Earlier
today, I was sitting on a park bench eating a sandwich for lunch when an
elderly couple pulled their car up under a nearby oak tree. They rolled
down the windows and turned up some jazz music on the radio. Then the
man got out of the car, walked around to the passenger side, and opened
the door for the woman. He took her hand and helped her out of her seat,
guided her about ten feet away from the car, and they slow danced for
the next half hour under the oak tree.
It was a
beautiful sight to see. I could have watched them forever. And as they
wrapped things up and started making their way back to the car, I
clapped my hands in admiration.
Perhaps doing
so was obnoxious. Perhaps I should have just appreciated being a silent
witness. But I was so caught up in the moment—so incredibly moved—that
my hands came together before my conscious mind caught on. And I’m
sincerely grateful they did, because what happened next inspired the
words you’re reading now.
The elderly
couple slowly walked over to me with smiles on their faces. “Thank you
for the applause,” the woman chuckled.
“Thank YOU,”
I immediately replied. “You two dancing gives me hope.”
They both
smiled even wider as they looked at me. “Us dancing gives me hope too,”
the woman said as she grabbed the man’s hand. “But what you probably
don’t realize is that you just witnessed the power and beauty of second
and third chances.”
“What do you
mean?” I asked.
“My college
sweetheart—my husband of 20 years—lost his life to cancer on my 40th
birthday,” she explained. “And then my husband of 6 years died in a car
accident when I was 52.”
As my mouth
hung open, we all shared a quick moment of silence. Then the man put his
arm around her and said, “And I lost my wife of 33 years when I was 54.
So what you see here before you—these dancing partners—this incredible
love—this marriage of only 3 years between two kindred souls in their
late 60’s . . . all of this is what happens when you give yourself a
second and third chance.”
Finding Peace
Through Painful Experiences
I’ve spent
the rest of the day thinking about that beautiful couple, about second
and third chances, and about how human beings find the motivation to
keep going . . . to keep loving . . . to keep living, despite the pain
and grief and hopelessness we all inevitably experience along the way.
And this
topic hits close to home too.
About a
decade ago, in a relatively short time-frame, Angel and I dealt with
several significant, unexpected losses and life changes, back-to-back:
-
Losing a
sibling to suicide
-
Losing a
mutual best friend to cardiac arrest
-
Financial
unrest and loss of livelihood following a breadwinning job loss
-
Breaking
ties with a loved one who repeatedly betrayed us
-
Family
business failure (and reinvention)
Those
experiences were brutal. And enduring them in quick succession knocked
us down and off course for a period of time. For example, when Angel’s
brother passed, facing this reality while supporting her grieving family
was incredibly painful at times. There were moments when we shut the
world out and avoided our loved ones who were grieving alongside us. We
didn’t want to deal with the pain, so we coped by running away, by
finding ways to numb ourselves with alcohol and unhealthy distractions.
And consequently, we grew physically ill while the pain continued to
fester inside us.
We felt
terrible, for far too long.
And getting
to the right state of mind—one that actually allowed us to physically
and emotionally move forward again—required diligent practice. Because
you better believe our minds were buried deep in the gutter. We had to
learn to consciously free our minds, so we could think straight and open
ourselves to the next step.
We learned
that when you face struggles with an attitude of openness—open to the
painful feelings and emotions you have—it’s not comfortable, but you can
still be fine and you can still step forward. Openness means you don’t
instantly decide that you know this is only going to be a horrible
experience—it means you admit that you don’t really know what the next
step will be like, and you’d like to understand the whole truth of the
matter. It’s a learning stance, instead of one that assumes the worst.
The simplest
way to initiate this mindset shift?
Proactive
daily reminders…
Mantras for
Finding Motivation in Hard Times
It’s all
about keeping the right thoughts at the top of your mind, so they’re
readily available when you need them most. For us, that meant sitting
down quietly with ourselves every morning (and on evenings sometimes
too) and reflecting on precisely what we needed to remember. We used
short written reminders (now excerpts from our book and blog archive)
like the ones below to do just that. Sometimes we’d call them mantras,
or affirmations, or prayers, or convictions, but in any case these daily
reflections kept us motivated and on track by keeping grounded,
peaceful, productive thoughts at the top of our minds, even when life
got utterly chaotic.
We ultimately
discovered that peace does not mean to be in a place where there is no
noise, trouble, or hard realities to deal with—peace means to be in the
midst of all those things while remaining calm in your head and strong
in your heart.
Challenge
yourself to choose one of the bolded reminders below every morning (or
evening), and then sit quietly for two minutes while repeating it
silently in your mind like a mantra. See how doing so gradually changes
the way you navigate life’s twists and turns and hard times.
01. Never
assume that you are stuck with the way things are right now.
Life changes
every single second, and so can you. – When hard times hit there’s a
tendency to extrapolate and assume the future holds more of the same.
For some strange reason this doesn’t happen as much when things are
going well. A laugh, a smile, and a warm fuzzy feeling are fleeting and
we know it. We take the good times at face value in the moment for all
they’re worth and then we let them go. But when we’re depressed,
struggling, or fearful, it’s easy to heap on more pain by assuming
tomorrow will be exactly like today. This is a cyclical, self-fulfilling
prophecy. If you don’t allow yourself to move past what happened, what
was said, what was felt, you will look at your future through that same
dirty lens, and nothing will be able to focus your foggy judgment. You
will keep on justifying, reliving, and fueling a perception that is worn
out and false.
02. It is
what it is. Accept it, learn from it, and grow from it. It doesn’t
matter what’s been done; what truly matters is what you do from here.
– Realize that most people make themselves miserable simply by finding
it impossible to accept life just as it is presenting itself right now.
Don’t be one of them. Let go of your fantasies. This letting go doesn’t
mean you don’t care about something or someone anymore. It’s just
realizing that the only thing you really have control over is yourself
in this moment. Oftentimes letting go is simply changing the labels you
place on a situation—it’s looking at the same situation with fresh eyes
and an open mind, and then taking the next step.
03. Use pain,
frustration and inconvenience to motivate you rather than annoy you. You
are in control of the way you look at life.
– Instead of getting angry, find the lesson. In place of envy, feel
admiration. In place of worry, take action. In place of doubt, have
faith. Again, your response is always more powerful than your
circumstance. A tiny part of your life is decided by completely
uncontrollable circumstances, while the vast majority of your life is
decided by your responses. Where you ultimately end up is heavily
dependent on how you play the hands you’ve been dealt.
04. The most
effective way to move away from something you don’t want, is to move
toward something you do want, gradually and consistently.
– The key is in building small daily rituals, and understanding that
what you do in small steps on a daily basis changes everything over
time. This concept might seem obvious, but when hard times hit we tend
to yearn for instant gratification. We want things to get better, and we
want it better now! And this yearning often tricks us into biting off
more than we can chew. Angel and I have seen this transpire hundreds of
times over the years—a course student wants to achieve a new milestone
as fast as possible, and can’t choose just one or two small daily habits
to focus on, so nothing worthwhile ever gets done. Let this be your
reminder. Remind yourself that you can’t lift a thousand pounds all at
once, yet you can easily lift one pound a thousand times. Small,
repeated, incremental efforts will get you there. (Angel and I build
small, life-changing rituals with our students in the “Goals & Growth”
module of Getting Back to Happy.)
05. Effort is
never wasted, even when it leads to disappointing results. For it always
makes you stronger, more educated, and more experienced.
– So when the going gets tough, be patient and keep going. Just because
you are struggling does not mean you are failing. Every great success
requires some kind of struggle to get there. Again, it happens one day
at a time, one step at a time. And the next step is always worth taking.
Seriously, no matter what happens, no matter how far you seem to be away
from where you want to be, never stop believing that you will make it.
Have an unrelenting belief that things will work out, that the long road
has a purpose, that the things you desire may not happen today, but they
will happen. Practice patience. And remember that patience is not about
waiting—it’s the ability to keep a good attitude while working
diligently to make daily progress.
06. Don’t
lower your standards, but do remember that removing your expectations of
others is the best way to avoid being derailed by them.
– As you
strive to make progress, you will inevitably encounter road blocks in
the form of difficult people. But realize that the greatest stress you
go through when dealing with a difficult person is not fueled by the
words or actions of this person—it is fueled by your mind that gives
their words and actions importance. Inner peace and harmony begins the
moment you take a deep breath and choose not to allow outside influences
to dominate your thoughts, emotions, and actions. (Angel and I discuss
this in more detail in the “Relationships” chapter of our book.)
07. As you
age, you’ll learn to value your time, genuine relationships, meaningful
work, and peace of mind, much more. Little else will matter.
– Remember this, especially when the going gets chaotic and tough. Focus
on what matters in each moment and let go of what does not. Eliminate
needless distractions. Realize that too often we focus our worried minds
on how to do things quickly, when the vast majority of things we do
quickly should not be done at all. We end up rushing out on another
shopping trip, or hastily dressing ourselves up to impress, just to feel
better. But these quick fixes don’t work. Stop investing so much of your
energy into refining the wrong areas of your life. Ten years from now it
won’t really matter what shoes you wore today, how your hair looked, or
what brand of clothes you wore. What will matter is how you lived, how
you loved, and what you learned along the way.
Afterthoughts… On Deep Loss & Renewal
Before we go
I want to briefly address the biggest elephant in the room. That
elephant is losing someone you love. The elderly couple in the opening
story lived through this kind of loss. Angel and I have lived through
this kind of loss. And although there are no words to make it easier, I
want those who are presently coping with this kind of loss to know that
the journey forward is worth it. The end is always the beginning.
There’s more beauty—a different kind of beauty—ahead.
You see,
death is an ending, which is a necessary part of living. And even though
endings like these often seem ugly, they are necessary for beauty
too—otherwise it’s impossible to appreciate someone or something,
because they are unlimited. Limits illuminate beauty, and death is the
definitive limit—a reminder that we need to be aware of this beautiful
person, and appreciate this beautiful thing called life. Death is also a
beginning, because while we have lost someone special, this ending, like
the loss of any wonderful life situation, is a moment of reinvention.
Although deeply sad, their passing forces us to reinvent our lives, and
in this reinvention is an opportunity to experience beauty in new,
unseen ways and places. And finally, of course, death is an opportunity
to celebrate a person’s life, and to be grateful for the beauty they
showed us.
That’s just a
small slice of what living through deep loss has taught us.
Just a short
piece of a longer story that’s still being written . . .
A story of
second and third chances, renewed hope, and heartfelt dances.
And the
reminders above will get you there, one day at a time.
Your turn…
Before you
go, let me ask you a quick question:
And how might
reminding yourself of it, daily, change your life?