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OKAY, YOU'RE RIGHT. The world is crazy. Your world may be especially crazy. But I promise that you can still find personal meaning and deep happiness.
The paradox in each case is that even when things are going badly in the world around us, we can still find personal meaning and deep happiness. We can do that by facing the worst in the world with the best in ourselves. You and I, as individuals, can't control the external world. We can't control the economy or the rate of population growth. We can't control the weather or natural disasters like fires and floods. We can't control when terrorists may strike or wars may break out. We can't control which companies will acquire which companies, or which jobs will be eliminated, or which jobs will open up. We can work hard, and prepare, and seize opportunities. But there are lots of things in our external world that we just cannot control. For example, your sector of the economy may take a hit, and the company you work for goes bankrupt. You are talented and good at your work, but suddenly you are out of a job. You may start your own small business, and a fire destroys your files, records, and product designs. You have to start all over. You may be in line for a political appointment, but your party loses the election. You don't get the job, even though you worked hard for it and are qualified to do it. Your supervisor may be very competent and not interested in changing jobs. You are qualified for promotion, but her position is not likely to open up for a long, long time.
We can control our inner lives. We get to decide who we are going to be and how we are going to live. We can decide to love people, and do good, and succeed, and be honest and frank, and think big, and fight for the underdog, and build, and help people, and give the world our best. We can live our values, and stay close to our families and friends, and do what is right and good and true - no matter what. No matter what. The good news is that these are the things that give people the most personal meaning and the deepest happiness. What do I mean by "personal meaning"? I mean something that is significant and meaningful to you personally. And what is "deep happiness"? I think of it as the kind of happiness that touches your spirit and connects with your soul. People have many names for it. Some people may call it self-actualization. Others call it self-fulfillment. Still others call it being centered. People of faith may call it finding God's will for their lives. But whatever you call it, finding personal meaning is the key to being deeply happy. And that personal meaning can be yours, no matter what. How am I coping with a crazy world?
A Personal Declaration of Independence The Paradoxical Commandments are a personal declaration of independence from all the external factors we can't control. We don't have to depend on the external world for meaning and happiness. We can find them in our inner lives. Executive coach Ken Hill came across the Paradoxical Commandments in the early nineties. For him:
Our personal meaning and deep happiness don't depend on the way the world treats us. They depend on how we respond to the way the world treats us. How we respond is always up to us. It's our decision. It's about our inner lives, the part of the world that we control. Do
I Understand the Factors
No Excuses The Paradoxical Commandments are also a "no excuses" policy. Sure, some people are illogical, unreasonable, and selfcentered. So what? That's no excuse. You need to love them anyway. Why? Because love is an important source of personal meaning. You don't want to miss all that meaning, just because people can be difficult.
And maybe the good you do today will be forgotten tomorrow. So what? That's no excuse. You have to do good anyway. Why? Because doing good will make your life meaningful. I am always optimistic. I believe that if you follow the Paradoxical Commandments and live the paradoxical life, things will usually work out for you. If you love people, and help people, and do what's right and good and true, you're bound to receive recognition and praise.
In short, if you follow the Paradoxical Commandments, you won't let excuses prevent you from finding personal meaning and deep happiness. You'll do what is meaningful, anyway.
What Are My Excuses
Breaking Away from a Difficult Past I have met and heard from counselors and therapists who work with people who have difficult pasts. Some of these people grew up in poverty. Some were mistreated when they were children. Some have unresolved conflicts that seem to paralyze them. Some got a "raw deal" from a friend, a spouse, or an employer. Some have been addicted to alcohol or drugs. Some have committed crimes.
Dave Coleman, a university professor, says:
Joe Rice broke away from the harsh realities of his early life. He grew up in a family of migrant workers who picked fruit in orchards in California. His father was a violent man who regularly beat his children, especially when he was drunk. At an early age, Joe witnessed his father kill an African American man for no reason other than his color. In his senior year of high school, Joe hid in the bedroom closet while his father beat his mother. He was too scared to breathe, let alone stand up for her. His father left the house, saying he would be back to get Joe next. Joe found his mother lying on the floor. He held her and cried.
Joe decided to fight. He waited alone in his room with a butcher knife.
When his father came back, Joe defended himself, What Joe found in that new world was a lot of good people who were willing to help him, and teach him, and encourage him. He decided to become a person who did that for others. After he completed his college degree, he became a Peace Corps volunteer, and then a distinguished educator. It was clear to Joe at an early age that people are illogical, unreasonable, and self-centered. But Joe dedicated his life to loving them anyway. We need to acknowledge the past, learn what we can from it, and then move on. If our lives are stuck in the past, we need to get unstuck. It may not be easy. We may need help, and it may take time. But even as we struggle, we need to remember that personal meaning and deep happiness can be ours. We can break away. We can start new lives. We can do it anyway.
A Difficult Present Many of us are struggling with the present. Sometimes, the present is difficult because of the society we live in. But even then, we can find meaning in loving and helping others. I grew up during the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was a communist, totalitarian country, and the Soviets were our biggest enemy. Sadly, while the Cold War was raging, the Soviet people themselves suffered badly. They lived in a police state and they had no freedom. They endured a low standard of living, with little food and clothing, and shabby housing. Their daily lives were a struggle.
In the summer of 1972, when I was twenty-four, I crossed the Soviet
Union on my way from England to Japan. I had lived in England for two
years as a student, and was on my way to study for two years in Japan. And yet, during that trip, I received crucial help from a Russian man I had never seen before and would never see again. I never learned his name. But he saved me from a dire fate because he was willing to do it anyway. Without his help, I might well have ended up in a Soviet jail. Before entering the Soviet Union, I did what all tourists had to do: I went to the Soviet tourism office, known as Intourist, and paid in advance for all my airplane and train tickets, hotel rooms, and meals for the trip. After paying for everything, I set aside some extra spending money to buy souvenirs once I got into the country. I didn't have much - I was on a typical student budget. I had to count my pennies. Once I got into the Soviet Union, Intourist told me that there had been a mistake, and I hadn't paid enough. The Soviets were greedy for foreign currency, and I became convinced that they would say or do anything to get more of it. At any rate, after a week in Leningrad and a week in Moscow, I had no more foreign currency and only 25 rubles. A ruble sold for about 25 cents on the black market, but the government sold them for $1.25. While I had little money left, I wasn't worried. After all, I had already paid for my transportation, room, and board.
However, when I arrived at the Moscow airport to fly east to Irkutsk,
I was told that my luggage exceeded the weight limit, and it would cost
26 rubles (U.S. $32.50) more than I had paid previously. Well, I didn't
have 26 rubles, I only had 25, and the plane was departing momentarily. During the Cold War, there were plenty of stories about Americans being dragged off airplanes or seized in their hotel rooms and never heard from again. I had been told by other travelers that Americans had been locked up and not even allowed a phone call to the American embassy. I didn't know what would happen, but I knew I had only a minute or two to resolve my problem. I told the people at the counter that I had only 25 rubles. They weren't going to budge. I opened my backpack and began to look for things to throw away to lighten my luggage. I had brought a lot of luggage because I knew it would be several months before my trunk would arrive in Japan. I started to throw things away. Suddenly, I felt a tap on my shoulder, and I turned around. It was a Russian airline pilot, a young man of perhaps thirty in a blue Aeroflot uniform. He handed me a ruble. I don't recall him saying anything. I don't think he spoke English. He just handed me the ruble. I thanked him profusely, hurriedly repacked my luggage, rushed to the counter, and ran out on the tarmac to the plane. I was the last one on board - the plane took off just one minute later. As we lifted off, I thought that I now knew what it was like to meet an angel. He even had those little silver wings on his shoulders! The Russian pilot had nothing to gain by helping me. There was nothing I could do to help him in return. He knew he would never see me again. Even worse, our governments were "enemies," so helping me might have endangered his career. He had every reason to believe that the KGB, the Soviet secret police, were watching and recording his actions. But he followed a Paradoxical Commandment - and did good, anyway. No matter how difficult our lives are, right now, we can still love people, help people, and do good. Like the Russian pilot, we can still find personal meaning. The opportunities are all around us.
What Opportunities For Personal Meaning
Sometimes, finding personal meaning is difficult for us We all want to be successful. But the search for success and the search for meaning are not the same. Unfortunately, while we are striving for success, we can miss opportunities for personal meaning that have nothing to do with "success." © 2008, Kent M. Keith, All Rights Reserved Excerpted from the book Do It Anyway: Finding Personal Meaning and Deep Happiness by Living the Paradoxical Commandments 2008 by Kent M. Keith. Printed with permission of New World Library, Novato, CA. www.newworldlibrary.com or 800-972-6657 ext. 52. |
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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