If your life is free of problems, you might want to check your pulse. I’m afraid you may be dead.
Life, should you choose to live it, will always present you with a steady stream of problems. There’s simply no escaping them. If you don’t believe me, just give it a try. I think you’ll find yourself with a very big problem on your hands.
Now, some folks would tell you to see your problems as opportunities. I think that’s sweet, but I prefer to call them problems, because the only opportunity they present is the opportunity to solve them, so, at the end of the day, they’re still problems.
But problem doesn’t have to be a dirty word. After all, if I handed you a large stack of cash, I’d also be handing you a stack of problems.
Where will you keep it? How will you invest it? How much will you save? How much will you spend? So forth and so on it goes, but I suspect you wouldn’t mind these problems at all. Most of us would agree they’re good problems to have.
If your life is free of problems, you might want to check your pulse. I’m afraid you may be dead.
Life, should you choose to live it, will always present you with a steady stream of problems. There’s simply no escaping them. If you don’t believe me, just give it a try. I think you’ll find yourself with a very big problem on your hands.
Now, some folks would tell you to see your problems as opportunities. I think that’s sweet, but I prefer to call them problems, because the only opportunity they present is the opportunity to solve them, so, at the end of the day, they’re still problems.
But problem doesn’t have to be a dirty word. After all, if I handed you a large stack of cash, I’d also be handing you a stack of problems.
Where will you keep it? How will you invest it? How much will you save? How much will you spend? So forth and so on it goes, but I suspect you wouldn’t mind these problems at all. Most of us would agree they’re good problems to have.
If your life is free of problems, you might want to check your pulse. I think you may be dead.
Life, should you choose to live it, will always present you with a steady flow of problems to wrestle with. Each day, the lights go up, the alarm clock sounds, and, as soon as you open your eyes, your next match begins.
You could hit the snooze button, pull the covers over your eyes, and go back to sleep, but do this repeatedly and you’ll just find yourself with a different set of problems to wrestle with (unpaid bills, hungry children, weakening muscles, disappointed friends and family members).
There’s just no getting around it. You and I were born to be wrestlers. It comes with the privilege of breathing.
The trick, I believe, involves three things: learning to love wrestling, learning some good moves, and choosing a worthy opponent.
As crazy as it may sound, part of being happy involves learning to love wrestling with problems. You know you’re going to have them, so wishing it were otherwise will only disappoint you. It’s better, I think, to acquire a taste for taking them on.
At one point in my life, I had to wrestle with vegetables. As kid, I wasn’t very fond of them, but as I grew up I knew I needed to include more of them in my diet. To do so, I had to acquire a taste for them, which is what I did. One by one, I learned to not only eat new vegetables, but to enjoy them as well.
It can work the same way for wrestling with problems. You just have to look at them and perhaps yourself a little differently.
You can train yourself to see problems as opportunities, because each one that comes your way asking you to take it on, to get a hold of it, and pin it to the mat. If you can see the opportunity to do so as a means to better your or someone else’s life, develop your skills, and increase your confidence, then the problem doesn’t look so bad.