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Releasing Expectations: It’s Okay to Be Right Where You Are

“The most important point is to accept yourself and stand on your two feet.” ~Shunryu Suzuki

When I was younger, I am sure I was a little bit arrogant. I had high expectations for my life. They haven’t come to pass. I haven’t achieved whatever I thought I would achieve. It turns out that I’m an ordinary human being struggling with ordinary things.

Now that I’m in my forties, I have experienced disappointment, failure, and confusion. Many times I have lost sight of the path, and sometimes it’s felt like there never was one.

I expected I would be a writer. I did not expect to be a secretary. Not that there is anything wrong with that, it just wasn’t what I dreamed of.

I didn’t expect to have periods of unemployment, loneliness, or despair. I didn’t expect to be just like everyone else. Maybe I thought I was special, different, exempt. Maybe we all think that when we’re younger.

It’s not like I had it easy in my early life, but by my twenties I’m sure I thought it would all go to plan. It never went to plan. I’m not sure there ever was a plan.

And yet, maybe it has gone to plan, just not my plan. If some higher power is running the show, maybe this is part of the plan.

If I want to express the highs and lows of being human, then I need to have lived them. That’s what being a writer is. It’s not just being bulletproof and full of ideals. It’s making the dream right there in the gritty groundedness of everyday life.

I also realize that what I have achieved is not that important. What’s more important is what I’ve learned, and much of that didn’t come from success. Often my lessons came from the struggle of being human—wanting, trying, failing, and wanting and trying some more.

So at this stage, with my dreams still tugging at my heart and a lot of struggle behind me, I finally understand something about self-acceptance.

Here I am, right now. This is where I am and it’s okay.

Right here, right now.

I am where I am right now. That’s my starting point. I might wish I were further along, but I am where I am. I have to accept where I am or I can’t move anywhere, let alone forward.

Where are you now? Why is that okay?

This is my life and it’s good.

When I come back to gratitude, everything gets better. My expectations may be higher than my reality, but really, I have so much. Many people lack the basics: good food, clean water, access to healthcare, literacy. Even at the simplest level, my life is blessed.

What do you give thanks for?

A divine plan.

It does seem that life isn’t running according to my plan. Maybe there is a bigger plan. I may not always like it, but maybe it’s perfect after all. I don’t know what the Universe has in mind. It would be very arrogant to think I did.

How could this be part of a higher plan?

Being very human.

Experiencing disappointment, struggle, and failure is part of being human. It helps us feel for each other. I am fairly idealistic, but at this age I know that I am pretty human. I am full of faults and mistakes, and a few brilliant moments too.

How do you feel most human in your challenges? Why is that good?

No better or worse.

In my twenties I went to acting school. When you act, you explore the potential to be many different selves. We all have the potential to be an angel or a devil. Most of us are in between, but it might have worked out differently.

Why are you no better or worse than anyone else?

Favorite faults.

Honestly, sometimes our faults are simply our characteristics. Maybe you’re bossy but a great organizer, or a natural leader. Maybe you are a rebel who challenges the way we think and act. Maybe you channel your anger and make others laugh at your daring. Great comedians do that.

What is your favorite fault? How could you use it?

How it looks to the world.

We are often much harder on ourselves than anyone else would ever be. You may think you’ve achieved nothing while, to the next person, you have everything. It’s all relative and it’s all perspective. None of us have an unbiased lens.

There is no point wishing you were more than you are. It may all be happening this way for a reason. Even if there is no reason, the meaning you choose will make the difference.

At the end of our lives, it won’t really matter how many toys we have or even what we have achieved. It will matter that we appreciated this one precious life. It will matter that we enjoyed and explored being human. Love and experience; that’s it.

Let’s not give up on our dreams. Let’s keep moving toward them. Just play the game lightly with little attention to the score.

About Tania Yardley

Tania is a writer and a truthseeker who tends to question everything. Her past lives probably included a scholar monk and a dancing gypsy. You can follow her “ideas to play with” at missyardley.com.

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Mahesh

Tania, I liked your post and especially last sentence.

Let us play the game lightly with little attention to the score. so true…we are obsessed with score with the score that we have forgot to play.

Thanks

Omar

Hi Tania,
After reading your post, I am reminded of a lecture by Adyashanti where he says that we need to accept that we do not have all the answers all the time, and that confusion disappears when we stay in the realm of not knowing at a time when the thinking mind is trying to franticly figure everything out. Like you said, by accepting ourselves and where we are in life including the acceptance of this moment, we can start to move forward with more clarity and stop the resistance with life.
I also appreciate your measure of success that’s not based on job title but about being true to ourselves and learning from the struggles of being human, leading us to gather a wealth of life experiences that are most valuable.

lapis

Very good, couldn’t have said it any better but it is how I feel

Jamie

Acceptance is something I find myself frequently struggling with.

I like to set goals. I set goals for my business, for my body, and for my brain. I want to do everything in my power to become smarter, stronger, and on the way to a better spot financially than I was yesterday.

Goals keep me on my toes and away from complacency, however, I find it difficult to be truly happy when you’re always chasing the next milestone. No matter how smart/strong/rich I am now, I know that I am capable of achieving more.

I enjoy the path of pursuing the best me, but it can make acceptance tough at times.

Darin

Great post for today. I have TONS to be thankful for yet I feel I am no where near being in the stable life I want for myself. Many friends have told me numerous times that I am exactly where I need to be. I moved across the country a few years ago, without a job and really without a total plan. I quit a stable job and left family and friends. It was very out of character for me but I believe the universe said it was time to leap, so I did. I have never been happier and I have a huge adventure in my new home awaiting me. Yup, I am where I am supposed to be!

Tania Yardley

Thanks, Mahesh. I’m glad you liked it. I think you’re right, remembering the emphasis on “play” is important too. It makes life a lot more fun! 🙂

Tania Yardley

Hi Jamie, I like this – “I enjoy the path of pursuing the best me”. I think “enjoying” that path is good. But when we’re striving to be “good enough” it’s a problem. It depends where it’s coming from. Curiosity tends to lead to growth but it comes from a different foundation than inadequacy. Is it about increasing fullness and abundance or filling a void?

I’d be interested in any further thoughts you, or others, have on this. Thanks for thoughts.

Tania Yardley

Thanks, Darin 🙂 I’m glad you have TONS to be thankful for. That’s a lovely sense to have. I did notice you mentioned “stable” a couple of times as both something you want and something you felt a need to leave. I understand that paradox. One step beyond contentment is often boredom.

For myself, I’m no longer sure whether there is such a thing as where I’m “meant to be”. If my aim is simply to learn and grow, that can happen in many different ways. Sometimes trying something “very out of character” is just what I need. “Interesting” becomes more important than “right”. Enjoy the huge adventure of your new life.

Thanks for sharing your story.

Tania Yardley

Thanks for your comments, Omar. We really don’t have all the answers (ever). A sense of faith often helps with the acceptance issue. My mind definitely complicates things by interfering when it’s not needed! 🙂

I like your phrase “measure of success”. There’s a nice clarity in defining success on a personal level.

Thanks for your thoughts on this.

Tania Yardley

Thanks 🙂

latebloomer

I can relate. Accepting where I am is the path to peace. I let go of the high dreams and if someday they come round in opportunity I will explore them again. I am thankful today because I choose to be.

Tania Yardley

“I am thankful today because I choose to be” that’s beautiful. Thanks for your comment.

Jeevan/Mirthu/Gupt

“I also realize that it’s not so important what I have achieved.
It is more important what I’ve learned, and much of that didn’t come
from success. Often my lessons came from the struggle of being
human—wanting, trying, failing, and wanting and trying some more.” Thank you for those words of WISDOM & sharing your story! 🙂

Keri

Thank you Tanya, this is a good one. I struggle with controlling “the plan” as well. Things rarely go according to the “the plan” and yet, we humans still believe things will. Silly humans 🙂 Thank you for reminding me that the life I have (and it’s a darned good one) is the life I have. It truly is what it is and I get to love it – because why wouldn’t I love it?

Toyiah Marquis

Loved this article. This is exactly where I am. So hard on myself. I guess it comes from me wanting perfection and wanting to be the best for my girls.

Toyiah Marquis

This spoke volumes to me. This is so me.

Tania Yardley

Thanks for your comments, Keri. You’re right – I’m not sure why we keep thinking “the plan” will work, despite lots of evidence to the contrary 🙂 I’m glad you’re enjoying your “darned good” life. “Why wouldn’t I love it?” – what a good question!

Tania Yardley

I’m glad you enjoyed it, Toyiah 🙂

Tania Yardley

When I read the “perfection” word I thought of Brene Brown’s “The Gifts of Imperfection”. It jumped into my head that I should mention her to you. I’m laughing at myself – the perfectionist in me wanted to put in the accent mark on the final “e” of her name. Not really important 🙂 Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts, Toyiah.

Tania Yardley

Thanks so much 🙂

Nimble

Thanks for your post. It has given me inspiration and a reminder that life is about experiences and appreciation. Thank you once again