When we consider changing
some habit, some behavior, or even the direction of our life, we often
come up with some grand plan for doing so. We think big. Its
the American way. If we want to lose weight, we establish a goal of,
for example, 20 lbs. We decide to go to the gym four or five days
each week for an hour each day. Of course, for most people this plan
lasts for about a week, if that much. When we want to cut back in
our spending, we decide to give up buying clothes for the next year.
When it comes to our spiritual life, we say we will begin going to
our place of worship every week. In each instance our resolve lasts
for a very short time, leaving us feeling guilty, down on ourselves,
and disappointed. We accuse ourselves of being failures, lazy, lacking
in discipline, and generally as losers. Our self esteem drops and
we feel worse about ourselves than before we made the resolution.
We add one more self recrimination to the long list of past unfulfilled
promises to ourselves.
Each time we fail, we feel
just a little bit worse about ourselves. Our disappointment in ourselves
grows to the point where we may either give up trying to change or
we begin to accept ourselves as born losers failures. We begin
to look at ourselves as incompetent. We become depressed and feel
hopeless. In order to avoid falling into despair, we may simply give
up. We say, this is the way things are, I am doomed to living
my life this way, so I might as well just accept it. What we
dont realize is that it may not be that change is not possible,
but rather it is our approach to change that may not be working.
INSTANT GRATIFICATION
Most Americans have a penchant
for instant gratification. We want immediate results. We also have
a tendency to think, more is better. I have gone to the
gym to work out and watched very out of shape men go over to the weight
machine for the first time and try to bench press their body weight!
Finding they cannot lift this amount of weight, they give up and go
off to some other machine. I have heard people say that they are going
to lose 50 pounds in three weeks. These folks are setting themselves
up to fail.
Many health clubs and diet
plans count on the tendency of people to bite off more than they can
chew in order to stay in business. They offer big discounts to people
to sign up for a year or more in advance knowing that the vast majority
will go for a few weeks and then quit. If those who signed up attended
every day, there would be no room to accommodate everyone. The same
is true for diet centers. They count on peoples desire for immediate
results. Yet we all know, in the intelligent part of our brains, that
weight loss, body building, and as in learning any other activities
takes patience, persistence, and time, in order to achieve lasting
results. But our desire for immediate gratification takes over and
we set ourselves up for instant failure.
TWEAKING
This is where the concept
of tweaking comes into play. Literally, tweaking
means to gently pinch or jerk something or someone. Colloquially speaking
we use the term to refer to slightly improving or changing a situation.
We say, we tweaked our offer a bit and were able to make the
deal, or we tweaked the volume on the audio just a bit
for better acoustics. The same concept of tweaking
can be applied to aspects of our lives. We can tweak our lives in
small ways. Over time these tweaks add up to significant shifts and
changes. In each instance, we can make a slight alteration in what
we were doing in order to get a better result. They dont have
to be big changes, but minor adjustments. This concept tweaking, or
making minor adjustments to situations or areas of our life, can have
a significant impact on the overall direction of our life. A series
of tweaks can, over time, have the same overall effect as one significant
change without the pain of a large sudden shift.
Consider trying to straighten
ones teeth. We go to the orthodontist to have braces put onto
our teeth. The orthodontist doesnt try to straighten our teeth
all at once because the pain would be too great and damage might be
done to our teeth and gums. If the pain is too great we will want
to quit the process before the job is done. However, through a series
of tweaks gradually tightening the braces -- over a period
of many months or years we see our teeth straighten and remain straight
even after the braces are removed. The same is true when we want to
straighten a tree that has been growing crooked. We tweak it gradually
over time, each week tightening the brace that pulls the tree into
position. If we were to do it suddenly, the tree might break. A series
of tweaks does the job of straightening the tree, almost imperceptibly
over time.
We can apply a similar
principle for straightening our life. Change normally does not occur
suddenly, overnight. It occurs by degrees, often without our awareness.
When it does occur suddenly, it usually is precipitated by circumstance
or necessity. We may be forced to change when confronted with trauma,
precipitous occurrences such as sudden economic reversal, earthquake,
and so forth. For the most part, however, lasting change occurs gradually
over time.
Lets examine four
areas of our life: relationships, occupation, physical and mental
health, and spirituality, to see how the concept of tweaking might
apply.
RELATIONSHIPS
Relationships, especially
in a marriage, often get stale. Couples fall into habitual styles
of relating. Sometimes relationships becomes dysfunctional, while
at other times the relationship may simply lose its sparkle. In both
case, the couple may think that there is no way of revitalizing the
relationship without a massive overhaul. If they think in terms of
a complete overhaul, they may get overwhelmed and simply either accept
the status quo, or think that they ought to divorce. In my opinion,
many relationships can be salvaged or spruced up if each party makes
a commitment to seeking ways that each party can tweak the relationship.
Below I will list a number of ways couples have found to tweak their
relationship. It is not necessary that all of these suggestions be
followed. Rather, you could do one of them for a month or two, and
then when the mood strikes you could add a second, then a third, and
so on. Each of these tweaks, when added together over time, adds up
to significant movement. As with losing weight, it happens one pound
at time.
Tweaks for your relationship.
- Set aside one hour per
week at a specific time and place for an uninterrupted conversation
with your mate to discuss anything that is on your mind. Each party
takes a half hour just to talk with no interruptions by the other
party. The listening party is there just to listen for a half hour.
Then the roles are reversed.
- Set aside one night
a week for a date night, an evening consisting of at
least two hours alternately planned by each partner each week. The
date night could be something as simple as going out to a coffeehouse
for espresso or a local pub for a glass of wine. Or an evening picnic,
such as Chinese food or a hoagie sandwich at the beach or local
park. Just getting out of the house during the week can be refreshing.
- Take an in town
mini-vacation by spending the night in a local hotel or motel. Leave
from there to go to work the next morning. Or spend the weekend
at a local hotel. It does not have to be a major, planned event
to be fun or relaxing.
- Go with your partner
for a massage at a local spa or health club. Or even bring one to
your house. The cost is not that great compared to the payoff.
- Set aside time in the
evening for a relaxing ritual, such as preparing tea and cookies
before retiring.
- Take a bath or shower
together at least once a week.
- Do something risqué
that you might have done when you were dating. Think of the fun
you will have talking about it and remembering it afterwards.
YOUR OCCUPATION
At first blush it may
seem that only those who are self employed would have the freedom
to tweak their job. To be sure, it is easier to tweak when it is your
own business, but this does not mean that it is impossible to tweak
when you are working for someone else. You just have to be more creative.
The chances are that you have never given it much thought. You have
never thought of the ways you can make your work more pleasurable.
Lets take a look at some of the ways you might tweak your work
experience beginning with the commute to work.
Tweaks for work.
- Listen to a book on
tape while driving to the office. Or learn a language on tape. You
often complain that you dont have the time to read a novel
or those motivational tapes you hear about. Well the morning and
evening commute would be an ideal time to do so. Rather than complaining
about the traffic, you will look forward to finding out what happens
next in that novel you are listening to.
- Take a ten minute break
in the morning and again in the afternoon to leave the building
and take a walk around the block.
- At least once a week
have your lunch in a park rather than either in the office or in
a restaurant.
- Have your wife or husband,
friend, or child meet you for lunch once a month or more.
- Bring your child to
the office once a month.
- Put pictures of your
family and other personal items on your desk or around your office.
- Take a personal mental
health half day (or full day if you can) off several times a year.
Dont wait until you become ill. And take yourself to a movie
or hit some golf balls during that time off.
- Practice deep breathing
exercises or meditation often during the day.
- Develop a relaxing ritual
that you can look forward to each day while at your place of employment,
e.g., a tea break.
YOUR PHYSICAL AND
MENTAL HEALTH
It is in this area that
we set ourselves up for the biggest failures. One would think that
we would do whatever we could to build our self esteem and to enhance
our self image. Yet, by virtue of our desire for immediate results,
we achieve just the opposite. We resolve to be a totally new and improved
version of ourselves, fail, and end up feeling worse about ourselves
than when we started. The trick once again is in tweaking. Rather
than promising to be a totally new you, think tweak. Think about one
area you could spruce up just a bit. Below are only a few suggestions;
they should not be done all at once. Choose just one of them, or any
other of your choosing, and do it consistently until it become as
much a part of your life as brushing your teeth. Then add another
one, and another, and so forth. Take your time. Gradually, by virtue
of here a tweak, there a tweak, you will end up with that new and
improved version of you. But it will not come upon you suddenly. Rather
it will happen gradually, almost imperceptibly. Tweaking your physical
and mental health.
- When it comes to the
commitment to increase your reading, rather than committing to read
the entirety of War and Peace, think about reading one
article a day from a magazine of your choice.
- Rather than saying that
you are going to learn how to meditate, take 10 minutes a day just
to sit quietly and focus on your breathing. Increase at no more
than five minutes every two weeks until you are 20 minutes a day.
- Instead of promising
to powerwalk for 45 minutes a day, commit to walking around the
block either in the morning before getting dressed for work or in
the evening either before or after dinner. Make it at least a ten
minute walk. When that becomes comfortable, add five minutes. Add
only five minutes, and not more often than one addition a week,
until, over a several month period you are at 30 minutes a day.
It could take you months to get there.
- Give yourself a treat
by having a professional massage once a month. Start with a half
hour session. If you like it, increase it to an hour over time.
- Spend ten minutes each
morning stretching before you take your shower.
- Take a warm bath by
candlelight before retiring, while listening to your favorite soothing
music and enjoying a cup of tea. If you find it pleasant and relaxing,
increase the frequency.
Imagine how you might feel
about your life next year at this time if several of these ideas were
a regular part of it. For example, how would it feel to know that
you were reading an article (chapter of a book) every week, walking
for 30 minutes a day, having a monthly massage, and enjoying a warm
bath by candlelight several times a week. Then imagine how it would
feel if you were also tweaking your approach to work as discussed
earlier.
SPIRITUALITY
I think it was Charles
Darwin who said that what differentiates humans from animals is that
only human beings can blush. Human beings can reflect upon their own
behavior. They can experience a sense of something beyond themselves
and can feel connected to one another. They have a higher consciousness.
Human beings are conscious of right and wrong, good and bad; they
are conscious of their own finitude. As such, we can say that human
beings have a spiritual awareness as part of their existential makeup.
Most of us enjoy a beautiful
sunrise or sunset, appreciate a mountain view, feel calmed by the
ocean, and feel peaceful when stargazing on a clear night. At these
moments, we feel connected with the universe, a part of something
larger than ourselves. We feel moved by the good works of others,
and feel a sense of awe at the birth of a child. We feel blessed when
someone we love recovers from an illness. We often vow that we will
stop to smell the flowers more often. We promise to attend our place
of worship more frequently. We tell ourselves that we will make a
contribution of time and energy to make this world a better place.
Though we are sincere in these desires, somehow we seldom find the
time to follow through. We want to feel connected to others and to
our world, yet the time eludes us. Again, we believe that in order
to be connected to our spiritual self, we have to make a significant
change. We believe that we have to have a big impact. Overwhelmed,
we gradually slip into our routine, everyday life, feeling just a
bit disappointed in ourselves for not being the person we would like
to be. As with the other aspects of our life discussed thus far, we
can tweak our lives spiritually as well. The following suggestions
might serve to stimulate your own thinking about creative ways to
bring spirituality into your life.
Spiritual tweaking.
- Each day when you awaken,
before getting out of bed, spend a moment reflecting on
the miracle of just being alive.
- Before starting your
day, think about your blessings and how you might make a
difference in someone else's life.
- Once a week put a coin
in an expired parking meter to prevent someone from getting a ticket.
- Several times a week,
pay someone a compliment.
- Make it a practice to
say thank you to someone for taking the time to criticize
you.
- Create a picture in
your mind of the self you would like to be. Each day pause in the
middle of the day to reflect on that higher self.
- Tell someone you care
about that he/she is important to you.
- Periodically contact
a friend whom you have often thought about but have
not taken the time to call.
- Once a month spend an
hour volunteering at a local community agency or shelter.
CONCLUSION
We all have the power to
improve the quality of our life by making slight adjustments
tweaks to the way we do things. These tweaks add up over time,
with the same net effect as major adjustments without the pain of
sudden, drastic change. The traditional wisdom of no pain, no
gain does not apply when it comes to making significant life
changes. People often think that they have to wait until the children
grow up, or that they have to divorce, in order to lead the life they
would like. They then become overwhelmed with the enormity of the
task. My contention is that we should think small. You do not have
to wait, you can start tweaking today. Remember, dont put off
until tomorrow what you can tweak today.
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