Tag: Life Change

Revisiting: A Glimpse Into a Life

“I had a glimpse into the life…the person I wanted to be and I was afraid I could never be that.” - Umberto Crenca, Founder AS220

This quote expressed in a powerful story I heard during BIF10, struck me deeply. In a moment of clarity and vision, Umberto saw what he was meant to do and who he was meant to be. Beyond this recognition, he experienced the intense emotional pain that came with knowing the path he was on, the life he had accepted until that moment, would never lead him to that place. He had to make a choice.

This choice. This terrible, life-altering, difficult and beautiful choice.

To see beyond the expectations and obligations placed upon our lives by others, or ourselves, into a life we know we were meant to live. Once we have this vision in our head it haunts us. We may decide “stay the course” or “be responsible”, but the vision will reappear, time and time again. We try to negotiate, set conditions, skirt the border of our vision but we know deep inside the only way to get there is to go all the way, to embrace it fully and trade what we have to go where our heart leads us.

Our life. Our one life.

Can we look fully, unflinchingly on our calling and deny it? So many do. That’s why those who follow their vision become a source of inspiration. We see in their lives what is possible for us. Their stories are filled with wrong turns, false starts and hard experiences, but we never hear them say…”I wish I had stuck to the original plot”.

Every day we have this choice.

We can know what we know. We can honestly evaluate our direction and pay attention to what makes us come alive. We can open our eyes to what is possible and to who we were meant to be and accept the truth. We can wrestle with the choice and seek the courage to act. Then move forward, one step at a time or in a giant leap.

Just move.

Or we can pretend we do not know, make reasons to stay where we are, and try to squeeze some joy out of our quiet desperation. Eventually, the vision will fade, revived occasionally by an unexpected encounter but quickly returned to the hiding place where we keep it safe for someday.

What will you do with your beautiful choice?

This post was originally published in September 2014. As I was reflecting on these thoughts recently I felt compelled to repost them on my new blog in the hope that they will inspire someone who is facing a difficult decision or at a crossroad in their life.

Unreasonable Friends

unreasonable friends

 

The reality is that no matter how self-aware we intend to be, we can never truly see ourselves or fully comprehend the source of our behaviors and the consequences of our actions. We have been shaped by society, our ideologies, our relationships, and our childhood so that we inevitably develop blind spots. These blind spots can put us in danger of making poor decisions, misinterpreting events and unintentionally sabotaging our goals. It is not enough to be aware of our blind spots, we must take proactive steps to expose them even when doing so proves difficult and uncomfortable.

We value our reasonable friends.

Naturally we are drawn to people who think like we do, who are share similar ideas and values. In other words, we like people who like us and are like us. If there are differences of opinion they lie on the fringes. We’re debating the color of the tablecloth, not whether dinner should be served at all. These friends serve to reinforce who we already are, for better and worse. This encouragement is valuable, but it can also be dangerous.

These “safe” friends often end up in our inner circle, forming what is more or less a mutual admiration society. Groups of like-minded people can shape all sorts of wonderful ideas that are pretty much…alike. Fear of losing the feel-good status of the group can lead to any real concerns or differences of opinion, if they exist, being shut down before they ever see the light of day.

We need unreasonable friends.

An unreasonable friend is that person who will push us out of our comfort zone. The person who will call us on our rationalizations, compromises, and self-serving behavior because we trust them and we’ve asked them to tell it like they see it. They experience the world differently than we do and they provide a perspective we otherwise could not see.

  • Unreasonable friends don’t come naturally. We may have to overcome our own bias or fear to engage a person to become our unreasonable friend. We may have to turn to someone who we would not otherwise choose based on personality or things we have in common. That takes courage and intention. It takes being vulnerable.
  • Unreasonable friends provide a compassionate reality check. The key word here is “friends”. There are people who are unreasonable with an intent to hurt or make things difficult. Unreasonable friends have our best interest in mind. It will take some time to build a level of trust and experience that allows the relationship to reach its potential.
  • Unreasonable friends need unreasonable friends. To be a healthy, unreasonable friend we must realize that we too are flawed in our ability to see clearly. In the ideal scenario, these relationships become mutually beneficial. The opportunity to serve one another at this level will create some of our deepest and most valuable relationships.

Without someone in our lives who will tell us what they see, even when it hurts, we will only know what we see from the inside which will never be the complete story.

Questions to consider:

Do you have an unreasonable friend in your life? What difference has this made for you?

In some of your more recent challenges how might an unreasonable friend have helped you?

What would you look for in an unreasonable friend?

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