How to Get What You Want Every Single Day
Spoiler alert: I will reveal the most important secret near the very end of this blog, so it’s your choice — either skip to the conclusion or read all the way through. It depends on whether you like to enjoy your journey or prefer to arrive at your destination quickly.
Either way, I will keep it short.
During the past week I realized that, like many of us during the pandemic, I’ve fallen into the trap of feeling sorry for myself some of the time. Members of my household have even asked me, “Are you okay?”
Like my dad, I always answer that question with, “Everything’s fine.” This past week has been no exception. While I gladly solicit the opinions and help of others in business, I do not complain about my personal life unless it has become pretty grim. But I have been grumbling to myself lately, giving myself an “Ain’t it awful” message instead of the more uplifting, “Isn’t this fun?”
But I’ve changed my internal message. While my daughter and I prepared the stuffing for our Thanksgiving dinner, I focused on the joy of cooking together and found myself looking forward to an intimate dinner for four rather than the usual throng of twenty. It will be different, but variety is a good thing, even though I do like certain traditions.
The real trick of getting what you want every day is to realize that, as much as we try, we can’t control what happens to us. Bummer. But we can control our reaction. So all you have to do to get what you want every single day is to reframe your perspective and define the outcome as “exactly what you wanted”.
If, on Thursday, someone spills the cranberry sauce all over the floor, I’m planning to tell myself, “Thank goodness. Now I can concentrate on the turkey and stuffing, and eat fewer calories. I don’t like cranberry sauce anyway.” (Of course, that’s only if I can’t find my secret stash of cranberry sauce in back of the pantry.)
Happiness is when there is no gap between what I want to happen and what actually happens. I have trained myself to accept reality, and to label it, “That’s exactly what I wanted. I just didn’t know it yet.”
Of course, after Thanksgiving dinner I would buy more cranberry sauce to enjoy with the leftovers, which is the best part of Thanksgiving anyway. And with only four people at the table, there will definitely be more leftovers.
Yum.
Alan
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