People around me lately have had to deal with major life
changes. The funny thing about change is that it has long fingers. It never
really stays with the host. It has a ripple effect. Not always bad, sometimes
for the better, but I find it interesting to see how far the ripples go. For
instance, my going from being employed to being self-employed created huge
ripples in those close to me. While I have more flexibility, I have much less
personal time and that has affected my friends and family. I have had to change
my whole life to keep up and that has affected everyone, all the way down to my
hairdresser and UPS delivery guy. I may be home working on my deck at 2PM one
day and gone for 12 hours the next.
People have had to change their schedules and even lives due to my
changes.
I have a good friend
and client that lost her job. She is dealing with the shock and loss of her
entire social structure, income and security all in one fell swoop. At Plaid
Swan, we were affected as we loved working with this person and will miss her
on the work front for a long time, but now our relationship changes from
client/friend to just good friend and it feels off center and will until we all
regain our balance. While the change in not working with her is bad, her replacement
is a good guy and now we and 400 people have change in our daily lives. (But we
really like him as well, so it will be worth it.)
My neighbor was blindsided by cancer. No symptoms and too
far along to do much about. She went from gardening one day to making end-of-
life decisions the next. She is a very young woman and she has just found out
that she has lived her lifetime. It will be in the span of 42 years, not
80. I cannot imagine the changes in
every corner of her world from her parents to her husband to her children. Her passing will affect thousands of people
in enormous ways and some ever so slightly, but their lives will change all the
same. The mailman won’t get brownies
from that house this Christmas, and local nursing homes residents will suddenly
notice that this woman and her therapy dog don’t visit and read to them
anymore.
Someone said to me other day that they thought this woman
was cold and at times rude. This person has no idea about this woman’s health,
and it was not my place to tell her. But, she decided she no longer likes this
neighbor because she doesn’t wave anymore when she walks by with her dog.
The point of all this, is for everyone, me included to give
people in your everyday life a little slack.
Don’t take everything personally, don’t feel that every comment or
expression, or even poor customer service at the drugstore, is a shot at you. Stop reading so much in to all of life’s tiny
unimportant moments, and then maybe we won’t miss the ones that do matter.
Sometimes people are just simply preoccupied with all the
changes around and don’t think to make sure everyone else is petted and happy.
Let’s be kind to each other and give people we love and those we don’t even
know, the benefit of the doubt. Sometimes the kindest reaction is a little
breathing room. Let people regain their footing. And if you have to make
changes because of someone else, swim with the tide, not against it. The ride
is nicer.
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