In my 52 years of life, I have done many things.
I have also NOT done many things.
For instance,
I have never dived head first off a diving board.
I never went on Space Mountain.
Or the Tower of Terror.
When I became a mother, I would not fly in an
airplane unless we went somewhere as a family.
I would say that I am probably more fearful than
the average person.
I always think about the "what ifs".
What if I fly somewhere without my kids and the
plane crashes and my kids have no mother?
What if ???????????????????
It's funny - I consider myself an optimist.
The glass is always half full, not half empty.
But in reality, perhaps I don't really live my life that way.
Over the years, I have conquered many fears.
This usually happens when the benefit of facing
the fear out-weighs the fear itself -
like flying alone to Florida for my Dad's 70th birthday,
or flying to be with my parents when they were
in the hospital.
Being a parent also forces you to do things that you
might have previously feared because of your love
for your children.
TODAY I CONQUERED ANOTHER FEAR.
Until today, I have never climbed higher than
maybe 8 rungs on a ladder.
But I was painting my living room and my husband
was away on a business trip.
Before he left he asked me how I was going to paint
the high parts of the wall. He reminded me that he
has a bad knee and wouldn't be able to climb up
and down the ladder.
I really wanted to finish the room.........
So I went up a little higher
and trimmed more of the side walls.
Then I went up another rung.
And another.
And another.
Before I knew it I was at the top of the ladder!
I was painting the highest part of the wall!
I wasn't shaking!
My legs didn't feel like jelly!
I DID IT!
I was SO PROUD of myself!
My living room used to be gold.
Now it is "Persimmon".
This is the time of year that many kids are headed off to college. They are forced to deal with things by themselves, without their parents. For some it will be harder than for others, but I'm sure they all have fears.
And they will be forced to face them.
And they will conquer them.
One rung at a time.
I have also NOT done many things.
For instance,
I have never dived head first off a diving board.
I never went on Space Mountain.
Or the Tower of Terror.
When I became a mother, I would not fly in an
airplane unless we went somewhere as a family.
I would say that I am probably more fearful than
the average person.
I always think about the "what ifs".
What if I fly somewhere without my kids and the
plane crashes and my kids have no mother?
What if ???????????????????
It's funny - I consider myself an optimist.
The glass is always half full, not half empty.
But in reality, perhaps I don't really live my life that way.
Over the years, I have conquered many fears.
This usually happens when the benefit of facing
the fear out-weighs the fear itself -
like flying alone to Florida for my Dad's 70th birthday,
or flying to be with my parents when they were
in the hospital.
Being a parent also forces you to do things that you
might have previously feared because of your love
for your children.
TODAY I CONQUERED ANOTHER FEAR.
Until today, I have never climbed higher than
maybe 8 rungs on a ladder.
But I was painting my living room and my husband
was away on a business trip.
Before he left he asked me how I was going to paint
the high parts of the wall. He reminded me that he
has a bad knee and wouldn't be able to climb up
and down the ladder.
I really wanted to finish the room.........
So I went up a little higher
and trimmed more of the side walls.
Then I went up another rung.
And another.
And another.
Before I knew it I was at the top of the ladder!
I was painting the highest part of the wall!
I wasn't shaking!
My legs didn't feel like jelly!
I DID IT!
I was SO PROUD of myself!
My living room used to be gold.
Now it is "Persimmon".
This is the time of year that many kids are headed off to college. They are forced to deal with things by themselves, without their parents. For some it will be harder than for others, but I'm sure they all have fears.
And they will be forced to face them.
And they will conquer them.
One rung at a time.
"If you are distressed by
anything external,
the pain is not due to the thing itself, but to
your
estimate of it; and this you have the
power to revoke at any moment."
~Marcus Aurelius
~Marcus Aurelius
I like this philosophy....one rung at a time during the difficult parts.
ReplyDeleteJust like I tell the mamas to be in my Childbirth Classes...'take ONE contraction at a time'!!!
ReplyDeleteLove this post, Gayle!!! (way better than the bloody dismembered rabbit..lol)