Creating a Life Worth Living - Part One
Written By: Melissa Galt
It should have been
easy. Should've, would've, could've -- those words had been the essence of
my life and so many other people’s lives, too. Now I’ve learned
that life really isn’t about those words at all, and it isn’t
about easy. Instead, each of our lives is about will and won’t and
do and don’t, and the rewards that come from taking charge of our
lives.
Our lives are up to us, as individuals. We are the ones
in charge, whether we take that responsibility or not. So the
question is, are we going to live a life by accident, a life by
default, or will we have a plan, a path, a purpose? Will we end up
where we want to be by intent or nowhere by accident? Will we blame
others and external forces for the place we are in, or will we take
charge and define by choice who we are, where we are going, and what
we are doing? The choice belongs to each of us.
While my life
interiors have often been a mishmash of uncoordinated elements, I
have finally found my style and created a life of comfort and
achievement. So let me tell you how it all began and how you can find
your own passion and purpose. The Lesson: If you aren’t
living your dreams, then you are impersonating someone
else’s!
Getting There
Overall, it wasn’t a bad
upbringing. I’m not complaining. It had tough moments, Mom was gone
a lot, and Dad wasn’t around much at all. They divorced when I was
about six years old. But we didn’t lack for caregivers. I acquired
an early sense of independence and eagerly took on
responsibility.
My sister and I, as is typical of many close
siblings, fought often. In fact, Mother nicknamed us Poke and Pinch,
particularly for those long car rides when she was up front and we
were in back acting up. But what I didn’t know and what I didn’t
understand was that most of what I was becoming was up to me. I
assumed, as so many of us do, that it was up to my parents, or up to
my teachers, or up to someone, anyone else. I didn’t realize how
much of it was actually in my control.
Therefore, for a long
time I thought my life was about external forces and didn’t realize
it was instead about my internal dynamics. I was at the “life’s
not fair” stage and so nothing was my fault, I wasn’t in charge.
What a bunch of baloney! The Lesson: Life is about going
confidently in the direction of your dreams, not anyone else’s.
This is not a vicarious experience, but a visceral one.
The
Legacy
What is funny about that belief is that all the while I
knew that my mother had made her career decision early on. At age
seven, if you believe her telling of the story, she had already made
up her mind on a career, and then at age eleven she asked her parents
to allow her to go to acting school. They agreed as long as she kept
her grades up. Her grades soared because she was suddenly on purpose,
on fire, and following her passion. Few of us know that early what we
want or what will set us on fire.
She was a terrific actress,
no less an achiever than my great-grandfather on the same side of the
family who was a world-renowned architect. He also knew at a very
early age that he would pursue architecture. It was about following
their dream, their vision, their talents and their creativity. The
Lesson: It was about giving of themselves to the world and sharing
their unique vision.
Temporary Detours
They both
endured many obstacles, challenges, and crises but persevered and few
knew of those setbacks. They quietly took them in stride. They
didn’t complain or moan or lose sight of their goals; they just
considered the setbacks temporary detours, another chance for a new
experience, as it were. How many of us would weather the storms of
life and career crisis better if we reframed them as temporary
detours? I remember after I got into college, my mother sharing with
me that she had been on welfare at one point and we never knew it.
She had been without work for over a year and unemployment had run
out, and welfare was next. We never knew it. She was doing
everything in her power to find work; she was busy. She never let
on, and we were in public school at the time and walked to school, so
beyond belt-tightening on meals and no summer camp our lives were
protected.
The Lesson: It is in our perception and our
processing what our reality is. When we change these, we change our
world.
Culture Shock Without Leaving the Country
Being
a very academic adolescent, bent on making straight A’s and not in
the “in” crowd, college seemed a time-wasting choice to me. I
looked at it as four years of partying, and I wasn’t a partier. I
was a super square. So it made sense to me to pursue the best high
school education I could get, and that choice meant boarding school.
Being away from home didn’t concern me at all; I was largely
independent anyway. What I didn’t bank on was the cultural shock of
going from the West Coast to the East Coast. You would have thought I
was in a foreign country. I didn’t wear the same clothes, speak the
same language, or even understand the teen lifestyle West to East. I
didn’t fit in; I didn’t come close.
Needless to say, it
was a very painful experience, made more so by being labeled
“someone’s daughter” instead of being allowed to be myself. I
got through it, even made it with honors, and, ironically, was the
only one in the class not interested in college (this was a college
prep school). I had my sites set on working immediately and getting
my life off the ground.
The Lesson: Timing is everything, and
when we are ready opportunities will appear, sometimes we have to
allow the time to be ready.
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