Tuesday 12 July 2016

Keeping Your Life on the Move

A wise woman once told me:

'In every situation you have two choices. You can either change it or accept it.'

This quote is a great guide for me when I feel unhappy in a situation. For instance, with people. If you're finding someone irritating you can either accept the irritation or change the situation, e.g. by trying to spend less time with them. But how do you know when a situation is unacceptable for you?


You may have come across the Serenity Prayer:


It seems simple. Accept what you cannot change and have the courage to change what you can. The issue comes when you find it hard to know when a situation should be accepted or changed - the wisdom part. To make this clearer, I'll use examples:

A situation is unacceptable when:
  1. It is illegal

    Situation: your boss asks you to work a long shift without a break.
    Choices: accept this (work without a break) or change it.
    Wisdom: this is illegal, and therefore needs to be changed.
    Action: demand a break.
  2. It puts you in danger

    Situation: you drop your phone onto a train line.
    Choices: accept this (accept it is dangerous for you to try to retrieve it and ask for help) or change it (reach onto the track to retrieve it).
    Wisdom: I would be endangering my life to pick this up.
    Action: Ask a train station staff member for help and advice. 
With these examples, it seems easy deciding which action to take (or not take). Sometimes, it isn't so easy to decide what to do. For example:
  • Situation: your boss asks you to work late. 
  • Choices: accept it (and arrive late to the party you planned to go to) or change it (say no). 
  • Wisdom: If I accept, I will be late. If I change this situation, I can go but my boss won't be happy. 
  • Action: What's most important to you? Take that action. 
The most important thing is that you take one of those steps, either accepting or changing where you are. A lot of the time, people try to do both. For instance, becoming increasingly frustrated at someone because they're not doing what you want them to do. Accepting could ease that frustration, or acting could mean a change in their behaviour. 

Either way, making a decision helps you to keep moving, rather than getting stuck in cycles of resentment and frustration. And don't forget that accepting a situation is a decision in itself! Ever seen this quote by Einstein?


In terms of making the right or wrong decision (a future blog post on this will happen!), Susan Jeffers wrote a chapter in Feel the Fear and do it Anyway (available here). She says that every decision you make is a no-lose decision. Whichever path you choose will lead you down a path full of opportunities and things to enjoy. So give her chapter a read when you're afraid of making the wrong decision!


Image 1 from here
Image 2 from here
Image 3 from here



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