these things, often without our direct knowledge, will begin to shape our minds and our hearts. And this is very important.

Just as we often in life make a decision to eat healthier, or walk more often, perhaps we should also take a time out to determine if what we are feeding ourselves on a daily basis—the non-food type of consuming—is what is best for us.

Is playing video games for a couple hours each day serving us well? Is spending over an hour each day reading status updates on Facebook helping us to be better people? Is watching and reading the mainstream news creating negativity in our lives? Is caring about which celebrities are dating doing anything to improve our lives?

I cannot answer those questions for you, but I can speak from my personal experience.

About twelve years ago, I moved into my current home. Because I spent so much time in front of the television in my previous apartment, I decided that for my new life in my new home, I would have no television. After a couple of months without it, a surprised friend of mine asked me if I missed watching TV.

The answer was no.

Treasures Realized

I realized that my life had drastically improved without television. Instead of staring at a box all morning and evening, watching shows that had no positive impact on my life, I was actually doing things that did have a positive impact.

I was reading more. I was spending time with friends and family. I was outside planting a garden. I was learning more about my faith.

I was living.

And broadcast television has never made an appearance back into my home since. I also unsubscribed to many of the magazines I was receiving, especially those filled with news (world and entertainment), and those that promoted superficiality. I stopped caring about trends—what other people thought was important, and started caring about what was good for me. I developed a “less-is-more” way of thinking (except for my garden perhaps!).

And with all these time-consuming things now removed from my life, I attempted to give more time to things that matter, especially in my relationship with God.

Now, with that said, that does not mean that I have given my heart perfectly over to things that truly matter. I continue to be a work in progress. I fully admit that I allow too much social media into my life. And I am not exactly sure why. Unless finding out what burger my friend had for lunch (and snapped a picture of) is somehow beneficial to my life.

And I am working on this. I am purposely spending far less time on Facebook and Instagram. I am rarely on Twitter anymore, and I am about ninety percent ready to shut down my Twitter account entirely. And as for all the other social this-or-that apps out there, I have made a promise to myself to never start using them.

But everyone is different. Some people may not even use social media, or are great at limiting themselves to only perusing social sites for a few minutes a day.

An Honest Assessment of Our Treasures

Each person must ask themselves: what am I giving my time to? My heart to? My soul to? And the most important part of this evaluation: you have to be honest with yourself.

As human beings, we were created to worship. Everyone has chosen his own path. Those who choose to worship God give their hearts to Him and let everything else take a second, third, etc. place. Those who choose not to worship God will worship something—always. It could be their car, sports, a person, a pet—the list goes on.

Where your treasure is, there also will be your heart. What are you giving your heart to?

Where Is Your Treasure?

If you immediately start to defend the time you spend on certain aspects of your life, the exercise is futile. You must go deep into your heart for the answer. And by doing this, you can bring about positive changes into your life that you never imagined, or even thought possible.

Always choose carefully what you surround yourself with. The changes you make might just change your life.

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Alan Scott

Alan Scott is a writer and blogger. His work has been published on the Catholic Exchange, One Peter Five, The Stream and Catholic Today. His blog “Grow in Virtue” is about the journey towards a life filled with more virtue, faith, simplicity, generosity and far less complexity. He is listed on Top Catholic Blogs and is writing his first book, which he hopes to publish this year.

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