Showing posts with label let it go. Show all posts
Showing posts with label let it go. Show all posts

Monday, April 6, 2015

#15 on the Top 10 List of Life Thieves - "Woulda, Shoulda, Coulda"

Doesn't make sense does it - #15 on a list of the top ten things that steal your life. Actually, it's pretty simple. I keep finding more and more things that steal our lives. Remember, we can directly relate our lives, a priceless commodity, to time, another priceless commodity. It's my opinion that life and time are almost one and the same.

I'm going to count down from #15, although I may insert some additional life thieves as they occur to me or as you and others contribute ideas on life thieves.

Woulda, Shoulda, Coulda

How much time have you wasted contemplating things you would have done, should have done or could have done . . . if only? If you're honest, you're going to admit there has been any number of times you've spent time with these contemplations. These are life thieves.

I don't know a single person I've ever met who hasn't wasted time on this kind of retro living. Let's face it, even the best of us have some kind of regrets over missed opportunities in our occupational, relationship, hobby, financial, medical, physical, health, fitness, spiritual, etc. lives. The reality is that none of us can take advantage of all the opportunities that have and will continue to pass through our lives.

Life is nothing if not an ongoing series of choices and decisions. If we attempted to take advantage of every one of the opportunities passing our way we'd never accomplish and achieve anything. We'd go crazy attempting to do it all. It's impossible. We each made the correct decision, as we saw it, at the time. Yes! Maybe in hindsight it wasn't the best or right decision. But, remember, to be a successful professional baseball player and win the batting title for a given year only requires as few as 3.3 hits for every 10 times at bat. That means the champion batter made bad choices in swinging or not swinging the bat as many as 6.7 times at bat.

My sister often says to me how her life would be different if our father hadn't died at 42 when she was a few months over 10 years old. I, of course, agree with her. But, then I add, of course all three of our lives (we were three siblings) would have been different. But, would they have been better or worse than they turned out? The reality, is that each of the three of us have made thousands of choices during our lives since our father's death. We would have made those thousands of choices even if he had lived. Would we have made the same choices? Possibly, but it's not likely all of them would have been the same. There is no way of knowing if our lives would have turned out better or worse had he lived? So, it's a waste of time and our precious life contemplating something that can't be known.

Woulda!

Contemplating what you would have done or what would have happened if only you had made a different choice is a fruitless waste of your life. It's unknowable what path your life would have taken if you would have done something different.

If the baseball player who didn't win the batting title for a specific year would have swung a few more times he might have won the title. But, that's unknowable. Perhaps, he may have been walked onto base several of the times he didn't swing and positioned his team with the winning run for that game. Perhaps, if had swung a few more times he might have struck out and his team would have lost the game.

The best plan is not to focus on what would have happened if you had made a different choice. The reality is what you actually chose is now history. Focusing on what you learned from that choice can hopefully help you make a different and better choice in the future should a similar circumstance present itself.

Perhaps, you made a really great choice. Again, that choice is now history. You've benefited from the choice. Will you use the success from that choice to make another similar choice today or tomorrow?

There is no percentage in concerning yourself with what would have been. It's history and carved in the annuls of time. Now, is when you are living. Now, is the only time that really counts. Stop wasting your life on the "Wouldas" you can't change.

Shoulda

How many times has someone told you that you should have done something? How much time have you spent time contemplating the things you now know you should have done yesterday, last week, last month, thirty years ago when you met the person who became your spouse, when you accepted a job that wasn't really what you wanted, but you chose to do it for the money?

Yes! We all should have done many things differently. We should have said 'No' to someone when we said 'Yes' knowing it was the wrong choice. We should have gotten to know the person better that we said yes to or proposed to who became our spouse. We should have completed high school, the college degree, the graduate degree, become a doctor, lawyer, engineer, clergy, professional athlete, etc. But, we didn't and now we're obsessing over what we should have done and how different our lives would have been.

Again, the outcome of what you should have done if you followed that path is unknowable. Again, your life is now history and carved in the annuls of time. There is no time machine allowing you to go back and do what you now believe you should have done. This is a waste of your precious present life.

How about focusing on all the positive things that actually have happened in your life because of the choices you made. Believe me, there are far more than you may realize because you are retro focused and living in the past. If you've never watch a movie titled "Mr. Holland's Opus" starring Richard Dreyfus, perhaps you should. This could give you a positive perspective or spin on your life. You may not realize how many lives you've touched in a positive way because of the path you've trod. Richard Dreyfus's character, Mr. Holland, thought he had missed out on life and the dream he had for himself. I won't give away the end of the movie, but I will only say his eyes were opened.

Coulda

Yes! We all could have done many things differently during our lives. It doesn't matter how old you currently are, there are things you could have done. But, once again, there is no percentage in wasting your present precious life focusing on what you could have done. This kind of thinking is often associated with guilt over something. Perhaps you did something to hurt someone physically, mentally or emotionally. Maybe you said 'No' when you now feel you could have said 'Yes."

None of this matters. Time never goes backward, it only marches on. Perhaps you need to tell all the people in your life that you appreciate them for who they are and what they mean to you. Maybe there are people you need to sincerely say, "I love you," to. Perhaps someone did a favor for you and you neglected to thank them appropriately. Are you carrying a grudge, maybe for years, against someone who wronged you (or so you felt) at some time in the past and you've never forgiven them.

Yes! You could have done all these things back then including apologizing or forgiving someone. But, once again, it's a waste of your present precious life to think about, focus on or obsess over any of these things when you can simply take immediate action to change it all. Maybe they have passed away and left this Earth. Contact their offspring or siblings and take the action with them.

Yes! You could have made a different career choice or accepted a different job, or sky dived, or scuba dived or skied or taken up acting or sang solo, in a group or with a choir, written a book, painted YOUR masterpiece, led a group of people on a hike up a mountain, etc. So, why are you obsessing about it now? I know people of all ages who are doing these things. Yes! They could have done them a long time ago, but they aren't focusing or obsessing on what they could have done, they are doing these things NOW, in the present.

I have a friend and former author of mine who played in a rock and roll band when he was in high school and college and loved music. But, he chose to become a professional salesman for a major Fortune 500 corporation. He became so successful (after a near fatal bout with cancer while in his mid 20's) that he became an international sales trainer. He had a very successful career.

Then one day, 9/11 happened. This changed the dynamics of his seminar business. And then in 2008 the Big Recession knocked him out of the game again. He was in his 50's. So, he got together with a group of friends and formed a rock and roll band. Yes! He could have done music back when he was young, but that wasn't his focus. Today he isn't thinking about what he could have done. He's doing it and having the time of his life.

Bury the Past and All Your Woulda, Shoulda, Couldas

Your life equates to time. They are the two most priceless things we have. We were born wealthier than most of us ever fully realize. Don't waste your life thinking about, focusing on and obsessing over what your woulda, shoulda or coulda done. The past is the past. It's unchangeable. But, NOW is here. I commend you to review, if you've already read them before, or read, if you haven't already, my "12 Steps for Living Free." You'll find a link to the right of this post under the "Pages" listing. There are lots of ideas there to help you get started.

As the Nike Shoes slogan says, "Just Do It!"

Friday, September 5, 2014

Why We Buy More Stuff Than We Need

My Front Porch during my massive uncluttering and downsizing in 2008. 
Why did I even own this stuff? But, wait! There's more.  
I was sitting in my friend's 91 year old mother's living room the other evening engaging in some conversation with this delightful woman, older than my own mother would have been at this time. She was telling me she had decided to go through some of the closets, in her way too large a home for one widowed person of her age, to get rid of some "stuff." She pointed to her foot she held up prominently and said, "Ed, how do you like my new shoes?" I commented that they looked nice.

She then explained that she found this and another pair of new shoes, neither of which had ever been worn by her or the person who gave them to the Goodwill Store in town. She bought them, not because she actually needed them (of course, they were her size and fit properly), but because they were only $2.00 per pair. Who could pass up a deal like that. She didn't need the shoes and she wouldn't have bought these particular shoes in a shoe store if she actually needed shoes, but hey, who could afford to pass up a deal like that even if you don't need whatever it is? 
. . . READ MORE

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Five Great Regrets

Sometimes inspiration just jumps up and smacks you in the face, like this morning. I've been working on ideas for posts on "Conspicuous Consumption," "To Be Free or Not To Be Free," "Extravagant Frugality" and "Positivism vs. Negativism." Yes! I often am working on more than one idea at a time for posts. This morning as I was glancing over my email on my smartphone before jumping out of the sack (I get a lot of reading done very early this way), I noted a post on one of the Vandwelling forums I'm active on from my, yet to meet in-person, friend, VWRob. Rob travels these United States in his version of a van. Well, from what I can gather, it's actually a motorhome, but vandwelling is as much about philosophy and attitude as it is about the kind of vehicle one chooses to enjoy the lifestyle with. Rob is also a Living Free reader and offers excellent thoughts to me from time to time.

This morning, he included a link to a Facebook post from a nurse who has spent part of her recent career (and may still be) caring for those individuals facing the end of life, typically within a relatively short period of time, like weeks. Here's the direct link if you're interested in looking at it yourself: http://bit.ly/1i4qxb2. Thanks for the inspiration, Rob.

Regrets 

The dictionary says that a regret is a feeling of sadness or disappointment about something that you did or did not do. Now, I don't think I've actually every met someone who hasn't expressed some kind of regrets at one time or another. We all do things we regret doing after the fact or have missed opportunities to do one or more things and we live to regret it. So, it's not like any of us are unfamiliar with the word, the manifestation or the feeling of regret.

But, why do we have these regrets? It's because everything we do in life is about choices. The only things we have no choice over are the involuntary functions of our mind and body. Everything else, even as simple as getting out of bed (or not) when we wake up, whether we will eat and what we will eat, to when and if we'll go to bed at the end of the day is a choice. It's likely we'll experience one or (most likely) more regrets everyday. We ordered the hamburger, but when you smelled the chicken sandwich someone near you was eating, you regretted not getting the chicken sandwich. That's a pretty simple example. But, it could be that you never made your true feelings known to that gal or guy you went to the college or high school prom with and you later realized that you missed the person you should have been spending your life with. Or, you studied in college or vocational or technical school and after completing your studies and receiving your degree or certification, you realized that what you spent the time learning is not what you really want to do with your life. The list of regrets can go on forever.

Here's the reality, some regrets are benign and will be forgotten quickly as a new day begins. Others are more important and may be with you for a lifetime. The regrets expressed by the dying patients to the nurse from this article are probably the worst kind. They are the regrets that you will go to your grave with and no longer have the opportunity to change the course of your life to alleviate the sting of these regrets. I'm calling them Five Great Regrets. It was these regrets, though I hadn't actually articulated them or even realized they were motivating forces, that were the major reasons I made the dramatic and, to some people, drastic change in my life and lifestyle in 2008. Five years earlier I dealt with my own mortality when I dealt with the prostate cancer I was diagnosed with. I took time for myself that year and realized that life wasn't as serious as I had been making it all my life. I was committed and driven. I, subconsciously, believed that I was going to change the world through my entrepreneurial endeavors. The bottom line finally began to hit home. A very tiny, fraction of a fraction of the people who have, do and will walk on this planet will make those Earth changing contributions. If I were destined to be one of them, then something should have already have manifest itself. Now, that's not to say that I may still make an Earth changing contribution between now and the time I take my last breath. I'm a firm believer in saying, "never say never." But, now I'm focused on not having to face these Five Great Regrets (or at least all of them) when it's my time to go.

So here they are as reported by the nurse, Sina Anvari

Five Great Regrets

#1. Wishing one had the courage to live a life true to himself or herself instead of living the life others expected of them.

This seems to be the biggest regret of all those reported. I've quoted Shakespeare several times in this blog, specifically from Hamlet, "To thine own self be true . . ." What amazes me, as I think about this, is that this is not a new discovery or some modern revelation. Shakespeare was speaking about this some 500 years ago. And, if you search back, you'll find references going back to the ancient Greek, Roman and Chinese philosophers among others.

The biggest part of this regret was that most people die having not lived out even half of their dreams. I dare say that a large percentage of those lived out only a very small number of their dreams. Instead, they lived up to the expectation of others including parents, siblings, spouses and, yes, even offspring. I always refer to all those who know what's right for you as the "Committee of They." They know better. They may not know your dreams, but even if they do know them, they will make sure you know that your dreams are impractical or unrealistic.

The worst part seems to be when the individuals realize that they have this regret because of their own choices. I can completely relate to this because I can recall any number of choices that I've made that actually curtailed my personal dreams. What's even worse is when you do follow your dreams and heart and then feel guilty because others feel you didn't respect their advice or wishes.

#2.  Wishing one hadn't worked so hard.

Wow! This is a real guilt trip. We of the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boomer Generation were taught and had it drilled into us that hard work would insure us of success in life - at least, at some level. Think about it. We nominally have a 40-hour workweek. Add roughly an hour for lunch and a couple breaks and between a half hour and an hour a day each way for commuting to and from work. On the five-day workweek schedule, that accounts, nominally, for 60 hours a week. Deduct another 45 hours for rest/sleep and now 105 hours of our week are gone. That leaves approximately 63 hours and 35 of those are the balance of the weekend. So, there are approximately 5.5 hours per day to spend time with the kids and spouse, prepare and eat meals, help with homework and get ready for work in the morning. Of course, the weekend is typically spent taking care of laundry, cleaning the house, fixing the house and car, shopping and other utilitarian things. Viola! There goes another week.

After spending about 40 years of my life in business working 10 to 16 hour days, six and seven days a week, seldom taking any recreational time off, I really understand what this is all about. Now, in my case, I did make a choice to work from my home for all but about ten years of my life. I did that so I could be around for my son and spend time with my wife. Of course, she worked about as hard as I did since we both worked together in our businesses. So, for me, this regret will be a little less than for others.

But, really, were we really blessed with the bounty of this planet and all the beauty it offers and given a finite amount of time, more for some, less for others - just to work most of that time away? I think not. There's something wrong with the picture and this model.

#3. Wishing one had the courage to express one's feelings.

This is another big one. I don't know why we have so much trouble telling each other we love each other - sincerely. Or I guess, if we're being honest and expressing our feelings, we should be able to tell someone that we dislike or despise them, do or don't agree with them, accept or reject their philosophies or whatever it might be. Actually, many people may shorten their lives or endure illnesses of various kinds due to carrying around unresolved resentments and bitterness throughout, what can often end up being, the majority of their lifetimes.

So, instead of carrying that burden, why can't we simply be honest with those we have unresolved issues with? Sure, it is going to change the relationship, most likely, but maybe that's what should be. Either opening doors of honesty can develop new levels of trust, respect and appreciation for one another or, maybe, it will just end a relationship that's been toxic for too long and is poisoning you and shortening your life. It's too late to find out on your deathbed.

#4. Wishing one had stayed in touch with his or her friends.

How often do you find yourself going through old photos or yearbooks or letters or memorabilia and recalling memories of old friends and great times? Well, I'll tell you, now that I'm considered a "senior citizen," I find myself doing this fairly frequently. I might be traveling through a town I haven't been to in decades. Perhaps, as I did recently, one will return home to a hometown that was left behind decades before. As you drive past your own homes and those of your friends from childhood, school, church or other religious institution, college, restaurants, movie theaters, etc., what memories arise? Do you remember the people you hung out with, the guys or gals you dated, the sporting events, movies, church retreats, etc.? Whatever happened to all those people?

Okay, with the Internet and services like Facebook, Google+ and even LinkedIn, to mention a few, you may be able to reconnect with some of these old friends. Perhaps, some were very close friends. Others may have simply been part of the group you hung out with. All these years have gone by. You know what's happened in your life. In most cases, it's been an eventful life you couldn't have imagined when you knew these people. But, what's happened in their lives. I have one friend I was in the Air Force with in San Antonio, Texas. I left Texas for my assignment in Washington, DC. My friend was first assigned to Thailand and then to Korea. We kept in contact by letter for a year or so. Then we went our ways and on with our lives. Interestingly, both of us wondered whatever happened to the other. Then, a quarter century later, with the help of a new thing called the Internet, we reconnected. It turns out we'd only been separated by distances of between 35 to 70 miles all those years. Since we reconnected in 1996 we've been there for each other, helped each other through many life challenges, have traveled around the U.S. and some international places and we just count on each other being there through good times and bad.

I've been reconnecting with many old friends over the past few years. Some were high school, college and graduate school friends. Some worked for me as employees. Some were business partners. The list of connections and friendships from a lifetime is very long. It doesn't take much to do some searching and hopefully locate them through the various Internet services now available. Drop a card in the old snail mail if you can't find an email address, but have a street address. Send an email if they do have an email address. Connect with them on the social networks. Pick up the phone and call them and just chat for a while. Don't wait until it's too late and regret it. One of my high school buddies whose email address I had and had planned to connect one day, died rather suddenly at age 65 a couple months before he planned to retire at 66. I now regret that I never made the effort to contact him.

#5. Wishing one had allowed himself or herself be happier.

This is very common according to the nurse who wrote the article. And, I guess you could say that I've harped on this being happy idea for several years on the blog. As the nurse pointed out and so have I, happiness is a choice we can all make. It's a state of mind, an attitude, if you will. Why do so many people wait so long to realize this and then regret they hadn't spent most of their lives happy? Why do we feel we must be like Job from the book of Job in the Bible? Why do we feel like we have to carry the burdens of the world on our shoulders? If our brother or sister or adult children or living, aged parents or close friends or professional co-workers or employees or employers are unhappy, why do we feel we have to carry all, part or any of their burden? Lots of questions here, but this is what so many of us do, I dare say, for at least part of our lifetime, if not most of it.

Believe me when I tell you, you and I cannot, let me add emphasis to that - CANNOT - make anyone else happy. Everyone has their own lot in life and their own burdens to bear. Money doesn't solve it. Taking the responsibility for someone else's actions does not solve it. We can try our hardest to show others the answers, solutions, alternate routes or whatever to their ultimate happiness, but if the individual chooses to remain in their own situation, muck and mire, you and I will not make them happy. And, certainly, by us putting on our own sack cloth and ashes and being miserable (as the saying goes, misery loves company) we don't do anything to change their attitude or state of mind, we're simply making twice as many people miserable and unhappy.

Interestingly, some of the happiest people are those with the least amount of money and material possessions. Once they accept what they actually have and choose to be happy about what they do have, they change their attitude and state of mind. On the other hand, those who have very large amounts of money, even fortunes and material possessions, often are some of the unhappiest people because they have all kinds of concerns and worries about what they have, keeping it and getting more. I still don't get people who use drugs, alcohol, shopping, eating, gambling and other addictions to numb their unhappy state. None of these things will provide happiness, only misery down the road. And, I'm sorry. I refuse to consider any of these things "diseases." You don't get an alcohol or drug or gambling - name your addiction - bacteria or virus. You make a conscious choice to partake in this dangerous game. Few win, many lose, many hurt or destroy other lives and then they want society to fix them because they are "sick." Wrong and I don't care what the AMA or American Psychological Association says.

BE HAPPY - NOW! Don't wait until you're lying there thinking of all the things you allowed to pass you by and regret it now. Simply make a decision to be happy. Think happy thoughts. Stop watching the news. Stop listening to all the political claptrap. Don't take life or yourself seriously. Don't bear your employer's burdens - if you choose to work for someone else (yes, it's another choice), do it joyfully and do the best job you can, but don't take on the employer's responsibility. That's his or her choice. Life is way, way too short (and some have it cut off very prematurely) to not be happy most of the time. It's an attitude, a state of mind and YOUR CHOICE!

So, there you have it. My take on Five Great Regrets. Everyone will have some regrets when they die. There are some things that it's just too late to do anything about, even now. And, please, if you haven't realized it, understand that virtually everyone dies with "unfinished business." But, why not make your death bed regrets small ones and work on eliminating these Five Great Regrets now while you still have, hopefully, plenty of time. 

Saturday, June 15, 2013

The Cluttered Mind - Mine!

You may have noticed that I've not been posting as much over the last couple months as I had been. I guess I could use the excuse of writer's block. However, a more accurate description is that my mind has become cluttered. It's not been any one particular reason. There has just been a lot going on and I've allowed it to distract me from my primary mission . . . living free and writing about it.

So, what are these things that have distracted me? Well, certainly there has been a lot in the news lately. We've had industrial explosions in Texas and Louisiana; tornadoes in Texas, Oklahoma and other places; floods in various parts of the country; out of control wild fires (one of my former brother and sister in law's house has very likely been destroyed in Colorado); other kinds of weather related events, government scandals, not one, of course, but numerous scandals building on one another; continued unrest, escalating wars, political outbreaks and protests in new places in the world. Additionally, it was time for me to have my routine check-up and my annual cancer follow-up, plus I've had a lame shoulder and arm for the past eight months or so and it had me very concerned. And then my Medicare plan has just set me back on my heels. I've also been working on the annual Veteran Speakers Retreat I coordinate every year. This is the 12th year and my last. I have identified a new team to take over and replace me for next year's retreat, but I need to transfer everything over to them and bring them up to speed. Finally, I had a small project with a regular long time client to work on with him in the Washington, DC metro area.

Okay! So, the news is the news. I accept and agree fully that there is nothing I can do about all the events that blast forth from the one-eyed monster, the NPR programs and my Internet news feeds. However, It's impossible to remain completely oblivious to all the local, national and world events going on around us. For one thing, even on the most indirect level, all of these things impact us and we should remain informed at the very least. Certainly there is nothing you or I can do about the weather, floods or forest fires. There is little we can do about industrial explosions or train derailments and other catastrophic accidents. The government scandals, while not our direct fault, are, at least, indirectly a result of our collective action in electing the people who supposedly represent us and are supposed to look out for our interests as a society.

The point is, we live in a very complicated society and world and even when we work hard at simplifying and living simply, there are things beyond our direct control that complicate our lives and can lay a negative pall over life in general. Although, like anyone, I can get depressed, I do not suffer from clinical depression or have a depressive personality. But, I sure feel sorry for anyone who does suffer from depression and lets this stuff get to them.

It's very easy in this complicated society, no matter how simple we attempt to keep our lives, to be overrun by all this negativity. In my case, I call it a cluttered mind. I'm simply processing too much information and it does distract me from the beauty and light of simplicity and all the good things going on around me.  
Some of the good things include my doctor telling me that after ten years with no recurrence of the cancer he treated me for in 2003, it's unlikely I'll ever have a recurrence at this milestone. He declared me cured. Believe me, if you are a cancer survivor that is a jubilant and triumphant moment when you hear those words. My weight loss plan is continuing to progress. My primary care doctor is pleased with the progress of keeping my blood pressure in zone along with my cholesterol. I went to a physical therapist to evaluate my lame shoulder and arm and was relieved to learn that it is not a torn rotator cuff, which was my concern. With simple exercises and stretching the problem should clear up fully. This is all good.

But, then a little glitch appears when I find out that the Medicare plan I signed into for this year isn't what it stated in the brochures. Once again, it's the small, fine print that sneaks up and hits you up the back of the head. So, now I have to go through a bunch of letters and waiting to deal with the government, something I do my level best to avoid at all costs. This can cause mind clutter.

Well, I've allowed all this "static" to clutter my mind and distract me from my real mission in life. But, it's time to get back on track and follow "my plan" for my life. The Veteran Speakers Retreat is two months away, after which I'll take care of paying the bills and pass everything off to the new team. My spring and summer seasons in the future are then free. I'm refocusing my priorities toward getting the van (My McVansion) built up for getting back out on the open roads. I'm doing more downsizing. I'm focusing on the "Living Free" blog and setting up my other niche blogs.

I pass this on to you to illustrate just how easy it is to have your mind and plans hijacked and cluttered by too many things that, in reality, are not truly important. I'm currently reading a couple different books that are inspiring me. I've read some great blog posts recently that have made some terrific points I want to share with you. I've added a new piece of technology to my arsenal and I'll share my thoughts on that as well. So, here comes some great (I hope you'll agree) new stuff.  

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Living Your Dreams or Living In Regret


"How much better to know that we have dared to live our dreams than to live our lives in a lethargy of regret." -- Gilbert Caplin

This quotation was waiting for me this morning when I opened my "baby blues" to start a new day. Today is not a particularly inspiring day as far as the weather goes. It's cold and there is either rain, sleet or freezing rain or a combination of two or more of them falling all day. But, that's okay because I'm out of the rain and in a warm, protected environment. This weather doesn't really bother me too much because I know it could be a lot worse and I also know it's going to change. As a matter of fact, tomorrow it's supposed to be sunny with moderate temperatures.

So I was inspired by these words and I've said similar things in this blog in the past. I've reminded you that this gift of life we have is only for a brief window in an infinite continuum of time. It's a miracle to be born. And, for most of us, we have no idea when or how we'll die and leave this life. So, the only time we have is NOW! Yet, so many, I dare say, the vast majority of the human species allow this life to speed by, filled with doing things that do not resemble our true dreams until one day we are caught up in this, so-called, lethargy of regret. Thoreau wrote in Walden, “The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. What is called resignation is confirmed desperation. From the desperate city you go into the desperate country, and have to console yourself with the bravery of minks and muskrats. A stereotyped but unconscious despair is concealed even under what are called the games and amusements of mankind."

Of course we are so caught up in our busy lives of doing whatever it is that keeps us so busy and from our dreams that we don't realize our despair and desperation . . . well, not until it's usually too late to go back. "All the world's a stage and all the men and women  merely players . . ." From Shakespeare's, As You Like It. And, as I've also said before, this is it, there are no dress rehearsals and no do-overs.

As I continued through my morning emails and various blog and ezine feeds, I found one from my long time friend, speaker and author, Tim Connor. I guess Tim and I go back about 32 or 33 years. Tim is a sales trainer. He wrote a book titled Soft Sell. Back around 1980 or so, I worked with Tim in producing an audio version of the book. He is one of the most prolific writers I've ever met. I lovingly say that Tim Connor is a writing fool - but I say that with love and respect because he loves to write, he writes from his heart, he puts his soul into his work and he loves to help other people and see them succeed in life.

The title of Tim's ezine article this morning is The Seasons of Life. I highly recommend that you read the entire article that you can find here. There are important points about living the dreams and not living with regrets. One of the things that Tim did (and does so well) is create a list of important things to consider about whatever his topic might be. Today's article had a list of things to consider and I'm reprinting that list here with his permission.

-Always be reading, learning and growing.
-Make no assumptions.
-Don’t take anything personally.
-Don’t let circumstances determine your behaviors and attitudes.
-Always do your best.
-Turn off outside negative influences.
-Surround yourself with the right people.
-Accept that failure and problems are normal.
-Learn to see failure, disappointment and adversity as learning tools.
-Don’t let others push your emotional buttons.
-Life isn’t about what’s happening but how you learn from what’s happening.
-Optimism is a better life approach than pessimism.
-Success and achievements do not define you.
-Life is about relationships and not stuff.
-Life isn’t about getting but giving.
-There is no such thing as future security – it’s an illusion.
-Fear is the number one negative influence that must be managed.
-Have fun and laugh a lot no matter what is going on.
-Stress isn’t what’s happening but how you react to what’s happening.
-Never stop dreaming.
-Age is just a number. We are all going to get old but we don’t have to grow old.
-Control what you can and let go of what you can’t control.
-What you believe defines you.
-Your thoughts become circumstances.
-The past is dead – let it go.  Stay in the present – it’s all you have.
-Manage your expectations – all disappointment is caused by unmanaged expectations.
-Trust God every minute of every day.
-Be filled with appreciation and gratitude every moment.
-Take full responsibility for your life.
-Do what you love with passion, enthusiasm and courage.
-You can’t push the river.  Relax.

 Don't you just love lists? I am either throwing them at you or having you create your own lists. Listen, I can't remember everything on all these lists. I have to review the lists I make for myself, so I cut myself some slack just as you should. Each of Tim's considerations are tiny nuggets of simple wisdom. Most likely you are familiar with all or at least some of them. But, they are in Tim's article and posted here not as a directive, but as a reminder. These are the kinds of things, because we know about them, that we tend to often take for granted and they get caught up in the undertow of life circumstances. So, they are here for you to review. Some you may actually be living, others you needed a reminder to adjust your attitude and your priorities. Use them as you will.


Tim has a wealth of information available, and while he's not paying me for an endorsement, if you need some inspiration or maybe a bit of a kick in the hindquarters to get your "mojo" up again I recommend, without reservation, that you visit Tim Connor's Web site at www.timconnor.com. You can even email him directly, if you'd like to at tim@timconnor.com.

Now, get up off your lethargic apathy and go live your dreams. 

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Step #9 Making Amends


The late Charlie "Tremendous" Jones, a friend and mentor, who was one of the most forgiving and grudge free individuals I've ever known. He worked at accepting and loving everyone and did his best to carry the least guilt possible.

There are two pieces of baggage that are carried around for too long by too many people. I’m calling them the Double G’s. G number one is Guilt. G number two is Grudge. There may be some tangents we can reach out to from the Double G’s, but in my book they all focus back to Guilt and Grudge.

Both guilt and grudges burden us with significant and often extreme emotional weight. Some of them are trivial and, yet, can cause pain and scarring. Guilt or grudges can and, unfortunately, last a lifetime. They can destroy family relationships and friendships. They are sometimes childish in nature, but have grown out of proportion. Often, they can be resolved with simple, direct, honest communication.

Some people simply have a low tolerance for the human foibles of others and will carry a grudge against a person, a business, an institution or whoever or whatever has caused their jaw to tighten. Some people are ultra sensitive and take offense and carry hurt feelings forever because someone who isn’t very sensitive, diplomatic or tactful said or did something that caused some emotional pain.

Here is a fact! Life is short! In fact, life is too short! And, sometimes life ends abruptly with someone leaving this world with unresolved guilt or grudges and there is never any closure or amends. According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary the word amends means compensation for a loss or injury. Amends is also the ninth step in the Alcoholics Anonymous Big Book and, while I’m not going to go into it as deeply as they do, I recommend you look it up and read it if you’re interested and so inclined.

I’m going to address making amends as it relates to the most common emotional baggage that falls under guilt and grudges. Loss or injury covers a lot of territory, the most extreme of which most people are not involved in.

“It's hard for me to say I'm sorry”


It really is hard to say, “I’m sorry” in so many cases. That subtitle is a line from the lyrics of one of the hit songs produced by the great jazz-rock group, Chicago. The song title is After All That We’ve Been Through. Obviously, I’m addressing the first of the Double G’s – GUILT!

Guilt is an emotion that you learn very early. Once again, your parents, grandparents, siblings, teachers, religious influences, even your friends teach you about guilt at the very earliest time you can begin to use reasoning at the most basic level. If you wet your pants as you’re being bathroom trained, you’re shamed and made to feel guilty because “you’re a big boy/girl now and big boys/girls don’t wet their pants.” You take a toy away from another child in Sunday School and you’re admonished and made to feel guilty. These are simplistic examples, however, this is where guilt begins.

If you’re brought up in even a moderately religious environment you learn about the “Original Sin.” There are even jokes made about various religions and guilt. Pretty much all Judeo-Christian religions impress a guilt component with sin. You are guilty of this sin or that sin. In some religions you confess your sin and ask for forgiveness.

Guilt ranges from one extreme to another. It can be something as simple as saying something that hurts someone else’s feelings. This is often done without malice, just an error in your choice of words and how you expressed yourself. While at the other extreme it can be causing permanent physical injury or even the death of another person. This sometimes occurs by poor judgment and other times through an accident that couldn’t have been avoided. Of course, there is always the extreme where you actually set out with malice towards someone or some group and purposely inflict pain or injury, physically, mentally or emotionally and often all three.

The point is that most people other then sociopaths and psychopaths will make mistakes in their relationships with others and harbor remorse. Sometimes the other person will be so deeply wounded emotionally that they will break off the relationship, including relations with family members. If the wounding isn’t as deep, the relationship may continue to exist, however, it will be strained and distant. Here is the challenge. Can you, if you made the mistake and caused the emotional wounding or, perhaps, it was a physical injury, stand up to the person you hurt and not only apologize, but ask for their forgiveness?

Guilt is guilt. But, here is another fact. History is history. In other words, once you’ve done something or said something that has deeply wounded someone else, those words or actions can never be undone. It is carved in stone just as surely as the great statues of history were carved in stone. Time will weather the stone and perhaps the sharpness of the original carving will be worn away and softened a little. However, the statue was carved and at least some parts of it will likely remain forever. So, you can’t go back and erase the words you spoke or wrote. If it’s a physical injury, perhaps, it’s something that the person will recover from, but there will likely be a scar as a reminder.

Forgiveness


It’s time to start letting go of your guilt. You can’t undo whatever has caused this feeling of guilt. You can’t change what has happened. It’s likely that you can’t fix whatever it is. So, the only thing you can do is let it go and move forward. The present is the only time you have and the future is not guaranteed. So, why carry something into whatever future there is that can’t be undone, changed or fixed?

This is important. Read and digest these next few paragraphs because until you accomplish this step you can’t move forward. The first person you’re going to ask for forgiveness is . . . YOURSELF. That’s right! You’re carrying guilt because you are human and fallible. Everyone experiences what is called “self-talk.” That’s where you talk to yourself either out loud or in your head. Once again, because you have been conditioned to do what is always right and expected of you, you don’t cut yourself any slack. When you make a mistake you chastise yourself. “Boy, am I stupid.” “That was dumb.” “Why can’t I get this right?” “Darn, I knew I’d be late.” Each of these little self-talk chastisements reinforces a subconscious feeling of inadequacy. Of course, you’re perfectly competent and handle thousands of details day in and day out. However, since the time we were children there has been that conditioning that making any mistake is not good and therefore we harbor a subtle guilt.

Well, once again, here is the fact. You are human. Humans make mistakes. Get over yourself. Simply accept the fact that you’re not perfect. And forgive yourself for being a human like everyone else, who also make mistakes. One thing that I’ve adopted for myself is a WYSIWYG (pronounced wiz ee wig) attitude. It stands for “What you see is what you get.” This simply means that you are who you are and you’re a human who makes mistakes, errors in judgment, misspeaks and a myriad of other foibles. You never mean to hurt or injure anyone and you’ll do you level best to never let that occur – BUT IT WILL! So, others can accept you as you are with all your blemishes and warts or they don’t have to have any further relationship with you. But, that will by their choice, not yours. Since you have accepted them as they are, you don’t have any weight to bear from their choice. Essentially, you’re still going to offend or wound someone emotionally, mentally or even physically. It will happen, but you’re going to deal with it right then. You’re going to ask for their forgiveness and move on. If they won’t or can’t forgive you that will be on their shoulders. You’ve expressed your regret for the incident, apologized and asked for their understanding and forgiveness. There is nothing more that can be done.

Forgive yourself for every past transgression, every mistake, every failing, every time you feel you’ve let someone else down and so on. Remember, the only person in this entire world that you HAVE to live with is yourself. How can you live with and accept yourself if you are steeped in guilt. If you’re a religious person and believe in God’s forgiveness of you as a sinner, then how can you place yourself above your God in passing judgment of yourself?

The Amends List


Now you can move on to the next phase of forgiveness. It’s time to start making another list. This list is basically three columns. The first column is where you’re going to list the name of every person you know you’ve hurt or offended in some way at some time. The second column is going to be where you list a very brief description of how you hurt or offended each individual. The third column is where you’ll list an approximate date or time period when the incident occurred. The date or time period doesn’t have to be exact, it simply gives you a time line and shows you how long you’ve been carrying the guilt.

Who are the people you may have “wounded” in some manner? Well, let’s see – how about almost everyone? Okay, I’m being a bit facetious. But, the reality is that the list can include your parents, siblings, grandparents, spouse (including former spouses), children, other relatives, friends (including past boyfriends, girlfriends, buddies, gal pals, etc), neighbors, co-workers and the list goes on. You’re not going to remember everyone and even if you could, you probably have no idea where many of them are anyway. But, this is another dynamic list that you can keep adding to as names, places and incidents come to mind through association.

So, now you have this list you’ve created. What’s next? First, you’re going to forgive yourself for each or these people you’ve trespassed against. It’s another facet of your own unloading baggage process. Then, you’re going to begin, as the opportunity arises, to approach each of these people and apologize to them and ask that they forgive you. Perhaps you don’t know how to approach some of the people you feel have been hurt the most. It might be better to begin with those people who are closer in proximity to you and also with wounds, pains and scars that are not as severe as some of the others.

Many won’t even remember the incident until you remind them and perhaps it didn’t impact them as much as it impacted you. You both may get a good laugh over it. But, the air will be cleared and you’ve made amends. Some may not be as charitable. They may be grudge holders and just can’t let go. That’s okay! You forgave yourself and you apologized to them. If they want to keep that monkey on their back, it’s their choice, but your monkey is gone. Just as you’re downsizing and simplifying your life and feeling lighter and freer, as you shed this baggage of guilt you’ll feel even lighter, freer and certainly more joyful.

It may take some time to approach those people who you may have some very deep guilt about. Perhaps these might be parents or your current or a former spouse. You’ll want to keep procrastinating. DON’T! Remember, you only have the present. Tomorrow may never come for you or the other person. There are things that need to be said and it can weigh very heavy on you if something happens to the other person and the words are never spoken. Some of those words are “I’m sorry,” “I apologize” and “Can you forgive me?”

But, there are three words that can be spoken between all people to bridge wide relationship voids after you’ve apologized and asked for forgiveness. Those words are “I love you.” No matter how the other person responds or whether they forgive you or not, you have released your guilt and while “I’m sorry” or “I apologize” won’t change what happened in the past, it releases you. When you tell the person you love them, you are indicating that no matter what position they take, you truly care about them and respect their right to assume their position. Nothing more is needed. The entire encounter may last for only a few moments or it may open a door that’s been closed for too long.

Finally, some of the people you need to make amends with will have already passed away. You can’t face them and make your amends. If they are in a cemetery you should consider visiting their grave and making your amends there. I realize it’s just a stone marker placed over a buried casket with what’s left of the shell of the person and perhaps you don’t believe in an afterlife or a spirit. But, perhaps, it will just make it easier for you to let go if you visit that gravesite and talk to them out loud as if they could hear you. It surely can’t hurt and it might just make it more real for you.

In the future, I hope you’ll learn to not let this guilt build up and weigh on your mind and heart.  Think of all the time that passed that you could have spent enjoying those people you made amends with if you had only eliminated the baggage when the incident occurred. Life is too short!

Let It Go!  


I have a nurse friend, actually, she’s a psychiatric nurse, who always tells me, “Let it go!” when I go off on a rant about some injustice or issue with someone. She tells me that her granddaughter tells her to “Let it go!” when my nurse friend gets into a snit about something. I thought I was getting free mental health counseling, but as we’ve all heard, “Out of the mouths of babes . . .” The point is that we all allow things to get to us and sometimes we just don’t want to let go.

Grudges are totally useless. Basically, a grudge is a feeling of ill will or resentment towards someone who you feel wronged you, offended you or hurt you in some manner – emotionally, physically, financially or whatever. People who hold grudges can’t let them go. They won’t forgive the person they hold responsible and ultimately, the relationship is either very strained or terminates at worst.

I held a grudge against another business person in the recording industry once. He rented a very expensive, custom-built recorder my business owned for a weekend project. I told him I had a studio session that required the machine be back in my studio by a certain time, early Monday morning. We needed to get it reconnected in our system, check the alignment and be ready at a prescribed time for a recording session with a client. Monday morning came and the recorder was not back in my studio by the prescribed time. Actually, he arrived with the recorder while the client was standing in my studio wondering what was going on. Needless to say there was a lot of anger in that studio by then.

But, that’s not the worst of it. He rolled it in, said a hasty “I’m sorry” left a check on the desk and ran back out the door. We quickly lifted the recorder onto the platform in the control room, hooked up the myriad of cables, turned it on, threaded the alignment tape on the tape transport (this was back in the days of analog, reel-to-reel tape) and looked at the pattern on the oscilloscope. It was horrendous. There was something terribly wrong. Upon closer inspection, we found that the playback head had severe gashes in it, the stainless steel tape guides had been severely crimped and bent, but were turned so they weren’t noticeable from the front of the heads and the wires on the back of the head were resoldered and jury-rigged since they had been ripped out of the head. This was severe and very costly damage and, of course, meant that there was no recording session (lost revenue) that day or for at least a week and a half.

I called the party who had rented the recorder and he said he had no knowledge of any such damage. He refused any responsibility. Needless to say, he was off our rental client list. Two years later I discovered through someone who had been with the offending individual who had rented the recorder that weekend that when they were bringing this extremely heavy and awkward piece of machinery down a flight of stairs, they lost control of it and it slid down the stairs striking the head assembly and causing all the damage.

That’s a long story to illustrate the result of that incident in my life. I held a grudge against that guy for well over 20 years. I told everyone I encountered who might know who he was. I dissed him at every possible opportunity. I told people if he ever crossed a street that I was driving on I’d run him over and then back over him to see what I hit. I harbored vehemence about this individual for all those years. One day, it finally dawned on me that he probably had no idea I was carrying this grudge, this anger about this injustice that he had done to me. He probably forgot all about it. But, all that venom was still eating me inside every time I had a chance to stir it up and relive that incident. The only person who was hurting over this was me and I just kept hurting myself over and over. I finally “Let It Go!” I just decided that I had wasted enough of my life and time over something that was over, done and was never going to change. It was history. Now I only tell the story, as I just did, as an illustration of how futile and dumb a grudge is.

So, are you holding any grudges? There is a reasonable chance you may be. It’s most likely that there won’t be as many grudges you hold against other people as there is guilt you’re carrying. But, once again, you want to make a list with the person’s or organization’s name, the incident and the time period. Perhaps, your grudges won’t be as severe as the story I related. On the other hand, maybe they are more painful, severe or seemingly unforgivable.

Maybe your best friend stole your girlfriend or boyfriend who you intended to ask to marry you or you were expecting to be asked to marry him or her. Possibly your spouse had an affair and broke up what you thought was a solid marriage. Perhaps you worked for an employer for a number of years, had performed well, always achieved high performance evaluations and when a position opened up for a promotion in the company you were qualified for, they gave someone else the position from below your level or hired someone from outside the company. Then there’s the possibility that you loaned something to a friend or relative and they returned it damaged, dirty or even destroyed. The scenarios can go on and on.

Of course, maybe you’re a grudge holder. In other words, you just like holding grudges against people and making them feel bad. It gives you a feeling of power over the relationship. Just about anything is a reason for a good grudge. Someone arrived late for a lunch date and you had another appointment and had to leave right after the other person arrived. You asked to borrow something and they couldn’t for some reason or just wouldn’t loan it to you. Someone was going to pick up something at a store that you needed and forgot to get it and it inconvenienced you. Again, the list of possibilities can go on.

The thing is this, none of these issues matter. A grudge is a senseless waste of time and energy. It doesn’t change any of the issues I just outlined nor would it have changed the issue with my recorder, especially over 20 years later. So, what’s the use? Is this a form of punishment? Is this supposed to bury the other person in the depths of guilt so they’ll feel miserable for the rest of their life? Ultimately, the loser is the grudge holder and if that’s you, then you better do something about changing your thinking.

So, you have your list of grudges, the people you’re holding the grudge against and the time period when the grudge was initiated. One by one, go down that list and “Let it go!” If the person you’re holding the grudge against knows that you’ve been harboring these negative thoughts and feelings all this time, then you owe it to them to go to them and apologize. Wait a minute. Did I say you, the grudge holder, should apologize to the person who triggered your grudge? I most certainly did. If you’ve given them even the slightest reason to deal with any guilt over the incident, especially if they apologized and may have attempted to make amends with you at some point in time, then you need to release them from that guilt.

If they don’t know you’ve been harboring this grudge and, perhaps, don’t even have much of a relationship or any relationship with you, then simply let it go. Bury it. Life is short. Why give yourself ulcers or make yourself susceptible to some other diseases or degeneration by creating a negative environment in your own body. Forgive the person, apologize for holding the grudge and just let it go. Once you do, again, you’ll feel freer and happier with your own life.

Making Amends Leads to Freedom

The bottom line is that we’re all human. Sometimes we make mistakes. Sometimes we say dumb and even hurtful things. Sometime we do things that are thoughtless. Sometimes “life happens” and the result is that someone gets hurt or offended. Carrying guilt around for years is just plain useless because whatever happened to cause you to feel this guilt is not going to disappear from history. It is what it is. Face it! Deal with it! Make amends to the person or people who have been offended or wounded in some way.

The same goes for grudges. A grudge, ultimately, doesn’t really hurt anyone except the person carrying the grudge. It’s another 800-pound gorilla on your back. Life has enough challenges, difficulties and complications without adding your own lead-weighted, useless baggage to the load. Let it go! Again, make your amends.

Forgive yourself. God does and so does the universe. Then forgive everyone who you feel has ever transgressed on you. Then forgive everyone you’ve transgressed upon. Life is short. You can never have enough friends no matter where they come from – family, social friends, co-workers, whoever, wherever. Learn to say simple things like “I’m sorry” and “Can you forgive me?” And then learn to incorporate the sincere use of the three words, “I love you” as it pertains to the specific relationship (remember there are at least 15 ways to define the use of the word love in Step 8 on Relationships).

Living Guilt Free and Grudge Free, the Double G’s, is going to make you freer and happier. You’ll gain or regain stressed or lost relationships and live a richer and more fulfilling life. Just let the Double G’s go and live free.