That’s my credo. When I was in my twenties, one of the local talk show hosts in Tulsa, where I grew up, signed off with “If you can’t do what you love, love what you do.â€? Well, I was not doing what I love, so I tried to follow her advice to love what I do. If I could find her now I’d be tempted to punch her in the nose, or at least tell her off. It’s easy to love what you do if you are following the call of your heart. Otherwise, it is impossible.Â
           That, of course, was not the real reason I ignored my own dreams for so long. There was a big long list of other-inflicted and self-inflicted wrong choices. Yet, I consoled myself with her statement and tried to make the best of it, when I would have been better off in the long run had I rebelled.
 Many years later, I was living in Nashville and working as an on-air personality for WAMB radio, and loving it. I wanted a sign-off. I thought about her saying, and realized how much I disagreed with it. Then I remembered a quote I once read from Vincent Van Gogh. It was from a letter to a friend of his and went like this:
“People, let us give our soul to our work and let us work with our heart for our cause and love what we love. How many people give their best efforts to something unworthy… instead of surrendering themselves frankly to the irresistible impulse of their hearts.�
           These two quotes spurred my thoughts toward the importance of picking your vocation based on what you love to do.  And, the thought that I wanted to do everything I do from a heart of love. Of course there are little things we have to do that are not too thrilling, like cleaning the bathroom, or taking out the trash, but I’m talking about the big things. If I’m spending a big portion of my time doing something, a job or a voluntary pursuit, and I cannot do it with a heart of love, if I begrudge it, then that’s a good indication that I shouldn’t be doing it. Thus, my pledge to try to always operate from a position of love. To try to concentrate on doing what I could do with a heart full of love.   And my sign-off became almost a turn-around to the Tulsa talk show host’s sign-off. It was:
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What you can do out of love is your gift to the world.
Do what you love, with love.  Â
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(I am a writer and performer. You can check out both with my audio book “Winds of Change�)