
So many people say to me, “Why is it that what I can’t have, always seems more appealing than what I can have?” The answer is easy: Wanting what you can’t have is the easy way out. In other words, engaging in fantasy is often preferable to the effort it takes to achieve something that’s achievable. People say, “Don’t sacrifice the good to the perfect.” Even better is to say, “Don’t sacrifice the attainable for the sake of the unattainable.”
Sadly, for some people, life can be a pretty hopeless place, and yearning for the unattainable is better than nothing. “I can’t have anything I value, but at least I have my daydreams.” Life, or at least a happy life, requires a can-do attitude, i.e., you might not get exactly what you want, but you’re still capable of wanting – and getting – other things. This is the can-do attitude. Many people hem themselves in by assuming that they only want a small number of things. But our capacity to value and to achieve is limitless.
“The grass is always greener” might mean that your neighbor has a better lawn or a better life than you do. While lawns can be easily evaluated, lives are harder to judge. Sometimes people seem happy, but you’re not with them all the time, so you can never be sure. You can’t compare your life with the life of another. It’s one thing to say, “I like what Joe did in his life. I’m inspired. I think I’ll do the same.” It’s another thing to say, “I want Joe’s life, and I resent him for it.” Crafty politicians and some of our media often try to implant this flawed attitude in order to stir people up.
Some believe that envy is evil, and that one shouldn’t have envious thoughts because it makes you a bad person. Yes, envy is irrational and unproductive. But it’s more of an error than an evil. And if left uncorrected, it could turn into something that’s destructive to everyone involved. Envy is rooted in wanting what you can’t have, and it’s self-defeating. The only way to get over it is to get to the source of the problem, i.e., wanting what you cannot have while mistakenly believing that you can’t pursue other things. In other words, you must be “selfish” (in a good sense) to get over that envy. You have to believe, “My life is special and valuable. I can and should make it successful and happy.” These thoughts can take the spotlight off of other peoples’ lives and return it to your own where it belongs.
Sometimes people want what they think they can’t have, when in fact they really could have it. Perhaps you can’t have Dorothy’s husband just because you like and admire him, but you can have a man like him if you’re willing to persist in finding one.
People have to believe in their values, i.e., “I CAN find that thing that I want.” Just wishing it won’t make it so, of course, but it’s a start for attaining anything valuable. The only alternative is to give up, but once you’ve given up, it’s absolutely certain you won’t ever get what you want. A self-fulfilling prophesy if there ever was one!
There are always possibilities out there waiting for you. All you have to do is get out there and make them happen. It’s all part of that “can-do” attitude.
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