The Oral Report

Standing up in front of the class was never so much fun!

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Location: River City, United States

The rantings and ravings of a mom of three wonderful girls as she finds new love while working like a dog and shaking her fist at the system. You know. Pretty much like everybody else.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Five Things That 40+ Years of Living Have Taught Me

I want to preface this post by saying that my list, in no way, should be a guideline or representation of how anyone else in the entire universe (or beyond) should be living their lives. These are merely observations and lessons that have gotten me through the bad times and to the good times. They are my personal reflections.

1) Money doesn't buy happiness.

I know we've all heard it so many times it seems almost mythical. However. I see you all lining up to argue with me. And really, you shouldn't line up like that, you make yourselves targets that are entirely too easy to hit. But I will give you this much. Money can allow you to have things that will bring you some happiness. It will also help alleviate stress. And not that those aren't very important points, but happiness is far more than that. Happiness is learning to live with you...the whole you...without relying on anyone else to validate you. And accepting that person...warts and all...as valuable. Happiness is loving and being loved. Preferably, by the same person. Having someone working to make your life better (less stressful) and doing the same for them, gives you a great feeling of self-worth.

Personally, I've never had huge sums of money. I've had enough. Usually. I've been in situations, when I was much younger, where my (then) boyfriend and I would sell our plasma to get gas money. And I've been in a situation where, literally, all of my bills were paid off (car, credit cards, everything) and I had a few thousand squirrelled away in the bank. I didn't seem to derive any more happiness from the latter times than I did the former. In addition, having worked a four year stint as a personal assistant to a multi-millionaire, where my biggest task was keeping this man on a $125,000 PER MONTH budget (and fought him to do so), I can tell you that he wasn't happy. And he had plenty.

Love yourself. Find someone who can appreciate that and love you for it...and that you love back. The rest is all extra. But value your own personal happiness. Without it, everything else is handicapped.

2) Working for things builds character.

My parents didn't pay for my college tuition. Not any part of it. They probably would have, had they been in a position to do so. So...while they encouraged me, that was about all they could do. I bought my first car (and every one since then) myself. I've never received an inheritance. Figuring out how to get the things I needed was an invaluable tool for a great many things in my life.

I happen to believe a great many young people today are being ill-served by well-meaning parents. A want to give one's children better than what one, themselves, had is (unintentionally) short-sighted. By not allowing children to learn the lessons of saving and thrift, working hard for something you want badly, you are turning them out into a world where they will be unprepared to fend for themselves. I'm a fairly generous person. And it's only by sheer strength of will that I insist that my children contribute to these types of things. It's important to me to know, on some level, that I've done everything I can to raise human beings who can survive in the world we currently live in. To do less would be a disservice to them. And I love them far too much to do that. Independence comes only due to a variety of learned skills. Each of them are important to the success of that mission.

3) Think before acting or opening your mouth.

Some hurts never go away. Never. No matter how many times or ways that you apologize. The pain will lessen, but the guilt for causing it will simmer, just under the surface, forever. Of course, this is not true for sociopaths or others suffering from a variety of mental health issues, but for most sentient beings, we dislike hurting others. And for people who can take responsibility for their actions, guilt is a reasonable response to hurting another person.

It's not a lesson that has come easily to me. I've been known to have a short fuse and an ever ready arsenal of ammo at the ready. I will say that I try, very hard, not to get in that position. Like most, I was a victim of immaturity. As I overcame that, I tried, very hard, to remember what a dangerous weapon I had. Keeping it holstered is much easier now than it was then. Not that I don't still occasionally shoot myself in the foot. I do.

Anytime you can avoid unnecessarily hurting another person, it's worth the effort.

4) Making someone else feel better will make you feel better.

The joy that you can get by doing something nice for someone else is difficult to measure. It validates you as a good person. Which increases your self-worth. Which boosts your overall morale. Which makes you feel good...about yourself and your contributions. Whether it's throwing a dollar in a Salvation Army bucket, bringing a coat or a blanket to a homeless person on a cold night, or cutting your neighbors grass, doing something for someone else, and knowing that it will give someone else a good day or week or month or life is an immeasurable high.

My ex is catholic and while that has it's good points and bad points for me, one thing that has been a very good thing is the preparation that is required prior to accepting the sacrament of Confirmation. Our local diocese requires a certain amount of community service (which has to be recorded) before you can be accepted into the church. The requirement for both of my older two girls was five different volunteer projects. And because this was something I could get behind, I looked for a variety of things that we could do together. Things that would make both of us feel better. We did things like helping paint a mural at a center for troubled teens, sending holiday cards to AIDS shut-ins whose families had all but abandoned them, making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and delivering them to a homeless shelter, and volunteering at a nursing home to read mail to residents and, on occasion, paint fingernails. Instilling in my girls the notion that helping others makes you feel better about yourself was a great thing for me as both a mother and a human being on this planet. Watching them feel better about themselves as they gave something back was just icing.

5) Sometimes you have to be the bad guy.

Okay, you've tried every other option and can't get things done. I'm not saying you should disregard everything above. What I am saying is that there are people in this world who will only respond to a more direct approach. It doesn't necessarily mean you have to be rude or hurtful. And, depending on the importance of what you're fighting for, it may require assembling a posse and committing to the long haul. If you believe in what you are fighting for don't waiver. Don't stammer. Don't yield. Standing your ground may not win you every battle...or even every war...but people will reevaluate how strongly they feel about the opposing position when they see how serious you are about yours.

That said, this is not a card to be thrown out casually when the circumstances don't merit it. And those are lines you, yourself, will have to draw. Corporate America delaying much needed, oft-promised, funds that your family needs to survive...Definitely raise some hell. Internet trolls who have nothing better to do but talk trash...not worth the effort.

Okay, now I gotta go play a little. I suppose keeping a little time, from time to time, to do something that you truly enjoy doing would be #6...but who's keeping score?

7 Comments:

Blogger Mike Norton said...

Generally I agree, and generally, too, it's a strong agreement.

However, I still have distinct issues with #1 being ridiculously too sweeping, though. I only agree that money doesn't buy happiness because most people will find new things to be unhappy about if money is no longer a problem. Security, freedom from many fears of vulnerability, the ability to be able to act openly and honestly rather than constantly editing myself for the sake of a paycheck, and the freedom to do what I want to do with such time as I have -- all of those are things that would extremely important parts of my happiness. All of those are things money can buy.

So, for #'s 2-5 I give full agreement, but #1 still reads too much like "be happy in your place" propaganda, you working class hippie, you. ;) Where I suppose we might meet up on this is an agreement that money can be a fantastic facilitator for happiness.

1/29/2006 5:44 PM  
Blogger SuperWife said...

Mike -

I'll be glad to meet you there. I'll bring the patchouli...;)

I expected to catch the most flack for #1. Certainly, money holds the ability to facilitate SOME measure of happiness. But money alone will never do the trick. No matter how much you have. And hippie though I may be, it'll be a hard battle to convince me otherwise. As I said, alleviating stress can go a long way to help. But I've seen a man who had more money than I could ever spend in a lifetime and he was a mess.

1/29/2006 6:31 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi S.G. -
I just recently started reading your blog and I think you are a very good writer. I agree with all 5 points, especially the last one. I am a single mom and I AM the "bad guy" most of the time...of course, I also get the lion's share of the love and affection!
Thanks for some interesting thoughts.

1/29/2006 8:02 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You're spot-on on all points.

Learning to accept what you have and be happy with that, simple contentedness, is the real key to lasting happiness. So many people today go out snd chase the dollar to buy their dreams, and end up miserable for their efforts. I watched my brothers indebt themselves to banks and credit companies searching for a pot of gold that just ins't there.

I live within my means. It's not glamorous. Everything I own is obsolete. Every purchase I make is a planned one. I do the extremely unsexy thing called 'securing my needs first, then my wants'. My wants frequently come up short, and I've learned to want less, and try to enjoy what I have more.

Would more money be nice? Sure! Is it worth killing myself with stress to get it? Hell, no. There's nothing I can buy that I need, and a great many things I need that can't be bought at any price. Money only solves a few problems, and it creates many.

Me, I'd rather be a happy idiot, than struggle for the legal tender.

1/29/2006 9:12 PM  
Blogger Doc Nebula said...

I don't think #1 is a ridiculously sweeping statement at all, when you factor in how this entry opened -- that these are rules that work for YOU, not necessarily for anyone else. Are there people in the world who feel they could buy a great big CHUNK o' happiness if they had enough bread? Yes, there certainly are. You, apparently, simply feel you aren't among them... that even if you were fabulously wealthy, it wouldn't make you happy, unless you had other things in your life. And, conversely, without the fabulous wealth, you can still be happy, as long as you have those other things.

Again, there are other people who may well believe that all they need is the cash, and even without love, or friendship, or self actualization, they'd be fine. I tend to think that anyone who actually WOULD be fine in those circumstances... doing nothing with whatever talents they have, pursuing a lifetime of slack surrounded by professional sycophants who will agree to anything and sham any enthusiasm as long as you keep picking up the check... well, that person would have to be so shallow and soulless as to nearly qualify for subhumanity.

And, contrariwise, I tend to think that most people of any actual depth, like all our friends, even if they THINK they could be happy with bucks bucks buck and nothing BUT bucks, would find things are much different should it actually happen.

What money WILL buy is opportunity. I could start my own publishing company, hire good artists to draw my scripts, put out my own line of comics... or, with George Perez or Jim Lee pencilling TEAM VENTURE or AMAZONIA or SERAPHIM66, fairly easily get one of the established companies to publish it. Other people who want to work in other fields could use a personal fortune to make movies, create sculptures, record music... wealth is a wonderful facilitator. But it takes more than that to get to happy, in my opinion.

1/30/2006 8:57 AM  
Blogger SuperWife said...

Peanuts -

Thanks for the compliments and for stopping by. Hope you wander through again.

Nate -

I agree it's more about learning to be happy with what you have (or can realistically attain) than to set yourself up to achieve the impossible dream. I'm happier now than I've been in a very long time and it has absolutely nothing to do with finances. If we had more money would we be happier? I don't think so. It would allow us to do more things that we want to do, but the happiness part is already there.

Highlander -

It wasn't a lesson I learned early on. Like most folks, I grew up believing that I had to keep acquiring things...cars...houses...stuff...to make me happy. It never did. I spent a long time trying and it never worked. It wasn't about the money or the stuff. And I wish I'd learned it a lot earlier!!

1/30/2006 10:01 AM  
Blogger Julia said...

Good list.

My only comment is while money won't bring you happiness, lack of money certainly makes you miserable.

1/31/2006 8:51 AM  

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