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I can’t believe I did that.  I mean really; what could have I been thinking?  I’m too embarrassed to describe the event, but I will say that it was inappropriate.   And to top it off, it was with a very put together professional who could be of immense value in my professional growth and a great friend in my future.

It reminds me of a similar humility producing event that occurred very early in my professional career where I was at lunch with three of my business colleagues.  I had just started the job, and a colleague - also new - asked me if I wanted to join her and two of our more senior colleagues for lunch; one being very senior to us.  Anyway the topic of oral care came up and the ladies were very anti-dentist and were sharing their favorite horror story dentist visit.  Being the spontaneous extrovert that I am, I jumped in with “I actually haven’t had any bad dentist experiences, in fact - drum roll please - the best head I ever had was in a dentist’s office.”

Dead silence.

To my horror, I recognized what I had said.  I knew enough about American culture to know what the word head communicates here.  I could hear my mother reciting the four things that come not back: the sped arrow, the past life, the lost opportunity and the spoken word.  Less than a week on the job, I had just told three professional women that I had the best head in my life at the dentist’s office.

“Time out!”  I said.   “Let’s talk about cultural differences.”  They, themselves shocked, were looking at me with looks of curious disbelief. “You see where I come from the word head is more commonly used to express what you would call a buzz.”  Then I proceed to explain that I had been given nitrous oxide as part of my oral surgery to remove an impacted wisdom tooth.  It felt so good that I was oblivious to any pain or discomfort.

They looked at each other and then abruptly laughed out loud.   Whew!  They had accepted my gaff for the honest blunder that it was.

The question is how does one come back from something like that?  Make no mistake, there is an impact.  For example, for years after the one colleague that stayed in the company with me would sometimes greet me on a Monday morning and loudly ask “Had any good head lately Pete?”

When you commit such a “crime” there really is a consequence.  In one respect you can’t come back from it. It’s like your own personal invasion of Iraq.   You can’t just withdraw and pretend like it never happened.  Every time you show up at the UN, you know … people talk.  And forget about taking Iraq out for a drink.  Even if she’s polite enough to accept the invitation, you know what she sees when she looks at you: an invasion justifying, selfish creep.  That’s not the truth about you of course, but you have given her valid grounds to see you this way.

In the grand scheme of humility-producing actions that I have done in my life the one that prompted me to write this post is certainly not the worst, but it is the first that I’ve done in a long time, and I thought I would write about it because it brings up a couple things that I think are important to understand and incorporate into the practice of your life.

First, please understand that beating yourself up about something you thought, said, or did is not very helpful.  It is probably the case that human beings are the only creatures on the planet capable of punishing themselves over and over again for a single event.  Indeed, we can keep up the self-flagellation for a lifetime.  Definitely do learn from the incident (see below), but be clear that there was the incident (whatever happened)  and the story you make up about it (thank you Landmark Education), and they are not the same thing.  You get to choose the story you make up about whatever happens, and as a human being you have the capacity to invent an infinite number of stories about anything that happens.  Why pick a story that doesn’t move you forward in life?

Living your life as a practice means that you have in the background your greatness and that life is all about the ups and downs; they can’t exist without each other.  Growth in your life requires downs, failures, breakdowns, heartache and loss.  If you don’t experience at least some of these you cannot grow, in fact you’re not living.  Life isn’t only about happiness!  If you don’t have other emotions you wouldn’t know what happiness was, and life would be a gigantic flatline even if all your circumstances are what you think you would like.

Second, learn from the things that don’t work in your life.  Whether you’re on the giving or receiving end in a situation that doesn’t work, your job is to learn from it without assassinating possibilities or relationships.  What this looks like is giving up judging people and events as bad or wrong.  People will always do things that don’t work, and most times they have no awareness of the event and its effect on others.  Assigning a quality to that person’s character like bad, evil, or shallow closes off possibilities for both you and them.  Usually, it’s also a sign that you do the same to yourself.  Take a look and see.

So, where does that leave me with this person that I committed my latest humility-producing event?  Feeling and being great - as long as I live the practice that I preach.  That person will continue to occur for me as judging me and what I did as long as I continue to be the same of myself; I love myself too much to continue carrying that around.  I’ve moved on, accepting the consequence of a moment of unconsciousness.  At the very least it has reminded me that a teacher dwells within every circumstance of life.

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Came across this post by Cheryl Wright and would like to share it with you.  Gardening as Cheryl describes is the perfect analogy to what it means to live your life as a practice: the exercise and pursuit of a consciously created life.

Here’s some of Cheryl’s post:

Cultivate Your Life

Gardening is a lot of work but reaps great rewards. Use these four gardening tasks to cultivate your life. 1. Identify and remove the weeds that are flourishing, clogging your life pores, complicating your relationships and smothering your dreams.
2. Water your life with quiet time to pray, meditate, read, plan, dream and enjoy your favourite leisure activities.
3. Wait patiently for your work to bear fruit and expectations to materialise.
4. Wonder at the beauty that adorns your life.

There’s no way we can put off taking care of our lives and not experience the backlash. Treat your life as you would a garden and you will enjoy the beauty of a well-cultivated life.
I’m no gardener by any stretch of the imagination, but I am fascinated with the similarities between a garden and our lives. While we could put the smallest gardening effort on hold without any serious consequences, there’s no way we can put off taking care of our lives and not experience the backlash. So, like a conscientious gardener we need to cultivate our lives to reap the best fruits and enjoy the beauty.
Rainy days may keep you from heading outside with straw hat and gardening tools. But they are the perfect days to sit inside and do some work on your life. So grab your favourite drink and snack, curl up with your journalling tools and cultivate your life.

Weed
Sometimes it seems they pop up overnight. Unlike some plants that struggle to survive, lose the battle, shrivel and die, garden weeds are indomitable. They anchor themselves in any kind of soil and withstand extreme weather conditions.
Life weeds such as feeling overwhelmed with responsibilities at home and at work, financial problems, difficult relationships, health concerns and so on, rear their ugly heads and choke the good and positive things in our lives.
Some life weeds have tap roots; they burrow straight down and deep. They pierce and break our hearts. Others with fibrous roots fan out and filter through the network of our lives infecting and poisoning all that is good and positive.
They create havoc in every situation and relationship, turning our lives upside down and inside out. They loom above other minor life weeds and force us to set aside legitimate concerns so we can cater to their demands for our undivided attention.
Life weeds sprout and flourish anywhere. They cling to us like parasites. They suck us dry and leave us listless and passive in our own lives.
With a discerning eye and a prayerful heart identify the weeds that are flourishing, clogging your life pores, complicating your relationships and smothering your dreams. Don’t deal only with what is on the surface. Dig to the roots of the weeds in your life and get rid of them to allow the free entry and flow of all that is good and beautiful.

Water
We know of course that too much water can drown even moisture-loving plants. So we are often advised to water our gardens regularly with a moderate supply to keep the soil moist and the plants healthy and alive.
When we get lost in the rush of daily living, it is easy to allow our personal lives to languish in the neglect caused by whatever turmoil may be commanding our attention or the heat of busyness and burnout.
It is honourable that we take care of our responsibilities to our families, our jobs and other areas as well. However, when we don’t pay attention to our personal lives: health, leisure activities, our dreams and other personal interests, we are delinquent gardeners of the lives we’ve been given.
We water our lives when we take time to nurture ourselves with quiet time to pray, meditate, read, plan, dream and lose ourselves in the activities that we enjoy.
Are you drowning your life with too much of a good thing or killing your life slowly by leaving it to languish, dehydrated and starved of crucial life-saving nutrients?

Wait & Wonder

Visit the link above to read the full post.

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