Change
Change.
It
can
be brutal. I guess the hardest one is the death of a
loved one. There are also lovely little changes like
divorce, jobs going away, kids leaving home, new bosses,
moving, the list goes on.
But wait a
minute. If there wasn't change, you'd stay an infant, and
never grow up. You would never go to kindergarten and
start school. You'd never get married, nor have kids. So
ok, change can be good.
What is it
about change that makes human beings so nervous? Well,
there's definitely uncertainty. I don't like that much.
But what is it really that rattles us so?
The bottom
line is that change is necessary and guaranteed, all the
time.
We dislike
change because it triggers fear. But if change can be
good, why is fear our initial reaction? What are we
really afraid of? We are afraid that the New will
feel worse than the Present, that the change will result
in our having less than we do now. It's easy to get hung
up on the fear of change, to the point that any thought
that things could end up better, is obliterated.
The "what
ifs" begin, but why are they so negative?
Think of the
things we sometimes do to avoid having to confront
change. You hate your job, but you don't make the effort
to look for alternatives. After all, the new job could
end up being worse, or you could end up with no job. Or
you're unhappy in a relationship, but you stay because you
don't know how it will feel to be alone. A lot of moving
forward in our lives is grossly delayed by the fears
around change.
I'm an "I'll
feel more like doing it tomorrow" kind of avoider. I know
now that when I start saying that around a move, there's
some fear lurking.
So what is a
healthy method of dealing with change in our lives?
I think an
acknowledgement of the fear is a good place to start.
There's nothing wrong with you, most humans react that
way; it just comes with the territory. Acknowledge it,
but don't beat yourself up.
The next
step might be to make an effort to focus on all the
positive things that this change could bring you. Make a
list, if you need to.
Then
remember that fear doesn't
mean stop. It's a part of the human condition, and
the courage to embrace the change anyway, is one big
difference between the happy people and the miserable
ones.