Saturday, January 3, 2015

WD40, Solitaire and the 15th Failure

The greatest lessons of life are not learned through frustrated resignation; the greatest gains of life are not made through force, but in patient, creative searching for the missing thought, the unseemly solution, the misguided placement.  When you fail 15 times, back up to the point where you know you were successful or maybe just a bit further.  Back up to where you had a choice of actions or attitudes and try a different path.  If you can, back up to where you had many choices and look again. 
It took 40 tries to come up with WD40.  But it is one of the most fascinatingly useful products on the market, and has been for 60 years.  I’m glad someone invented it.  The only way you will live life without failing 15 times is to walk away from the problem before you solve it. You won’t always fail 15 times.  Ask yourself what is your solution; what is your WD40.  There are things that are just not worth 40 tries –even for my mind.  There are times to walk away, but not many.  Maybe it doesn’t really matter at all, but you wouldn’t feel that frustration at the loss if it didn’t really matter at all.  Just maybe learning that you will succeed is as valuable as any other outcome in the challenge.
There are times when it seems there is no solution to the problem we or others have created in our world.  That is very seldom true if we will just look again.  At times I have thought “I had only one choice of action and that was not a good or effective choice.”  I think I have looked at every aspect of the problem, but coming from a new direction, I see how many choices I denied by choosing one course of action. 
Often the quick, intuitive choices are the best that can be made; but far down the trail, sometimes I find they were not.  I may not even know what choices I had until I retrace my steps a good ways. I may not be able to change the choice I made, but I can see the problem in a new light and apply a new solution at my present juncture.
Sometimes it is a ‘we’ thing; sometimes it is a ‘me’ thing; sometimes it is a ‘you’ thing.  The greatest wisdom is seeing the problem and the possibilities. Honestly, at times, it does not matter whether we succeed or not, but it is what we take away from the conflict that effects the rest of our lives.  Quitting early may leave us unprepared for the greatest opportunity or test of our lives.
There are times I’d just rather delete the challenge from my personal programming and deem it a worthless endeavor.  What does it matter if I am 98% successful or 99% successful at over 3000 games of solitaire?  I tried; I survived; I moved on.  But in my years, I have found that the problem will come again with a new face, a new name, a new opportunity.  The old antagonist brings the same frustration: the challenge is the same; the fears are the same; the solution is right beyond my grasp.  Yet I have learned that as many times as I play solitaire, there is a solution, though it evades me 15 times.  I can succeed if I keep trying.  Maybe a tricky game of solitaire isn’t worth the time I spend to solve it.  Maybe the lesson I learn is.  I’m not really talking about solitaire.

Hang in there, walk away, look at something else for a time and then look again.

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