Photo Credit: Jaycen Saab
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Sure enough, you fume, you have a conversation with yourself
about how ruuuuude these people are, how you would neeeeever behave that way. You
are justifiably irritated, and you stay that way for the better part of your
day. You then inflict your foul mood on whoever you encounter next: co-worker,
child, partner, friend. Suddenly you’re all thumbs, you drop things, you can’t
find that whatever you need, and your back is acting up again.
No big surprise! Like attracts like, energetically speaking,
and when you’re in a rotten place, you cease to perceive the goodness all
around and in you. You can only relate to things that match in some way, your
foul mood.
The solution is not to pretend you weren’t slighted, dissed,
or generally “rudified” – you were! The solution is to recognize the behavior
as something you don’t want in your life, and refuse to attach to it. In short,
don’t cling! Don’t latch on to the person’s rudeness as if it were a life
preserver and hang on to it for all you are worth. Let go! Immediately,
totally, completely. They were rude, yes. You don’t like it, fine. It’s done,
over.
You see, it’s not the slight or the cutting-in-front that
hurts you, not really. Oh, you may have to spend 5 more minutes in line than
you intended, and you may have to remember to pay more attention to potentially
irresponsible drivers, but there’s no real harm here. You’re irritated,
annoyed, not damaged beyond repair.
Unless you make it so. The more you fume, dwell on the
slight, rehash it endlessly in the theatre of your mind, the bigger it gets,
and yes, then you can do damage to yourself over this truly insignificant
event.
You have better things to do with your life, your time on
this glorious planet. If you can, forgive the person (who knows what’s going on
in their life?), if you can’t, that’s all right too, but at the very least, let
go and walk on by. You will be the happier for it.
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