Seven days into the New
Year—and how are those resolutions????
Working? Well? Not? Or
forgotten?
I think of this, actually in
mid-December when I am writing this, because I looked at our new puppy this
morning and out came this thought:
(Bear in mind, his name is
Bert. He is strong. He is mutt. He is long sleek Malinois and Lab.) And for
some reason this morning, though he’s been with us for 3 months now, I said,
“Bert! You remind me of Burt Lancaster, swinging from the trapeze of life!”
He cocked his head, looked at
me as if to say, “I’m cool, Ma. How’d you know I swing, I glide, I dip and
rise, I turn and spin, dip and rise again?”
He is indeed movin’ with the
flow of his new life here, he rises, gets his training and then, yes, he dips
and fails. Then he does something totally new and endearing and we all are
right with the world in a new new way.
So today, I am asking you, with
those resolutions under your belt, how are they working for you? Do you rise
with them? Use them?
Sad to say, I have known too
darn many people who listed all those happy goals and promptly forgot them.
The ones who said they’d never
complain again…about the boss, their coworkers, the industry they work in, the
failure of their spouse to…pick a task.
The ones who said they’d
exercise and lose weight.
Then they’d keep it off.
The ones who said they’d be
temperate in their alcohol consumption.
Then got blitzed.
The writers who vowed to do a
daily page count.
The aspiring ones who said they
would have time to write when they retired. Or when the kids went off to
college.
The women who tell me their
marriages are in a slump. Do not know what to do about it. Or who never
developed their own sense of self or record of accomplishments.
The young people who are
waiting and waiting and waiting for
inspiration to stride about what they want to be when they grow up.
The folks who complain bitterly
about what they do every day, but love the money they make doing it.
The ones who tell me they are
New Age, but have no idea what it is to sit zazen, or who truly understand and
practice the joy of giving to the homeless, the ill, the disadvantaged.
Hello?
My rant today is this: Do not
tell me you will, when you have not the tenacity. Do not tell me you are one
thing, but act like another.
Do not criticize, and do not
complain.
Do not make promises to
yourself, that most special and nigh
unto sacred person in your life, if you have no intention of keeping them.
Recognize that you, just like
the rest of us, swing from the trapeze of life. You rise, you fall sometimes
through no fault of your own. You twist, your turn with the forces that affect
you and those you affect.
Make your life happen. Keep it
real.
Swing from the trapeze of life
and go with a flow that you make. As you approach the glory days of your life,
I bet you that you will see positives you never realized before. Aspects you
never considered.
All because you were good to
yourself and those around you, being a person who TRIED and who, on most
occasions, SUCCEEDED.
3 comments:
Great post, Cerise, and you are right!
I try to set only one or two goals. This year's is not to stress myself out over my publishing obligations. I'm only one person and can only do so much at one time so there's no sense in getting all worked up and worried about the numerous things I have to do. I plan on doing what I do now with daily life stress: take it one day at a time.
My other goal is to curb my mouth. I'm very vocal when something bothers me, but I feel I need to hold my tongue about various family things (lol) and will work on doing that more.
Fabulous post, Cerise!
I think what would help us succeed with these goals is to set small ones we can accomplish every day towards the big one we ultimately want. For instance, we set up a "to-do" list. Maybe one of the things on the list would be to point out one good thing about your job, what you've done that day.
I don't know. I'm just thinking here, thinking about how I can make things better for me. LOL
And, Faith, I'm with you, my mouth gets away from me sometimes. Poor Charlie had the brunt of it last night. This morning, he told me that he was tired of me taking out my being tired on him. Yeah, well, I get it, and there was more to it than that, but, whatever. The way I handled it was poor. I recognize that and am working on how to change that... now. :)
Marci
Personally, I haven't really set any new years goals, other than to write, every day, and cross something off that list every day without worrying how many things i add to it. I've reconciled myself to the fact I will die (Some day in the far future) with a list of things undone. It's inevitable. I am no longer going to fret about what those things turn out to be.
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