Showing posts with label looking at the past. Show all posts
Showing posts with label looking at the past. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

I Looked So Happy Then


"How Sweet Are the Hopes and Pleasures of Youth"  by Anne S. Bushby



How sweet are the hopes and the pleasures of youth,

Ere misfortune has blighted their springs to the heart,

Ere the seeds of suspicion, and envy, and art,

Have supplanted the feelings of candour and truth!


In life's joyous morning, how glowing, how bright, 

Are the dreams of the future--by Fancy inspired!

Like bubbles, that ere they are form'd have expired,

So vanish its sorrows, as transient, as light. 

 

But soon, oh! too soon, must these feelings decay,

The storms of the world they can never survive;

And alas! when once gone they can never revive 

To soothe or to brighten life's desolate way.

To constantly believe that your true happiness is past is to affirm the fact that you continue to make decisions that do not build a better present but ultimately extend into a more miserable future. Dwelling upon old times, while being reflective and pleasant, can also detract from your ability to move ahead in positive, constructive relationships.You become "frozen in time" and cease to entertain thoughts of vital growth.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           When you covet a wonderful past, you realize that it is so much easier to look back at what was comfortable instead of facing the unknown. The "grass is greener" in pastures of the past because you have already overcome the obstacles. The problem is that you can easily lose control of the direction in which your life is going by taking your eyes from the present positive road. The present or future may be painful, frightening, or challenging, but when you focus on your past, you avoid responsibility for your own future and you shirk the duty to overcome new pitfalls.

A great need exists for you to face the present. Sonce Reese, ("The Psychology of Why People Dwell on Their Pasts," Helium, www.helium.com/items, 2010) says, "Our minds also give us what we put into them. If you want to continue to dwell in the past, the mind will continue to create that for you. It is only when you decide to let go of the past and move forward that your mind will produce that outcome. You will only leave the past behind when you are psychologically ready to let go and move forward." In essence, you must make the conscious decision to move ahead.


When you are dwelling on the past or living in the past, you are usually talking about returning to certain memories over and over again like a bookmarked page. No new information is coming out. According to psychologist Adele Gregory, ("The Psychology of Why People Dwell on the Past, Helium, www.helium.com/items, 2010) "One possible explanation for this could be a variation of what Gestalt psychotherapists call "unfinished business" where past experiences intrude into the present because they didn't reach a satisfactory conclusion the first time around. A crucial element, such as an explanation, acknowledgment or apology is missing which keeps the person from being able to fully move on."

Sometimes when you dwell "on" the past, you frequently recount or cast up an event, often a perceived injustice. It might also happen in reverse, where you return to the past from regret over something you didn't do or say. The time spent worrying about such past events usually results in nothing positive.

The more important question may be not "why is someone dwelling in the past?" but "why are they disengaging with the present?" Gregory believes, "This opens the possibility that people dwell on the past because they find something in the present fulfilling, uncomfortable or confusing and an earlier time somehow holds the comfort or clarity they're searching for." For example, if you continually recount old adventures, you could see your present life as lacking excitement or freedom. You may also return to a time when you enjoyed a greater degree of success, respect or belonging in order to re-affirm your identity or restore your self-esteem.

Reliving the past, you can also return to a time when you enjoyed a greater degree of success, respect or belonging in order to re-affirm your identity or restore your self-esteem. Regret can preserve your belief that a happier or more successful state of affairs (than you face today) was at least possible - the past offers a defense mechanism for past events that have left you feeling disadvantaged in some way.


Then, Where Lies Happiness?

Several years ago, James Montier, a “global equity strategist”, took a break from investing in order to publish a brief overview of existing research into the psychology of happiness. (The Psychology of Happiness, www.trendfollowing.com, June 17 2004) Montier learned that happiness comprises three components:

  • About 50% of individual happiness comes from a genetic set point. That is, we’re each predisposed to a certain level of happiness. Some of us are just naturally more inclined to be cheery than others.
  • About 10% of our happiness is due to our circumstances. Our age, race, gender, personal history, and, yes, wealth, only make up about one-tenth of our happiness.
  • The remaining 40% of an individual’s happiness seems to be derived from intentional activity, from “discrete actions or practices that people can choose to do."
If you have no control over our genetic “happy point," and if you have little control over your circumstances, then it makes sense to focus on those things that you can do to make you happy. According to Montier's paper, these activities include sex, exercise, sleep, and close relationships.


Saturday, January 16, 2010

Would You Change Your Past Life?



If I had it to do over again? Damn right, I'd change it. What silly person wouldn't with the knowledge acquired in a single, fleeting lifetime? I'd prop up the entire calendar in front of me and judge the mistakes and the correct decisions. Then, I'd edit my life. I would try to correct all the bad moves with some more compassion and understanding while keeping those moments of perceived justification. I'd map it all out and adjust the controls to "Vital Readjustments" and slam the button with renewed conviction for providing me and all around me a smoother sail.

I'd seek to maximize my positive opportunities while looking deeper into the eyes of my friends and family. I would extend my hand to some of those whom I have ignored. I'd say, "I'm sorry" and mean it more, caring less about the personal pride I felt necessary to sustain. I would notice the smaller things with greater clarity, and I would respond in kind to the quiet pleas while realizing my own volume and confrontation do not always produce the desired or appropriate results. My hat would not hang on the catch of improbable fantasy but on the secured hook of reality. 

I'd keep many innocent moments of silly behaviors and daring deeds although I would decrease my stupid, immature risks of life and limb. I wouldn't change my challenges nor my struggles that served to strengthen  character. I would thank those who lent their time and efforts to their proper understandings of my possible contributions. I wouldn't necessarily raise my own expectations of success, but I would let others inside my hard veneer of being envious of those somewhere near the peak of popularity. I would tell trusted others my serious faults for some needed penitence.

I most definitely would love more -- people (friends casual and intimate), influential souls who held me in the light, those moments of incredible impact, and the insights that sprang like grasshoppers from summer fields in paths I have walked. I would embrace these loving influences without restriction or regret. I would use my talents and gifts to express my true emotions with limited thinking about their impact. In short, I would put my unique understandings in view for others to accept or deny. I would hope that others would appreciate our human condition.



I would emit a voice of wide acceptance but also a voice of natural, deeply held convictions for freedom of liberal expression, personal liberties, and tolerance for the faults of others. I would express an unpopular cause if I felt it necessary. I would remain outspoken but temper it with less excess. I would explore the fringes of my understandings while understanding I could only be myself with my own limitations.

I would serve my country, lead those exercises in which I had special expertise, and I would step back from lost causes. I would request time to develop my understandings and to pass them to someone in need. I would place myself in the center of confusion and unrest to test my ability to gather people together. I would maintain the confidence that most change is good and inevitable.

I would not change my limitations of acquisition, yet I would extend my comprehension of simple pleasures. I would hope to remain a contradiction of initial perception and deeper understanding. I would remain confident in being different. I would speak more distinctly to people's needs, and I would ignore their silly rantings. I would have those close appreciate the art and the artistry of those on the planet who hold the ability to touch the soul and extend the vision.

I'd use my Ray Charles grit to sing my songs and accompany them with my Eric Clapton licks to make people laugh and cry. I'd write the music with the power and beauty of Lennon and McCartney and the drive of Chuck Berry to rock the bones of those on the floor of the brief rhythmic seasons of life. I would spotlight the wild, sad, and joyful expressions of passion, flaws and triumphs in a person's beautiful dance of life for the benefit of all.

"When all our tears have reached the sea,
Part of you will live in me.
Way down deep inside my heart
The days keep coming without fail.
A new wind is gonna find your sail.
That's where your journey starts."  

--Rodney Crowell