Three Classifications
"A classification of disciples. He says that they are of three kinds : (1) First or best (2) Second or middling and (3) Third or ordinary. The best kind of disciples are those who guess what their Gurus want and immediately carry it out and serve them without waiting for an order from them. The average disciples are those who carry out the orders of their Masters to a letter, without any delay, and the third kind of disciples are those, who go on postponing the carrying out of their orders and making mistakes at every step." – Shri Sai Satcharitra, Ch. 23
Some years ago, three brothers left the farm to work in the  city. They were all hired by the same company at the same pay. Three years  later, Jim was being paid $500 a month, Frank was receiving $1,000, but George  was now making $1,500. 
  
  Their father decided to visit the employer. He listened to the confused father  and said, "I will let the boys explain for themselves." 
  
  Jim was summoned to the supervisor's office and was told:
  
  "Jim, I understand the Far East Importers has just brought in a large  transport plane loaded with Japanese import goods. Will you please go over to  the airport and get a cargo inventory?"
Three minutes later, Jim returned to the office. "The  cargo was one thousand bolts of Japanese silk," Jim reported. "I got  the information over the telephone from a member of the crew." 
  
  When Jim left, Frank, the $1,000 a month brother, was called. "Frank,"  said the supervisor, "I wish you'd go out to the airport and get an  inventory of the cargo plane which was just brought in by Far East  Importers." 
  
  An hour later, Frank was back in the office with a list showing that the plane  carried 1,000 bolts of Japanese silk, 500 transistor radios, and 1,000 hand  painted bamboo trays. George, the $1,500 a month brother, was given identical  instructions. Working hours were over when he finally returned.
  
  "The transport plane carried one thousand bolts of Japanese silk," he  began. "It was on sale at sixty dollars a bolt, so I took a two-day option  on the whole lot. I have wired a designer in New York offering the silk at  seventy-five dollars a bolt. I expect to have the order tomorrow. I also found  five hundred transistor radios, which I sold over the telephone at a profit of  $2.30 each. There were a thousand bamboo trays, but they were of poor quality,  so I didn't try to do anything with them."
  
  When George left the office, the employer smiled. "You probably noticed,"  he said, "that Jim doesn't do what he's told, Frank does only what he'd  told, but George does without being told." 
  
  The future is full of promise for one who shows initiative.

 
 
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