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The Reward of Taking a Chance

Dance-take Chance-PeopleToolsOn March 1, 1968, my law partner, Jim, and I formed a company to invest in real estate. I went out and agreed to buy houses and apartment buildings, promising down payments of $5,000 or $25,000 in thirty to sixty days. There was just one small problem. Neither Jim nor I had any money. Somehow we always came up with the down payment, but those were scary times.

After two or three years of watching me repeatedly put our financial lives at the precipice, Jim cornered me in my office one afternoon and told me that he didn’t like what I was doing.

“Jim,” I said. “Between us we have a net worth of $15,000. Suppose we take the risk, as we have, run our net worth up to $1,000,000 over the next few years then lose it all? We would have gone from almost nothing to really nothing. No big loss. But suppose we run our net worth up to a million dollars and keep it? We could be set for the rest of our lives.”

Though Jim was polite, his fear pushed him toward caution and in 1971 Jim left our company to practice law with different—and I assume more financially conservative—partners. I continued to take those same scary financial risks. It was a “bet” I eventually won.  Big time.

With women, however, I was more like Jim with money. As a high school student I could only gather enough courage to ask a girl to dance with me just as she was waltzing out the door on the arm of someone else. I was paralyzed by my fear of rejection, so I didn’t get to practice my fox trot with very many girls.

But I’ve noticed, as perhaps you have, that where you take the greatest risks you reap the greatest reward. In fact, isn’t risk the only way to achieve great reward? And risk, even great risk, is often an illusion. Here’s why.

At high school dances I doomed myself to failure for just one reason—I refused to try. No ask (no risk), no dance. No dance, no date. No date, no . . . anything. Suppose I had been more assertive? Would I have suffered total rejection? Not likely. Would I have enjoyed the pleasure of spinning around the dance floor with a girl in my arms? Yes. So if I had “taken a chance” I would have gained more at the time, and I also would have gained experience to help me later. As the poet John Dryden said, “None but the brave deserves the fair”

On a deep level we all fear rejection. I know I do. But my fear of loss is not the same as loss itself. A few years ago, at age sixty, my younger brother died of a sudden heart attack. I had always assumed that both of us would survive well into old age. I had no fear of losing David, but I lost him anyway. I’ll say it again—the fear of loss is not the same as loss itself. It is not loss itself that deters us, it is the fear of loss. And as Franklin Delano Roosevelt reminded us, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”

Fingers-crossed-PeopleTools

So I encourage you to take a chance. Not blindly, but deliberately and more often than you do now. It is better to take ten risks and enjoy seven victories than to take one risk and win only once.

Take a close look at those areas in your life in which you would like “more.” More money, more friends, more travel, more anything. You might politely ask for a slightly higher increase in salary, where the real risk is a lot lower than the perceived risk. Then go for it!  (My employees do this all the time.)

You may find that there are some areas—for me, my physical safety—in which the loss could be catastrophic and you do not want to take any risk at all. That’s perfectly fine. We will never meet at the top of Mount Everest. But we might share a real estate investment. Or a dance.

Alan

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The Family Conference

 

PatternsPersist-PeopleToolsWhen I was seven or eight my father started holding “the family conference.”  The primary purpose was to talk about and resolve family grievances which inevitably arise. For example, my little brother David often ate the last of the peanut butter and didn’t leave any for my lunch.

At each family conference, if possible, we would take action to solve whatever problems were discussed. We met in the living room. I can still see my father sitting in the big stuffed chair in the corner, smoking his pipe, with me and my little brother on the sofa next to him, and my mother in her chair on the other side of the room.

The rules were:

  1. Any family member could call a family conference, which was normally held within a day or two of the request.
  2. Any of us could speak for as long as we wanted to, without interruption.  I frequently cried when describing my problem, but everyone else waited for me to compose myself.  No one could interrupt or directly argue.
  3. The conference lasted for as long as it needed to, until everyone had been heard on any subject they wanted to talk about.
  4. There was no “blaming” allowed, and there was usually an attempt to resolve each problem by all family members agreeing on a solution, often after a compromise was reached.

I found “The Family Conference” to be very helpful, even though I usually didn’t think of my best arguments until the next morning.

I was a sensitive kid.  I cried when I was frustrated, which was often. These conferences made me feel safe to be myself—first crying, and finally expressing my needs and opinions.  Even if my problem wasn’t solved every time, I felt much better after the conference because both of my parents had taken the time to sit and listen to what I had to say.  In other words, I felt that they heard me.  The process also seemed more democratic than parental dictatorship which is the governing process for many families.

Family-communication-peopletoolsSo parents, if you aren’t already doing so, I encourage you to starting holding family conferences. It will involve your children in running your family on a more egalitarian basis, preparing them to be better parents for your grandchildren. This is one form of glue that does hold families together. It teaches your children to use their words, rather than their fists.  It also encourages direct communication, rather than having children hide their feelings, or communicate only with friends.  Shouldn’t family members be best friends and look out for each other?

I think so.

Alan

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Snip

snip-peopletoolsMany years ago I read a book by Harry Brown entitled How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World. The essence of his advice was that when a relationship is over you should let it go and create room in your life for the next relationship that, for him, was always better.

I don’t believe that the next relationship, or next anything, is always better than the last, though it certainly has that possibility. I do believe that, just as in a tropical rainforest, unless a tall tree falls its tiny successor will never be bathed in full sunlight and grow. In other words, you have to make room for your future.

If your current life and relationships are perfect, please visit another of my blogs and come back to this one if and when you need it. However, if you would like to create space or sunlight for a new experience or person (read about my 80% solution), then perhaps you should “snip” from your life that which is not working for you.

In the 1970s, heyday of “encounter groups,” a Louise joined our ongoing group. She was forty-five years old and had held the same job for twenty-five years. She had hated her job for many years. The rest of us suggested that she simply quit, but for most of us that is much easier said than done.

When you snip a job or person from your life, you are left to encounter the fearsome black hole of the unknown. But that’s just part of the process. You have to take a leap of faith, or you might consider the modified snip.  It’s like back in school when you would swing on the playground rings. You always had to grab the next ring before you let go of the last one. That is where two hands are useful. Louise from the encounter group ultimately resolved her fear by looking for and finding a different and better job before she quit the one she was so unhappy with.

One of my favorite pieces of writing advice is to “Kill your darlings.” A word, a thought, a paragraph, or an entire chapter— each may be beautiful and the best you’ve ever written, but if it doesn’t belong, doesn’t add to the total work, then it must be snipped. This concept has been especially difficult for me to use in my own writing, not because I love all of my darlings, but because I don’t like to waste anything. I have invested time and thought to write each sentence. When I throw anything out I grumble to myself that I have wasted my time. Then I remember that all the time I have spent in the past is really just a “sunk cost” and I snip!

Snip-sunshiine-peopletoolsI’d like to end with another story from my encounter group. One fine day a woman in our group named Karen called all four of the men she was dating, and ended each relationship. This was quite a day’s work. The Big Snip. But Karen had decided that she wanted to find a more meaningful and committed relationship and by eliminating the men who did not fit the bill (one of whom was my brother) she certainly created a lot of space to find the one right person.

I encourage you to do the same. If it isn’t working in your life (be it a relationship, a job, or a favorite article of clothing), then snip it out to make room for something which may work, or fit you, better.

Alan

 

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