Sunday, March 25, 2012

ON FUN ~ Stuff Your Sorries In A Sack...

At the age of 45, writer Regina Brett wrote a column for the Cleveland Plain Dealer listing 45 lessons that life had taught her thus far. As a breast cancer survivor, many of those lessons were learned the hard way. Five years later she added five more lessons rounding her list up to 50 and turned her popular list into a book called God Never Blinks. I found her list to be entertaining, inspiring and thought provoking. I thought I would go through each of her lessons learned and write about how that lesson has or has not come up in my own life, now that I am over 40 and feel old enough to have finally learned something.

"If we all threw our problems in a pile and got a look at everyone else's, we'd fight to get our own back."
~ LESSON #40

Sometimes I check myself for being too much of a Pollyanna. My approach in general is to try to look on the brighter side of things rather than wasting energy on negative feelings and stress. Which is a fine way for me to live my days internally. But when I project that onto other people sometimes, I think that it may be irritating or even a direct source of the kinds of feelings I'm trying to get other folks to avoid.

If someone I know is having a bad day or a tough time overall, reminding them that other people are worse off is not always going to have the effect I'm looking for. I want them to feel appreciative of the good things they have going for them. But really, when someone is venting to you about their crappy deal, they don't want to be cheered up by considering the greater misfortune of others. They want empathy. They want to be coddled and fawned over. They want a rousing show of support. To know that someone has their back. They need to know that their reaction to their problem is valid. Once they have that, oftentimes they move on themselves to finding a way to get beyond the challenge causing such trouble.

That's what friends do. They are supportive, nod their head in agreement and give comforting hugs or pats on the back. And sometimes they bite their tongue to keep from telling their buddy to suck it up and stop complaining about a broken arm when someone else close to you is dying from cancer.

I like this lesson's message. I remind myself how lucky I am all the time. And when I have real struggles I remind myself that it could always be worse. And that maybe the person I'm bitching too is the one that has it worse. And I do us both a favor by keeping my venting to a minimum. I save my real rants for Tedy the cat. He's a very good listener and he's got it made in the shade. I never have to worry that his life sucks more than mine.

6 comments:

Sandy Nawrot said...

Yes mine seriously won the cat lottery. I hope they know that. And I totally agree with you on this one. It is very easy to find someone else out there that has it worse, and I count my blessings every day. But I do have my go-to people (a couple of my girlfriends - there is nothing as good as a girlfriend) that I bitch to. I have found that men are not quite as good at the listening as a girlfriend. Men want to fix the problem, my girlfriends will just nod and listen and tell me that I am right to feel this way.

Janet said...

What do you do when you have a friend that complains about the same things over and over and over?

Kathleen said...

This is sound advice. I always try to keep my problems in perspective. I had a friend die of brain cancer a few months ago and I can honestly say that none of my problems seem like much after that!

vanita said...

i hear what you're saying and it's true, someone is always suffering more, but frankly, when you're suffering, your pain for yourself is stronger and most times i feel that people, including myself, vent because we're confused and need someone to help us figure it all out. so i tend to try to look for possible suggestions that can help. if a friend of mine is "complaining' about pain, i'll ask what her doctor prescribed, if it's helping, if she's taking her meds on time, if she's missed any care instructions, even we need to go further, i'll suggest having another doctor look at her. when a friend of mine was having extreme marital problems that were no worse than mine at the time, i suggested to her what i did, i sought out a marriage counselor. didn't work for my first marriage because my ex was a tool, but worked for her and she's still married to her first hubby 10 years later, while i'm on 2nd hubby. lol. sometimes, we're just confused and need a clear mind to help us see the way, so we vent.

Tami said...

As one who's default reaction is always cynicism, I appreciate your Pollyanna attitude. And you are so right - when the world looks bad (real or imagined), the last thing anyone needs is platitudes. My daughter sent me a quote the other day - don't know where she found it, so my apologies to the author - but it went something like: Every woman needs a best friend to help her laugh when she thinks she'll never smile again. Love it!

stacybuckeye said...

There is nothing wrong with Pollyanna. I always thought of myself as one, but I've found with Gage that I tend to obsess over the little things that help nobody!
I count my lucky stars every night and would not trade my cares for anyone else's.