“Everything is a choice.” I read these words upon
opening my eyes to the morning light and decide I’ll
apply this line of thinking to the planned and unplanned events of the day, to
prove (or disprove) this hypothesis. Can absolutely everything be a choice?
It is a choice to throw
off the covers in the morning and step out into the mist for a pre-dawn run. It’s a choice to fire up my computer and begin my conference
calls at 7:30 AM, to slip out for a cup of coffee when my meeting unexpectedly ends
early. It’s
a choice to share my opinion on the business challenge at hand, or to remain
silent, deferring to others. It’s a choice to pay my bills, to work hard at yoga, to drink a
green smoothie when I’d rather have a hamburger.
We can trick
ourselves into believing we don’t have choices. Going to work, for example, can seem like one
such instance. A job can feel like an obligation,
not because we’re physically chained to the desk, but
because the repercussions of not working are too harsh to bear; the alternatives
so loathsome we wouldn’t ever consider them. Who would pay for our
next great pair of shoes? How would we keep
our homes? Put food on the table? While it might not seem so obvious, we’re making a choice to go to the office.
My ah-ha moment lightened
several years ago at a time when I was frustrated at my lack of upward movement
in my job. To hear me describe it back then there were “no opportunities”, and I had “no choice”
but to stay in my existing role. Upon
further examination (many months later, unfortunately), I realized my own
misguided perspective colored my thinking. I was making pointed choices to be
present and available to raise my children which took me out of the running for
many positions requiring travel or relocation.
I understood then and there I felt trapped, not because there was
nothing out there for me, but because my personal choices about family were so
firmly fixed and non-negotiable, I couldn’t see how I was adversely impacting my professional ambition.
Many choices can
be looked at objectively, consequences weighed and decisions made independent of
others. Complication sets in when we
consider the expectations another may have of us or worse yet, we presume expectations
where none exist at all. We put ourselves in positions where we feel like we
can’t say no.
This is how we end up purchasing a $25 bag of Cub Scout caramel corn we
don’t need, or sitting through an all-day baby
shower in a dreary banquet hall on one of the few remaining glorious autumn
days. In these cases we move away from
choices that reflect our own truth, creating imaginary obligations we’re torn, even resentful, about fulfilling.
Time is a precious
and finite commodity. Our choices around
how we spend the 525,600 minutes we’re granted each year of life play a part in
whether we are stressed or relaxed, harried or calm, sad or happy. We’re not always going to love all of our choices, but knowing
they are ours to make is empowering.
There are things
we don’t get a say in, like whether the sun shines
or it rains, what might come out of a manager’s
mouth at the next one-on-one meeting, or what kind of mood a significant other arrives
home in after a long day at the office.
But we do get to choose how we receive these situations.
I’ve been away from this blog for some time. And, yes, I’ve
missed it. It would be easy to say I
just don’t have the time. But the truth is I am prioritizing differently, putting
other happy activities in my life ahead of this one. It’s a choice that may disappoint those who
look forward to reading, a choice I revisit at times to make sure I'm still good with it. But I know it’s my choice. I'm happy to own it.
some own it with you. don't you think now that your loved...say peace
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