Choices

May. 29th, 2006 07:18 pm
trixtah: (Tattoo)
[personal profile] trixtah
(Apropos of nothing I want to discuss right now)

As an adult, one's life is full of choices. One makes them after (hopefully) adequate consideration and due faith, and one deals with the consequences. Often choices mean a whole raft of implications that one didn't consider beforehand. No-one is omniscient. So the other part of being an adult is dealing with the consequences and the unforseen implications of those choices.

"Dealing with" stuff can be done in different ways. One, of course, is total avoidance. Another is being able to smoothly handle any resulting situation because you instinctively know the best approach, or because it's similar to something you've dealt with before. Quite often, though, you deal with unforeseen results with some kind of coping process until you have it sorted. Or else you don't cope at all, so the best thing there is to exit from the situation as quickly and gracefully as possible.

Coping is hard. It needs to be a finite process, at least in regard to a specific stimulus (since all of life involves choices, we're generally coping with at least one thing at a time). We evolve mechanisms which enable us to cope, which others may or may not have any sympathy with, and which may be more or less effective. We make mistakes, and can take a while to make up lost ground. However, there should be a sense of progression to the situation one is coping with: that one is adjusting to the demands involved; or, that one is carrying out the necessary actions to resolve the situation, to bring it to its finite end.

When we're in a coping process, it can be hard to sense our progression. The mechanisms which we use to cope may sometimes actively hinder, or others can fail to see how they can possibly work.  If we do make some kind of internal changes, it can take a while for the external actions to catch up. Because an external observer probably has a very different coping style, they may not see any change at all. Or it may not be fast enough, or complete enough for them. But one may rely on those same external observers to give us feedback, or even to provide a threshing floor to sort out those implications.

So I find those people whose contribution to that kind of thing is "you made your bed, you lie in it" deeply unhelpful. Yes, telling someone you think they're stuck and they need to get out of a situation is helpful. Or that they need to move forward from that particular sticking point. Telling them a coping mechanism is actively counter-productive is helpful. Telling them you find that particular mechanism wearying can be helpful.  Telling them that you're not responsible for their issues and they need to help themselves can be essential. Telling them that they have done this same thing umpteen times before, and it's about time they started to learn is also helpful.

Failure to acknowlege the progress someone has made is not helpful. Nor is identifying a non-existent problem. Nor is critiquing someone's coping mechanism without offering a better solution.

Unless someone is actively not coping, kicking their feet from under them in such a way while they're trying to move towards their goal is counter-productive, to say the least. It makes them reluctant to trust you with relevant information in the future (thus further distorting any perspectives you may have on the situation), and either tends to make them more risk-adverse in the future, or conversely more reckless and certainly much less likely to listen to input.


Thank you for the ventage (coping mechanism #1).

(no subject)

Date: 2006-05-29 10:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shangchi.livejournal.com
I have found that there are two things that seem to help the most when it comes to coping, with whatever situation in which I may find myself, but they prove to be the two hardest things I've ever had to do in my entire life.

1) To see the situation as it really is; totally objectively, uncolored by my own wants, desires, prejudices, delusions, fantasies, etc.

2) To see myself exactly as I am, again totally objectively, without the coloring and filtering (and blurring) that usually goes on when we look at ourselves.

I find that in the very few rare times that I can see both of these things as they are at that particular point in time, everything else, whether it be solutions, resolutions, resignations, whether it involves people or just circumstances, seem to become very apparent. There may still be lots of work to do, or pain to accept, but the real hard part is over.

I suppose you could say that I'm spending the rest of my life learning to see things (and myself) as they really are.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-05-29 10:30 am (UTC)
ext_8716: (Default)
From: [identity profile] trixtah.livejournal.com
Yes, I think seeing all sides of a situation enables acceptance and action, on whatever levels.

Total objectivity, hm. That's a hard one, and certainly something I don't ever expect to achieve. Trying for it is bound to be a worthwhile exercise, tho'. :-)

(no subject)

Date: 2006-05-29 10:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shangchi.livejournal.com
As I said, it's the hardest thing to do I can think of. Another way of putting it, according to Anthony DeMello (as well as the Buddha and other spiritual teachers) is to become awake, and I can't help but think he's onto something, judging from my extremely limited experience.

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