Day 1 & 2
My daughter, Emma, got her first job recently, working at a self-serve frozen yogurt shop. She enjoyed being trained to prepare the yogurt machines, how to keep the area clean, and take payments from customers. She also enjoyed interacting with customers to help them make yogurt selections. She had a great experience on her first day, learning how to do the job well. The job also allowed her to earn money, which made it possible for her to gain power as she transitions to adulthood.
Everything changed on Emma’s second day. She was blamed for money shortage in the cash register from the previous day’s receipts, even though several employees had access to the register. She was frustrated and discouraged when she came home and told me about it. The event seemed very unfair to her.
As parents, we don’t like to see our children suffer. We could comfort them by agreeing with them about how unfair such events are. We could become frustrated and discouraged, similar to our children, about the organization they work for. We could say a lot of things to diminish the stress and make our children feel better. All these reactions have one thing in common: they focus on how we wish reality to be rather than how reality is.
Another Way To Respond
There’s another way to respond. Instead of thinking that such events shouldn’t occur, we can accept that they’re normal. Unfair events are inevitable in our lives. As parents, we can allow our children to undergo suffering. We can move beyond judging events as fair or unfair and focus on the learning opportunity. We can guide our children, not to make them feel better, but to help them understand reality. We do this so our children can be powerful enough to deal with reality as it is, instead of dwelling on how they wish it to be. Focusing on how reality is guides their attention toward actions that can lead toward outcomes that are fair.
Making A Choice
I told Emma that she was fortunate to experience such an event so early in her job career. Right now, at the outset of her work-life, she can make a choice about how to respond to such unfair events. I told her that once the event had occurred, the only thing left that’s within her ability to influence, is her choice. Her choice now will influence how she’ll perceive stressful events and how she’ll interact with them in the future.
I told her that she can choose to react, focusing on how unfair it is to be blamed for the cash shortage, or she can choose to respond by being curious about learning how to deal with people that blame others. The former shifts her attention to how she thinks others should act instead of how they did act. She’ll dwell on wondering why they blame others, which focuses her on what she can’t control: other people’s behaviors. The latter shifts her attention to how others did act. She’ll dwell on how she needs to act in response to the event, which focuses her on what she can control: herself.
We want to feel powerful when interacting with the struggles we inevitably have in life. We retain our power by facing reality and working with it. This is what Emma did. She stood up for herself by expressing the facts firmly, yet in a kind manner. She wasn’t the only one who had access to the cash register, so any employee could be responsible for the cash shortage. Her boss understood her argument and wasn’t offended because Emma was respectful in how she expressed herself. She didn’t accuse her boss of unfairly blaming her; she simply explained the event in a clear, firm, and respectful way. She also suggested a solution to the problem: assign one person to the cash register and make that person count the money at the end of the shift.
Responding to this stressful event in this way helped Emma remain calm and direct her attention in a curious manner. She learned that she can take action to influence a stressful situation toward being more fair. Having a job to make money gives her power, but it’s this kind of internal power of directing her attention that’s most important for her to learn. That kind of power can be wielded anywhere, anytime regardless of how much money she may have. Such power helps her direct her choices as she finds and lives the many steps of her life.
Practice tip: Beyond Blessed and Cursed
One of the main quotes don Juan says to Carlos Castaneda is: “The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge, while the ordinary man takes everything as either a blessing or a curse.”
Ordinary people tend to equate comforts they experience as being blessed and stressors as being cursed. Move beyond blessed/cursed by simply seeing everything that happens as a challenge.
Are you blessed by having large holds on a rock climb? Are you cursed when those holds are small? No, you simply have a challenge.
- If the holds are large, then the challenge is: you can be distracted because the difficulty of the climbing is low.
- If the holds are small, then the challenge is: you can be distracted because the difficulty of the climbing is high.
In either case, apply your power by focusing your attention. Focus intently on your climbing, whether the climbing is easy or difficult. This way your attention is more likely to stay focused in the moment, which is where your power lies.
This Post Has 2 Comments
Hi Arno, a respectful and honest question here. You quoteded ““The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge, while the ordinary man takes everything as either a blessing or a curse.”
I’d like to offer an alternative quote and idea by my favorite author, David Deida from his book – The Way of The Superior Man. He states “Every moment of your life is either a test or a celebration.” I that if everything is a “challenge,” then we are not living a balanced or even observant life. Everything is not a challenge. That leads us to distort reality. There are many of situations in everyone’s lives that are not challenges.
Hey Max, I haven’t read that book, but I intend to soon. It sounds very interesting.
Point taken about everything being a challenge, which might indicate that everything in life is stressful. We need comfort and we need stress, in timely proportions. It’s a cycle.
A subtlety is that even with the balance of “test” and “celebration” we have challenges. From a mental training perspective, it’s a challenge to approach tests (stressors) as opportunities to learn, and when we fail, to not allow that failure to diminish how we feel about ourselves. Likewise, we approach celebrations (comforts) without clinging to them, so that the success doesn’t make us feel better about ourselves. Feeling better or worse (blessed or cursed) about ourselves shifts our attention away from the learning process.
The point is one of identity. If we tie how we feel about ourselves–our self worth–to outcomes, we make how we feel about ourselves dependent on those outcomes. In short, we make ourselves victims.
If we separate our identity from outcomes, then we position ourselves as warriors. That separation, though, is a constant challenge. I think this is what don Juan pointed toward in that quote.
Thanks for sharing your perspective (and book suggestion) to help us both (and the WW community) understand these concepts better. a