Tag Archives: writing

On Being Kind, Being Right, and How to Load the Dishwasher

Is anyone else as amazed as I am by the many and varied perspectives we all have? On Wednesday, I wrote about how hard it can be for me to choose being kind over being right, depending on the circumstances. I had a lot of fun contemplating Anne Lamott’s quote, “You can either practice being right or practice being kind.”  But even better, I loved reading these other writers’ responses.

 

photo by srqpix of Jason Luper mural

Velveteen Mama disagreed a bit with Anne Lamott and argued that “the crux is our dependency on the outcome.”

In her post, SusieJ described how taking her boys to a church they like–not the one she would choose–has been a surprise blessing.

And Mayberry Mom just made me laugh, as she agreed that it’s difficult “to let go of being right when it doesn’t really matter,” but insisted that how we load the dishwasher does matter!

Wise Words 1: The Most Important Things

“The most important things are the hardest to say. They are the things you get ashamed of, because words diminish them — words shrink things that seemed limitless when they were in your head to no more than living size when they’re brought out. But it’s more than that, isn’t it?…you may make revelations that cost you dearly only to have people look at you in a funny way, not understanding what you’ve said at all, or why you thought it was so important that you almost cried while you were saying it. That’s the worst, I think. When the secret stays locked within not for want of a tellar but for want of an understanding ear.” –Stephen King

Do you have these kinds of secrets? The ones that you stumble upon and wrestle with, the ones that flip and turn in your mind like rocks in a tumbler, until you’ve polished them into a brilliant gem? A gem you quietly hide in the recesses of your heart?

I do.

Stephen King’s words took me by surprise the first time I read them. “Yes!” I thought. “He nailed it.” He took a concept I’d tiptoed around, an idea I thought was incredibly complex and articulated it simply: “The most important things are the hardest to say.”

I find that this is true whether I’m really, physically saying a thing—naming a dream, challenging an idea, confronting a friend—or simply trying to convince myself.

Ideas, I think, are the hardest for me. As a concrete thinker, for example, I have no business being intrigued by Vision Boards. Except I am. Are you familiar with this idea? To create a Vision Board, you clip pictures that resonate with you, deeply, and glue them to poster board, butcher paper, or other background. Admitting that I find this fascinating is harder than you might think. And it’s hard for the exact reasons Stephen King expresses.

First: “words diminish them.” So true. When I say Vision Board it feels wishy-washy and dreamer-like. The rest of my brain screams: Make a plan. Write it down. Pros and cons. Cutting out pictures on pasting them on poster board? Is this elementary school?

And that’s just when I say them to myself.

When I say them out loud, or here, to you, they shrink to eleven tiny letters, two words and a space on a page. The words  “vision board” represent a concept, an idea; they’re without substance. They’re void of the thought and hope and heart that bring them to life when they reside in my mind. The fear of giving voice to these words, to paraphrase Stephen King, is that you may not understand what I’ve said—or you might look at me in a funny way—or you might completely miss why this idea is feels big and important to me.

One of the most essential components in this process, I think, is the community with which we surround ourselves. When our spouse or friends or, if we’re lucky, both, lend “an understanding ear” it allows us to make our revelations with all their glory and shortcomings, without fear of mockery or judgment.  We’re free to unlock our secrets. But equally important is the reverse: that we, ourselves, lend “an understanding ear” to the others in our tribe, acknowledging the value of their most important things, too.

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This is the first post of Wise Words, a place we can describe how wisdom from across the ages resounds in our lives. (I’ll post a new quote each Monday; details, here.) I’d love to have you link up below and add your voice. When you do, be sure to link to your Wise Words post, not just to your main page. Also, please link here on your post, so others can find us and join if they’d like. If you don’t get to it on Wednesday, no worries—you can add your link anytime this week. Last, but definitely not least, add to our sense of community by reading the thoughts of at least one of the other writers/bloggers who participates.

Many thanks!

PS When I read Caz Makepeace’s recent post on Jeff Goins’ blog, I thought it was right in line with this idea. I highly recommend it for a great read about following dreams and quelling doubts.

 

Wisdom From the Ages: Join Me?

If we would only give the same amount of reflection to what we want out of life that we give to the question of what to do with two weeks’ vacation, we would be startled at our false standards and the aimless procession of our busy days.”

—Dorothy Canfield Fisher

Wisdom through the ages
Do you spend more time planning your vacation than your life? (photo credit: virtual photography studio)

For a long as I can remember, I’ve loved reading kernels of wisdom like this one. I find it powerful when people from varied cultures and far apart centuries share share insights that still matter.

This weekend at the Blissdom Conference, Jeff Goins challenged us to write what we love.  Afterwards, I thought for a long time about what I love and I realized this: I love to think. I love to ponder. I love to hear what others have to say.

To that end, I’d like to spend the rest of this year investigating the wisdom people have shared through the ages. Wisdom we can apply to our lives here and now. I’d like to do this together. Will you join me?

My idea is this:

  • Each Monday I’ll post a quote that resonates with me and might resonate with you, too—maybe long-ago words from Thoreau, maybe a newer nugget from Gretchin Rubin.
  • On Wednesday, I’ll repost the quote and tell you a story, explain how I think it relates to my life now, and I’ll invite you to do the same. You can respond with a comment, or link to your own post describing how the quote moves you—or why you don’t agree with its premise.
  • On Friday, I’ll link to the post that most spoke to me, or to all of the posts if we only have a few.

Each month will follow a theme, and since we missed February, which I suppose would have been about love, March will be about relationships.

I’ll post a quote Monday and look forward to reading your thoughtful responses beginning on Wednesday.  If you like the idea, please share it—we can all learn from each other.

Will I see you next week?