It Could Have Been Worse
My oldest son, Ethan, could have lost his life.

It Could Have Been Worse

How’s this for a week full of things going wrong. Maybe you can top it, but I hope not… for your sake.

First, our washer stopped working. The replacement cost: $1,500.00. The following day, our water heater was the next to go. Cost: $1,000.00. Lastly, my son’s car needed a new flywheel. Cost: $1,900.00. Several other smaller things around the house also broke at the same time, but here’s the thing.

It could have been worse. Much worse. (And trust me, there are worse things that can happen in a week than this, but read on.)

I keep saying that because when the repair shop dropped the transmission to replace the flywheel they removed the front end of the car. When they put it back together the “mechanic” at Robert's Auto only hand-tightened two very important nuts. My son backed out of our garage to head back to college in Los Angeles when the front axle (and wheels) literally fell off. If this happened on an LA freeway at night, he could have been killed.

So, it could have been worse. Much worse.

Same goes for the water heater. I found a plumber to install the new one and haul away the old one for a lot less than Home Depot was charging. I saved $400. The washer dryer was a part of a Labor Day sale so we saved a couple of hundred bucks there, too. All the other items I fixed myself.

I’ve been giving a lot of thought to why all this happened. I mean, I know why the water heater went, my other son hit it with MY car. The washer was ten years old, so… What I mean is, why me? Why now? My answer. Why not me?

I’ll take the hassles and costs of replacing things?because the past week could have ended much worse.

In the case of the car, the silver lining is obvious. For the other things that went wrong, I’m sure down the road I’ll see a reason why they happened. Or maybe I’ll never know, but possibly by staying home to wait for the repairman or do some of the repairs myself it kept me from some horrible tragedy if I wasn’t stuck at home.

If we take bad things in stride with the assumption it could have been worse, maybe we’ll be able to handle more—or at least deal with it better. ? ?


LEE SILBER is the award-winning author of 25 books and an international speaker. However, he's most proud of his two sons, Ethan and Evan. www.leesilber.com


Valerie Golik

Nonprofit Executive - Marketing Professional - Writer/Editor - Leadership Coach

2 个月

We've been there, Lee! Now when I catch a third red light in a row, I still grumble (sometimes a lot), but I also think it might be my guardian angel saying, "Hang tight for just a second." ??

回复
Kimberley Hoffman

published freelance Illustrator / Dipl.-Illustratorin | USA bei hoffmanillustrates!

2 个月

I think that if we can laugh about it 20 years from now, it wasn’t actually a catastrophe. I‘m glad your son wasn’t hurt. That is the most important thing of all.

Sarah Harris, MCM

Talent Acquisition Partner; Writer; Blogger; Mindfulness Advocate; Korean Adoptee ???

2 个月

Excellent reframing - I needed it this week. My car's power steering went out while my daughter and I were driving it and we were fortunately in a quiet neighborhood with a surprising open parking spot (and no restrictions due to LA street cleaning) and it totally would have been worse if it'd happened a few hours early on the freeway overpass. Your article helped me exhale and relax a few notches.

Paulette Ensign

Tips Products Publishing Agency, The Tips Content Strategist

2 个月

An excellent re-frame, my friend!

Carey Craig

Human Resources Leader / Community Board Member

2 个月

Good message to hear today. Thank you.

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