In the past few years, both my sister along with two of my wife's sisters have lost their husbands at a much too early age. Although the circumstances between each is different, for some unknown reason I was thinking about the ways each has dealt with the loss, and from that a lesson we all can learn from emerged.
What this weeks Monday Morning Minute is not, is a suggestion of how a person can deal with their loss. I am taking some artistic license here and using the loss of a loved one or husband as the catalyst to start a train of thought, in this case using the loss as a picture and illustration.
Here is the thing I know, we have all faced loss, and not just the loss of a loved one. We have lost at home, we have lost at work or school, we have loss when it comes to the things we set out to do. The lesson I think exists here is what those next steps look like, and how we deal with them.
When my sister lost her husband a few years ago, she was an absolute wreck. Our hearts broke as she went through the grieving process, in her case, it involved using reference material that told her what she should be feeling at various weeks past the initial loss.
In one hard conversation she commented that she did not know how she would be able to move on. I remember during that conversation making the comment to her, that her husband would not want her to stop living, and that the best way she could honor his memory is in being the best you, she could possibly be.
I think that notion extends to many other aspects of life. All of us have faced failure or setback in life. My question to you is this, how did you deal with it.
Did you fold up, give up, gather up, and head home, tail between your legs. Or did you embrace what was learned and face that challenge again another day?
Did you use that failure as the reason why the next time you tried something, you were better situated to succeed at what you set out to accomplish?
Did you vow to never do the things you did that caused the hurt, and find a way to not only learn from it, but apply it to future endeavors?
If we as humans allow the past to define us, we miss out on all the future holds for us. If, instead of looking forward each and everyday to a bright new future, we spend the days looking over our shoulder at what once was, there is a whole lot of life we will end up missing out on.
Here is what really brought this full circle for me. Imagine if you will, a time in the not so distant future, where you find yourself reunited again with that lost loved one, or the failure that so succinctly kicked your butt. What would you report back at that time as to what was done to accomplish great things.
Perhaps I am being flippant or insensitive to those who have lost loved ones, but the truth is, I think I am being quite the opposite. The greatest way you honor past experience is succeeding at future experiences, and constantly looking over your shoulder at a past that gets further and further away every waking minute means you will miss out on your next chapter.
If this lesson does not apply to you, I am sorry. But for me, the greatest honor I can give or do to that which defined me in the past is to simply succeed at what I have in front of me. And not just succeed, but succeed in a brilliant way that exceeds your wildest expectations.
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