A Recipe for
Failure
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The other
day I said, “I was worried that Jane (nearly 95 and frail) might not hold up
during your special dinner at the restaurant.”
Immediately
I was scolded, “No, no, no. Don’t say that. That is a negative thought. We don’t
need negative thoughts. That is bad.”
Whoa on me.
I was taken aback. And I felt uncomfortable. I hadn’t meant that I was immersed
in worry, sending sure death pulsing into the Universe. I’d had a fleeting
thought, perhaps improperly expressed, that my friends’ dinner go well, without
being shortchanged by Jane’s needs.
Wondering
from whence came my discomfort, because I don’t mind being scolded, I let the
matter simmer. It flung me far back into my past when I was grabbing onto any
idea which promised me the moon, life without pain and angst, riches, success, beauty
and life forever, O Queen.
That era of
my life was a miserable, terrifying time, for which I am grateful to no end.
Without the horrors, miseries and terrors, I would never have been given the
gifts to help me turn my life around. I am grateful.
I learned
that no matter how hard I tried to stuff the painful and negative aspects of
that time into a box and bury them, they refused to stay underground but
insisted on staring me in the face until such time I got the courage to deal
with them. Courage and grace and tools and self-discipline.
I learned
that when I “thought” something to be the most horrible thing that could happen
in my life, often it was the greatest gift. I simply had to wait for the gift
to unveil itself. Was this easy? Was this fun? Heck, no. I got nowhere by
saying to myself, this is negative so I refuse to think about it.
I also
learned that making real changes in my life took much more than positive
thoughts. It took action. I had to make a decision and put it into action.
Each one of
these prickly gifts, and lucky me, I was gifted a lot, helped me to turn my
life from pain and misery and depression to a pretty dang good life, one with a
lot of friends and laughter. I could tell you some stories, believe me.
I like to
liken life to a battery. A battery has both positive and negative poles and
both are necessary for the battery to work.
I learned to
be grateful when an event, situation, or imagination, hit me upside the head. Learned to be grateful and wait until I could
see what the box really held. ‘Twarn’t easy. I am no judge of what is positive and what is
negative.
For my
friend, maybe her ‘positivity’ works, but for me, I can’t buy into “if I only
think positive thoughts, I will only have positive results.” Like I said, I
tried.
Contrary to
what I just said, I also believe that thoughts are important. They matter. Thoughts
contain energy. They add to the collective unconscious.
I am very
human. I have negative thoughts. Mean and evil thoughts. Ugly thoughts.
Critical thoughts. Worries. Along with kind and loving and generous thoughts.
Human. The thing is, I’ve also learned which ones to hang onto. I choose which
ones to feed and nurture. It’s not easy. That self-discipline-action thing
again.
I have help.
Or Help, if you prefer. I tap into that Help frequently. My Help comes in
various forms, including when from the trenches, I desperately cry out, “Oh,
God, I need help.”
Most of the
time Help comes in human form. You. My friends. My enemies. Or a cloud. Or a
tree. Or a giant philodendron leaf larger than a turkey platter, the most
beautiful leaf I’ve ever seen that stopped me in my tracks. Or a rock. Or a
scent. A sound. A touch from my dog. Or when I stub my toe on the metal screen
door.
My battery
is working. Both poles. When I tried to have only good, pure, sweet positive
thoughts, I only got into more trouble. Maybe it works for you. Celebrate what
works.
For me, it
felt good to sluff off that need to be perfect, thinking only good thoughts, at
which I was an abject failure.
My friend
perceived my words as negative. To me, I was expressing that I cared. I cared
about my elderly friend, and I cared that my friends have a good dinner
together.
We are not
all born on the same page. We don’t all need the same lessons. Maybe even I can
learn to say “I care” instead of “I worry”.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
Begin season
of wretched excess
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