Tuesday, November 24, 2009

10 HARD Ways to Make Your Life Better

Some of the most worthwhile things in life aren’t easy. One of the things I dislike most about “power of positive thinking”-style personal development philosophies (such as “The Secret”) is the implication that if you just have the right attitude and the right state of mind, the rest will just fall into place. I think it causes a lot of hurt and disappointment in people who invest their time, effort, and of course, money into these systems and find themselves, one or two or five years down the line, exactly where they were before.


“You must not have wanted it badly enough,” the authors of these philosophies seem to be saying. “There must still be something wrong with you.”

I don’t think that, ultimately, God or the Spirits or the Universe or the world “provides”. I think a lot of times the world puts obstacles in our way, and no amount of positive thinking makes them go away. And I think that a lot of the people who are “successful”, by whatever standard you want to use, have as much “wrong” with them as a lot of the ones who aren’t successful. Maybe more.

In any case, wherever the motivation comes from, the things that really make our lives worth living can be quite difficult. (And who knows, maybe thinking positively helps take some of the edge off of doing the hard stuff?) What’s more, they can take a lot of time to do, and even more time to get right. But I think that doing is the important thing, not the result — throwing yourself into something with all your heart, mind, and soul is the success, not the “growing rich” part.

Here, then, are ten things that are really hard to do but which have an incredible power to make your life better.
1. Start a business

My dad, who has been self-employed almost all his life, used to tell me that “Only jerks work for jerks.” Working for someone else puts you at their mercy and subjects you to their whims — and often their poor management skills. Not only that, but the profit of your labor goes into their pockets.

Starting a business puts you in control of your work life, and your money. It’s hard — small businesses fail every day. But the rewards of even a failed venture can far outweigh the risk. Just knowing that your failure was the result of your own choices — instead of a decision made at a corporate office a thousand miles away — can be liberating.
2. Organize a group

What makes you passionate? Chances are, being around other people who are passionate about the same thing would make you even more passionate about it. Often the only thing keeping you and them from coming together is that nobody’s put out a sign saying “Come and talk!” Getting a group going is a tremendous challenge, and very often the personality of the founder leaves a tremendous mark on the group as a whole. Seeing a group grow and take off can be tremendously awarding — but even failing can teach you important things about leadership.
3. Volunteer

I don’t mean spend Thanksgiving at a soup kitchen, though that can often be challenging enough. What I mean, though, is to make a long-term investment in your community by joining school committees, donating three hours a week in a shelter, hosting a monthly read-along at the library, tutoring at-risk children after school, teaching adult literacy classes at a local prison, or any of a million ways to play a role in the lives of people who need you. Perhaps the most pressing need in our society is for people to take an interest in and engage with their communities.
4. Take an active role in your children’s’ activities

Pick one thing your child does and commit yourself to it. Coach their team, become a Brownie leader, spend a weekend day in the workshop with them, buy a bike and ride along with them — make their passions your own. Don’t crowd them — especially if you have teenagers — but show them that you value something they do by giving them your time and interest.
5. Start a family

I don’t mean have kids. That can be all too easy! Make the decision to have a family, which means to give of yourself fully to another person or several people. Risk being vulnerable by sharing your fears, quirks, and failures with someone else; you might find it makes you stronger than ever before.

This transcends marriage and parenthood. There are lots of people who can’t marry because the law prevents it. There are people who can’t have children. These are not the essential ingredients of family. The essential ingredients are love, mutual respect, trust, and open giving. Find (or make) someone you can share that with.
6. Write a book

It feels really, really good to see your name on a book cover, but it feels even better to know that someone, somewhere, might find his or her life changed by something you’ve written. Share your particular expertise, whether it’s story-telling or woodworking, with the world — or just your family. Time isn’t the big issue (though it is an issue — don’t let the positive thinkists tell you otherwise!) but if you commit yourself to a page a day — a couple hundred words — within a year you’ll have a pretty decent-sized manuscript. That’s something to work with!
7. Learn an art

Take painting lessons, a pottery workshop, a music class, whatever — learn to express yourself and you might find a self worth expressing. Don’t settle for being a “Sunday painter” — devote yourself to an art and master it.
8. Run for office

The world needs smart, dedicated, and upright people to take care of all the fiddly details of making things run. As it happens, running for local office isn’t as challenging as you’d think (which isn’t to say it’s easy) — Michael Moore, the filmmaker, ran for school board while he was still in high school. Just for kicks. And won! It’s fine to have your heart set on the White House or Capital Hill, but try your hand at city councilperson, county registrar, or something closer to home first. And be clean — run for the experience of putting your community on a better path, and not for the power.
9. Take up a sport

Enough with the working out already! Sure, you want to be healthy, but the whole treadmill-running, iPod-listening, 45-minutes-after-work thing is a little anti-social, don’t you think? OK, you want some solitude once in a while — fine. But at least add a sport, something you do with other people. You’ll be spending time interacting with others, while also developing team-building and leadership skills. And, you might learn something from your fellow players.
10. Set an outrageous goal — and achieve it!

The nine tips above are only a handful of ideas about how to make your life better. Maybe you want to record an album, climb a mountain, make the Hajj (the pilgrimage to Mecca), see 20 countries — don’t just settle for tiny goals, push yourself all the way to the edge and figure out how to make the craziest thing you can think of happen. Yes, you’ll have to learn a lot along the way, and plan months or even years in advance — that’s what makes outlandish goals worthwhile.

I don’t want to suggest that you need to do all these things to be happy — doing just one is quite a handful! But if you’re unhappy with your life, if you want to make a change for the better, you need to think big and you need to be ready to put in the work to make it happen. It’s easy to “visualize success” and to “think positively”; it’s not so easy to throw yourself into the unknown and make it work. But if you can make it work, you’ll gain far more than you can imagine.

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"Why Marriages May Not Last"

"Why Marriages May Not Last"



Why do people come into our lives and then leave?
Why do marriages fail to last a lifetime?
The answer to this lies only with God, but one must look at this question from a philosophical viewpoint.
Read the essay below that I received via e-mail. I found it an excellent vehicle for getting across the message that all marriages aren't supposed to (or can't) last a lifetime. This may help you to accept your divorce more easily.


"A Reason, A Season or a Lifetime"

People come into your life for a reason, a season, or a lifetime.
When you figure out which it is, you know exactly what to do.
When someone is in your life for a REASON, it is usually to meet a need you have expressed outwardly or inwardly.
They have come to assist you through a difficulty, to provide you with guidance and support, to aid you physically, emotionally, or spiritually. They may seem like a godsend, and they are.
They are there for the reason, you need them to be.
Then, without any wrong doing on your part or at an inconvenient time, this person will say or do something to bring the relationship to an end.
Sometimes they die. Sometimes they walk away.
Sometimes they act up or out and force you to take a stand.
What we must realize is that our need has been met, our desire fulfilled;
their work is done.
The prayer you sent up has been answered and it is now time to move on.

When people come into your life for a SEASON,
it is because your turn has come to share, grow, or learn.
They may bring you an experience of peace or make you laugh.
They may teach you something you have never done.
They usually give you an unbelievable amount of joy.
Believe it! It is real! But, only for a season.

LIFETIME relationships teach you lifetime lessons;
those things you must build upon in order to have a solid emotional foundation. Your job is to accept the lesson,
love the person/people (any way);
and put what you have learned to use in all other relationships
and areas of your life.
It is said that love is blind but friendship is clairvoyant.

Author Unknown

Our spouses were a part of our lives for a reason. We chose them not only because we fell in love with them and enjoyed being around them, but also because (consciously or subconsciously) they met a need in us that we thought could only be filled by them. We didn't do this consciously, but the need to be met was there. We also fulfilled a need in them. Harville Hendrix writes books describing this theory. He says that we seek a mate to meet the unmet needs of childhood,
especially if we were raised in any type of dysfunctional home. Once married, we proceed to work out with the spouse things we could not work out as a child.

Perhaps marriages end because one or the other has fulfilled their purpose, and it is time for us to move on. This can happen when we marry someone who isn't right for us for an entire lifetime. As much as it may hurt, we need to realize that there may not be a solid basis for a lifetime relationship with that particular person. We also need to realize that one or the other person may change from the person you married, and you may find that you are no longer compatable.

I thought I loved my first husband with a love that would last eternally. He declared deep love for me. In that marriage, upon looking back, I didn't ever feel "special". I didn't ever feel that I was loved unconditionally, although I did feel loved.
Something was missing, though. Before I met my second husband, I would read a book or see a movie about real, true love and I couldn't help but feel a bit skeptical. I never shared this with my first husband, but I didn't believe that any marriage could be as good as those depicted in fiction. I didn't believe it when husbands in those books and movies adored their wives and put them first, or when they got along so beautifully without friction.
I did some soul searching, and came to realize why I married the person I did in my first marriage. There was love, of course, and expectations. I believe that we met each other's needs at that time. I was looking for someone very different from my father. I see that he did come into my life for a reason, or for a purpose, even if he stayed but a long season. I will be forever grateful to him for what he gave to my life in spite of the pain that our divorce caused me.
While with me, he did serve a purpose and meet needs that I had at the time. And I believe that I served a purpose in his life. We had a good life together. For a while, we shared dreams and common interests, we were best friends, and we had two beautiful children. I don't regret our marriage, or the time we spent together. I do regret the pain I went through, and the unhappiness we both felt at times. But to regret the marriage would be to say that there never was love or companionship or a reason for our being together.


It didn't last because we weren't right for each other through the long haul, even though we both had thought that we were going to grow old together.
The first time I heard that we weren't right for each other (while in divorce recovery), it nearly killed me. I was very angry with the person who suggested that possibility to me. I tried to deny that notion for several years until I finally realized she was right. There were too many conflicts that seemed to get worse and worse. Had we been well-suited, we wouldn't have had those conflicts and those heated arguments. Had we stayed married, it never would have been good again. Both of us would have remained unhappy and unfulfilled, and we would have had strife and accusations and anger to deal with forever. In the end, there was "too much water under the bridge" to salvage the marriage.

We are where we are, doing what we are supposed to be doing, with the person we are supposed to be with for a reason. Our marriage wasn't a mistake even though it didn't last. It's important for us to see the reasons we came together and the reasons it didn't last.

Here is a saying that has helped me since my divorce, and it may help you with any of your losses.
"Only that which we no longer need leaves our lives. Everything that surrounds us serves a purpose."
(From "Streams in the Desert")

For you to think about:

Look back at your marriage and try to see why you married this person. Look at what he gave you, and look at the needs he met.
Know that you were meant to be married for a time.
Now that the marriage is ending, don't hold on too long and make it harder for you to move on.
Take what you have learned, for I believe that each experience in our lives is a lesson we can learn from. Take the gifts of life and the good things you had, and cherish them.

In the end, I believe that we are put on this Earth to learn and to grow. We have to move forward. There is more work to be done;
more growth to experience; more life to live. Let go and move on.



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