Eyes Wide Open

I had a conversation with my mom quite a while back about how I wanted to live my life, the things I wanted to do and accomplish, and how I wanted to love and be loved. I can’t remember the exact context of the conversation or what brought this topic up in the first place. (That happens a lot with us; our conversations are a large combination of zigzags, swirls, and circles most likely with a triangle thrown in somewhere that oddly connects at its points). But what I do remember is that she told me she remembered thinking along very similar lines at the same age and how naïve it seemed now. She said this not realizing that I had thought through, at length, everything I’d told her and had a specific reason for every single one of them and why they were important to me. (Or maybe she did and was just trying to draw them out of me. She has a way of doing that.)

After explaining those reasons I concluded with this, “I’m not lost. I’m not being naïve. I’m walking into my adult life with my eyes wide open, knowing that I’m going to get knocked down and my heart broken at times. I’m also ready and willing to risk that. My heart is open, but so are my eyes.”

She responded by giving me this look – serious, perhaps somewhat stunned – and said, “Write that down. Right now.” I did.

Now, here I am months down the road sharing it with all of you because I think it was an important moment in my life and maybe it will mean something to you, too. It was the moment I really realized that I was ready to make some moves in my life to open myself up. To people, to opportunities, to risk. Risk was a big one for me. I’m a cautious person, whether by nature or taught by experience I’m not sure. Maybe it’s both. Either way, it acts as an umbrella for my openness to people and opportunities because those are risks in themselves. They’re gambles. They put me on a path that could lead to heartbreak or failure. I don’t know about you but I don’t like either one of those things. I do a lot of things to ensure I don’t fail – at anything, ever – and if I can avoid heartbreak, well, that’s all the better. So my willingness to open myself up to all of these things was a big deal for me.

What I had finally come to terms with, though, was that I was also opening myself up to a wealth of positive experiences. New lessons. New people. Love. Friendship. Success. These far outweigh the negative. No matter what life has thrown at me in the way of negative experiences, no matter how hurt I’ve been, out of them came some of my most meaningful relationships, my most valuable lessons learned, and my most profound epiphanies to date. Not only that, but in the times after the ceiling appeared to have just caved in on me…and I lived through it, I risked more, put myself out there in bigger ways than every before, and received more in turn. It was in these moments that I threw myself out of my comfort zone that I reaped such greater benefits than the times I played it safe.

The difference now is that I do so with more intent, more purpose, and more gusto than in the “I have nothing to lose so I might as well” moments of the past. That is why I say I’m not doing it out of naïveté, that my eyes are open. Because I know. I know someone or something is going to knock me down. I know someone is going to break my heart. I know because, while I may be young, I’ve been knocked down and I’ve had my heart broken. But does that mean it isn’t worth the risk?

Absolutely not.

It’s Not All Sunshine and Roses

It's Not All Sunshine and Roses

I think everyone thought as a kid that growing up was going to be the best thing to ever happen to them because all of the most exciting things happen when we’re “grown up.” What we didn’t realize was that our idea of what a “grown up” is changes as we get older.

When we’re eight, we can’t wait to be 10. (Double digits, baby!) When we’re 10, we want to be 13 and a teenager. When we’re 13, we want to be 16 with a driver’s license. At 16, we want to be 18, graduating high school and off to college. In college, we just can’t wait to be 21 and glimpsing the end of homework.

Then, we’re free! No homework. No curfew. No rules. We’re independent. Finally. The words “I can’t wait until I grow up so I can…[fill in the blank]” no longer apply the same way they once did.

That’s when it hits us smack in the face. We are grown up; and while it might be as awesome as we thought it would be, it also came with a lot of responsibilities we never considered (like bills). We realize that being an adult isn’t all sunshine and roses, nor is it all fun and games. In fact, being a “grown up,” a real-live, full-grown adult isn’t even about being happy all of the time.

We pretty regularly have to make choices and decisions that don’t always lead to our immediate happiness. (Like breaking up with or turning down someone whom we really love but ultimately know we wouldn’t be right or healthy for each other.) However, those choices get us one or two steps closer to where and who we want to be and to long-term happiness.

Being a “grown up” is about making the best decisions we can with the information and hoping they were the right ones that will lead us to happiness – in that moment and in the years down the road. We may not always succeed. We may not be happy 100% of the time or even 90% of the time, but even the bad and difficult decisions we inevitably make along the way lead us to those stretches of time when we are nothing but…

Happy.