2010 MISTAKES
Be Happy in LIFE Inspiration - December 2010
Mistakes only make us stronger
Now that the New Year approaching, I find it is a good time to reflect. Every year, I talk about the New Year wish list and if you remember from previous years, I still recommend everyone to have a huge wish list for life. This year, you need 2011 to prepare you for the next year.
Today, I would like to write about the mistakes we have made. If you are familiar with my writing, you know I do not use the word "mistake" often, because I think it has a negative connotation for most people. Personally, I do not think we make mistakes. We do the best we can and only think of our actions as mistakes when we realize they did not get us the results we expected.
We always do the best we can, because as humans, we do not have the capacity to do anything else. Can you imagine yourself looking around for options and saying to yourself, "This is the most horrible option I have, so let me choose it"?
I did not think so!
When thinking about it in retrospect, I have made many mistakes in my life, but that is the fascinating thing about life - you do not make decisions with a 100% ability to read the future. It is a guess. You manage to recognize many options and pick the only one that seems like it will give you the best outcomes. Yes, a second into the future, I discovered it was not the best option, but I could not do that before. If I could do it, I would have.
Mistakes I have made (and what I can learn from them)
Much like making a wish list that functions as a tool to set goals, learning from our mistakes can do exactly the same. If you have your 2010 wish list, it is a good idea to also make a list of 2010 mistakes you have made and what you can learn from them. Remember, it is not meant for you to find ways to beat yourself up for things you have done wrong. Kicking yourself hurts and is not very productive. You can do much better feeling good about yourself.
I find this activity liberating. It is a way to forgive myself for all the "mistakes" and "wrong decisions" I have made without the ability to tell the future. Even the best fortuneteller does not have a 100% success rate.
To succeed with this list, remember that you are judging yourself with a different perspective. When looking at the past now, you have knowledge you did not have back then. You know now how things turned out and you can put tags on them. You can say which was a good choice and which was not so good (I am sure you may even say some were bad choices).
If you say things like, "I should have known", "I regret this", "I could have done it differently", "I should have said something else", "I didn't think properly" or any other variation of judging yourself harshly, this is your opportunity to stop it and learn from your experience. Now, you know. Now, you can do it differently. Now, you can say something else and come up with a better idea. Give yourself another chance.
It is neither good nor bad, but thinking makes it so
- William Shakespeare (Hamlet)
When making your mistake list, there are things you need to make sure of:
- These things happened to you (not to your wife, your husband, your mother, etc). Distinguish between what happened to others and what happened to you as a result of it.
- You did something or did nothing, but it effected the situation (this can be not defending someone who got hurt, not expressing your real feelings, not intervening, not taking things seriously, etc).
- Now that it happened, armed with the knowledge of how it turned out, your think the outcome was not in your favor.
How to list mistakes and make the most of them
Mistakes are not as bad when you take learning from them, therefore the first part of this activity is to find mistakes and the second is to find learning. If you are not getting to the learning, this activity may frustrate you rather than give you hope. Focus on opportunities for personal growth.
- Keep asking the same question "Now that I know something I could not predict before, what will I do differently next time?" and be happy that next time will be easier, because you already know something you did not know before and you better prepared.
- Start with old stuff first, because you are now far away from it in time and space and may be less involved emotionally. Also, the change in perspective is bigger and can help you release some old thoughts that no longer serve you. Go down memory lane to your childhood and try to remember things that did not turn out in your favor. Go from there to school, high school, family gatherings and so on.
- Regrets are a wonderful way of finding mistakes. Usually, when we regret something, it means there is some important work we must do on forgiving ourselves, so list your regrets.
- Situations when you think you should have stood up for yourself or someone else are a good source of mistakes for your list.
- Was it something that I did/did not do, or was it out of my control? It is important to understand that having a car accident while driving safely and being hit by someone else who was drinking and driving may mean you were involved in the accident, but you had no control over what happened. Learn to let those events go. They are not mistakes, because there was nothing you could do differently. Many people experience grief this way. They keep saying to themselves, "I should have, would have, could have", but in fact, when someone else dies and you had no direct impact on their death, it is too late and it is not a mistake on your part. Let it go!
- When you find things others have highlighted to you as mistakes, be careful. Your actions may not have resulted in a good outcome for THEM, but this is YOUR list. Ask yourself, "Do I agree this was a mistake?" and "What can I learn from the fact that someone else thinks it was a mistake?"
- When you examine situations in life that did not turn out the way you wanted, ask yourself, "What was the REAL mistake?" What was it I did/did not do that would have made it all turn out differently? Roll the event backwards and find the point at which a thought, an emotion or an action started making things fall apart. Was it a misunderstanding? Was it an overwhelming feeling? Was it an accident? What triggered the chain of events that led to the undesirable results?
When you write about something you see as a mistake, ask yourself, "Was it really that bad?" Sometimes, we remember having bad feelings, but when taking space and time to reflect, we realize they were not as bad. I sometimes say to myself, "Let me get back to it in a week" or "Let me sleep on it". When we are emotional and feel we have done something wrong, we are more judgmental than when we look back at things. You may find the real mistake was to carry a negative impression of the event in your mind all this time.
- The best tip I can give you that is the essence of NLP (Neurolinguistic Programming) is to go over all your mistakes and ask, "What good has come out of this?" I believe this is the most important trick in every healing and recovering - finding good in any perceived bad. I have been suggesting this technique to countless people for many years. Some of them get very upset with me and tell me, "Ronit, how can you ask me to do this? It was cruel to go through something bad. Why would I want to cheat myself into thinking something good has come out of it?" I tell them that if I can say that something good has come out of losing my two babies, they can get there too. Can you imagine me asking myself "What good has come out of the death of my two kids?" Well, I have done it and it has made the whole difference between dragging myself down to a life of agony and finding happiness. Ask yourself, "How has this bad thing helped me become better, stronger, wiser, kinder, more successful or happier?" and I believe in "Ask and you shall receive!"
This is a tricky list, because you come up with 2010 unpleasant events that did not work in your favor. But if you get 1 or 2 learnings and good things out of each one, you will have over 2010 reasons to be happy, forgive yourself and look forward to making more mistakes, because with them come new understanding, new knowledge and new hopes for the future.
Have a happy holiday season and a year full of hopes, goals and personal growth.

May the force be with you,

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