Stand And Deal
Vance G. Larson CHt
Consultant, Coach & Advisor- A healthier version of you is waiting.
I was in a AA meeting a few weeks ago. I was there to speak about the homeless issue in my community for work. What is interesting is that when I speak to a closed group, be it a police department, the military or a room of addicts, they want the dirt. In other words, before they let me into their world, they want to know about mine. This is almost always because they want to know if they can trust me. So for me, I have to find a way to bridge that gap.
It was a 7:00 pm AA meeting and after I gave my spiel, I was ready to leave. They didn't let me off the hook. They wanted my story. And although I never identified as an alcoholic, I clinically was many years ago. So in the spirit of building trust, I opened my little world to them and told them my story. The synopsis I gave was that I made some very bad decisions while drinking that almost cost me my life. I hurt people, would often blackout, and was far removed from any semblance of a healthy life. After sharing my story, I think what they heard most was that after 34 years of being sober, every now and again I think about having a drink.
I have had a very blessed life in some regards. In others, downright heartbreaking. I told them of them many health problems that my wife has. That after a decade long battle, there have been more than a few times that I have had to rush to her side to administer treatment. That even though I was a crisis counselor for 2 decades, and then a first responder chaplain for another 10 years, nothing prepares you for holding your wife's unresponsive body in your arms. Truly dark times.
"I would rather feel the pain."
I then went on to talk about being on top on my game, owning several business, 7 houses and pretty much retired by age 40, only to lose everything. By everything, I mean all of our property and money {including our IRA's}. The worse that things got, I would have a passing thought of taking a drink to "numb out" for awhile. I came to the conclusion that I would stand and deal. That I would rather feel the pain, then risk my time and talent to possibly getting sucked into the world of alcohol abuse. That is what this group told me made sense to them.
I think we all have our escape plan when life comes beating down our door. Some drink, others shop, and some simply run. But what I have learned, is by standing and dealing, you feel the pain and then move passed it. When we "numb out", the problem often gets bigger. It doesn't go away. We have to face it at some point. And those who don't, often get sucked into a unhealthy lifestyle.
I am reminded of an old parable I use when I teach a meditation class. The teacher jumps into a cold river to get to the other side. He then quickly gets out. He asked the students to do the same. The students begins to question him. Why should I do this? Let's wait until its warmer. I know its cold and I don't want to get wet. The teacher says "If you had jumped in by now, you would already be getting out, and you would be one step closer to your destination". See what I am getting at?
This simple illustration shows that we can over think things. We second guess, make excuses, and we prolong taking action. And when all is said and done, we still have that river {our problem} to cross or deal with. I am all for practicing the pause. I am not for talking myself out of pain. Because there will be pain in our lives. The question is do we allow pain to paralyze us? Or do we stand and deal?
Retired
5 年Love this, thank you! Great parable.