I have a vivid imagination. I used to get lost in my head with all the paths my life could take that inevitably seemed to end in different versions of me being rich and famous. I would imagine my clothes, the parties, the well-known friends and my face gracing covers of magazines. How I would get there was much less clear or fun to dwell on. Fame and fortune seemed the solution to all life’s ills during my late teens. I still get lost in my head with visions of different types of accomplishments now: authoring a best-selling novel, making big strides for education and literacy in my daughter’s birth country; taking on that huge professional role that will let me leverage my experience as well as my creative side.
I always want to be the best at what I do and if I am brutally honest, perfect.
I have a hard time doing something if it doesn’t live up to my vision
of what it should be. I would take projects at school and spend much
more time than necessary to make them try match the picture I
envisioned. And even then, some part always fell short.
I
recall as a pre-teen going to my first dog obedience competition with
my pup who I faithfully trained each day and took to classes on the
weekend. The dog did great. But I forgot to give one command to stay
and she followed me, a disqualifiying event. I learned, but for that
lapse, we would have scored high enough to achieve second place. I
cried the whole way home in the backseat of my dad’s car. I was
devastated and couldn’t see the good in the experience or savor the
partial success. I didn’t achieve what I set out to do so all was lost.
I
know I carry over my high expectations of myself at times to others. I
had a best friend who as a child who meant everything to me. I recall
our parents being concerned we were “too close” in grade school. As middle school rolled around,
our paths started to diverge and she sought other friends. I had
unrealistic expectations of our friendship lasting as it was into the
years ahead. I feel betrayed and rather lost; but realized later, I was
a big contributor to the large divide between what I hoped and what
happened.
I can look back at a number of
painful adult life lessons since and see now where my expectations set
up me for a larger fall. I found, with a little time, most these
disappointments led to positive outcomes or learning. An award at
another show, a new friend, and with the years, the list goes on.
So I am trying hard to take life’s ups and down as they come. It’s tough because envisioning a certain beautiful outcome
is part of my bliss and fuels many of my passions. So while I want to
retain the childlike kinetic energy inherent in imagining the impossible
and perfect is possible, I also want to disconnect it from unrealistic
expectations.