Losing is painful. It doesn’t matter what - a job, a promotion, your health, a lover, a spouse - it’s painful. Sure, the pain is greater, the greater the loss, but whenever we lose something, we feel it deeply.
A friend of mine, a trial lawyer by trade, recently lost a
big case. He’s not in the habit of losing trials, for him this was a most
unusual experience. But what intrigued me was his attitude about it: “I can see
where I made some mistakes. I know it’s hindsight and all that, but I seriously
misjudged how the jurors would look at certain facts. I can’t wait for my next
trial - I have some thoughts on what I could have done differently, and I want
to see how they will play out.”
His is an optimist’s attitude. A miracle-making attitude.
One that practically guarantees success. Oh, maybe not every time, but more
often than not. It is well established that optimists succeed beyond their
actual aptitude and talents - all because of their attitude.
Many lawyers, in his position, would have expended their
efforts laying blame somewhere: on opposing counsel for underhanded tricks, on
the Judge for being biased toward the other side, on the jurors for “not
getting it,” on their trial team for being inefficient, or on themselves. My
friend, however, simply assessed his work, figured out what was missing, and
was rarin’ to go on the next trial - so he could once again, win.
All it took was a shift in perception, what Marianne
Williamson* defines as “a miracle.” Or, to my way of thinking, a shift in
perception (how you see the loss) lays the groundwork for a miracle, for
something to happen that will be better than what was expected. By moving off the blame-game, and choosing
instead to learn from the experience (the shift in perception), my friend put
himself back on the success track.
When you look at your loss, whatever it is, as permanent and
all-encompassing, then sure enough, you’ll feel devastated and unable to let go
and move on. If, on the contrary, you look at your loss - be it the loss of a
job, a spouse, a client, your savings - as temporary, something to learn from -
then chances are excellent that you will be able to move on to even better
things; to a “miracle.”
The only change is in how you perceive the event, the loss.
And that, unlike the loss itself, is totally within your control. Buck against
it though we may, we can always control what we think. No, it’s not necessarily
easy. I find it takes considerable effort to move my thoughts off the comfort of
wound-licking and self-pity to thoughts that will generate a better future. But
it’s doable.
And knowing that all it takes is a shift in perception, in
how you view things, makes the seemingly impossible “miraculous,” possible.
* Williamson, Marianne (2009-10-13). A Return to Love:
Reflections on the Principles of A Course in Miracles (p. 9). HarperCollins.
Kindle Edition.
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