Inspiration Archives: Allen Klein
Allen is an award-winning speaker and best-selling author of 18 books including The Healing Power of Humor and The Art of Living Joyfully.
If I could share 500 words to inspire, this is the important wisdom I'd want to pass along to others...
One of the most important lessons I've learned in my life is that I can rise above any situation; that I don't have to let my circumstance rob me of my joyous spirit; that I can take back my power and not let any person or thing ruin my day, or, for that matter, my life.
Looking back, I realize that I learned that lesson at an early age. When I was seven-years-old, my parents took me to see both Broadway musicals, Carousel and Oklahoma. From that day on I wanted to be the person who created "the pretty stage pictures." I wanted to be a scenic designer.
We arrived late for one of the shows and missed the beginning. So when the show was over, I refused to leave. I thought that, like a movie, I could see the beginning again. That day I was dragged out of the theater kicking and screaming, but my heart never left the theater.
In grade school, I took shoeboxes and made a scene from the book that we were reading in class. Other students wrote book reports; I did dioramas.
In high school, I saw almost every Broadway show, including the opening night of Hello Dolly. In college, I designed many of the school productions and, with the help of one of the professors, got into Yale Drama School.
It was a three-year master's degree program. They admitted twelve students the first year. Then, because they only produced eight plays in their smaller theater the second year, they let go of four designers. I was one of the first to go. I was told I had no talent.
Of course, I was heartbroken. But, even then, I realized that nobody could tell me I couldn't do something if I truly believed I could. After all, I was a "scenic designer" since the sixth grade. I was a designer, at least in my mind, since I saw my first Broadway show. Nobody could tell me I wasn't a designer. Nobody could ruin my day. Nobody could ruin my career. Nobody could ruin my life.
Soon after being booted from Yale, I became an apprentice in the scenic design union in New York City and finally became a full-fledged designer at CBS - television. My fellow classmates at Yale were still designing school productions while I was designing national television shows such as Captain Kangaroo, The Merv Griffin Show, and The Jackie Gleason Show.
Who said I had no talent? Who said I would never be a scenic designer? Nobody was going to ruin my day or my dream. Not even the head of the Yale School of Drama scenic design department.
More recently, that lesson was presented to me again, when I got a speeding ticket. In spite of that, I continued to be joyous that day and continued to repeat my mantra whenever not-so-wonderful stuff happens to me: "No one, or nothing, can ruin my day."
Recent Blog Posts
Abundance flows more freely to you when it continues to flow outward from you, as you pass it on.
May 24, 2013
...
Surrender Equals Peace
May 23, 2013
By Trisha Sugarek. The other night I had such a moment of clarity and sense of surrender that it took my breath away....
As you close your eyes tonight, may you know how blessed you are and celebrate with gratitude.
May 23, 2013
...
Our greatest limitations are the ones we place on ourselves.
May 22, 2013
...


