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Archive for January, 2024

It is possible to get inordinately upset at things other people say – it is notoriously a feature of having low self-esteem but may even afflict people with a healthier level of confidence in their own worth or abilities. Feedback is often a good thing and can be constructive, but sometimes it is simply hurtful and not actually intended to help. As a general rule, I believe that, before reacting, it is useful to stop and think – to coin a phrase, what other people say may not be about you.

I always remember an instance from many years ago that I have tried to learn from in the intervening decades. An ex visited me a while after our ways had parted and asked for a loan. When I responded that I did not have any money to lend him, he rather huffily replied that I was no longer a nice person to know. This devastated me at the time. When I was asked by a colleague what had upset me so terribly and I explained, they looked puzzled. ‘But it’s only his opinion!’ was their take on the comment. That had never even crossed my mind – I automatically assumed that if someone had said that I was no longer a nice person to know, it must be true. I would like to think that today I might be able to respond along the lines of, ‘That’s quite possible, but you may want to reconsider whether saying so is a good way of getting what you want’, and then serenely move on. I think of this as a variation on the ‘Whatever!’ strategy, which is a mental shrug based on not attaching too much importance to the things people say, and not allowing it to take up more space in our lives (and affect how we feel) than is in fact appropriate.

This approach can also be applied to how we react to other people’s opinions and to disagreeing with people about things generally. There are plenty of opinions out there, and it really is worth picking your battles. Do you particularly want to have an argument about every statement you utter or every view that someone else expresses? Equally, do you have an insatiable need to produce a put-down when someone voices an opinion you think is rubbish? There may be a little conflict aversion in evidence here, but I would suggest that the ‘Whatever!’ strategy can be both practical and helpful: you simply (mentally) roll your eyes and make the decision that that particular battle is not worth bothering with. The world will go on without your heavy-duty defence of your statement or your smart retort to the other person’s. People’s opinions will continue to differ. It is mostly true that you cannot change people, their opinions or their behaviour – only they can decide to make those changes. They may choose to do so, or they may not. Whatever!

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Dark times

When things feel bleak is when you might think about the time you get to spend together with the people you love. We do not normally tend to think – at least not consciously – this could be the last thing we do together with people, yet that is how it is. Every minute and every day. Life is always precarious. We are all impermanent beings. None of us really knows how long we are going to be around for, nor what we are going to have to go through. Every day I express the hope that the person I share my life with will be well, happy, peaceful and safe, that he may have good health and be with me for a long, long time, that he may be able to banish his demons, and that somehow we might throttle that black dog that gets its teeth around his neck most mornings, so that it lets go.

When things feel bleak, feelings of fear, hollowness, darkness and cold might come – you have to try to just accept them when they well up inside you, make them welcome and let them be, like strangers you have to let into your sitting room because somehow they have a right to be there. I do not personally believe you can tell them where to go, even though the notion of shouting ‘get thee hence to endless night!’ might be attractive sometimes. Maybe they come as a loving and gentle reminder to try to do the best you can in the now, and not as merchants of doom about what may lie around the corner.

I am for accepting things and going from there, hoping the fears are exaggerated and that somehow, at some level, in some way, whatever comes will not be so bad. And knowing that it too will pass because everything does.

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