The World…As I See It: (What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You) Stronger…Or Jaded

For Suave.  He requested a blog and so I wrote. 🙂

A song that actually has something to do with my post.  It’s been a while.  Aerosmith’s “Jaded”

“What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger…or jaded.”

Jokingly a friend said that a few months ago about an expected ending to an unfortunate romantic endeavour.  While we both laughed about it, saying it out loud (or typing it as it was actually over Facebook chat) made both of us pause.  (Thanks, Lesbro.)  Sure getting hurt makes you more adept to recognizing the warning signs and being able to deal with something similar in the future (…stronger).  BUT it’s rarely a happily learnt lesson (…jaded).

Where does the old adage originate?  Was it someone trying to make another person feel better about a crappy situation?  Or worse, trying to make themselves feel better?  I also wonder what it pertained to.  Was it romantic escapades, business ventures or family drama?  And how close to killing you must something get to qualify?

Similar adages “trial by fire”, “learn from experience”,”don’t knock it ’til you try it” all teach us the same thing: to know and truly learn something (good or bad) you have to live it.  Sure, sure, I get it.  I can’t understand what it feels like to fall in love, fly thru the clouds or burn my finger on the stove until I’ve done it.  But why should we always feel the need to try everything ourselves?  In many cases, I prefer to learn from other people’s mistakes.

Having the door shut my in face both literally and metaphorically, both romantically and professionally, hurt.  There’s no better way to describe it.  Both affected my self-image and self-evaluation.  Both made me question what I was “worth”.  While these questions were temporary (because obviously I’m amazing), a hit to your psyche on that level can have lasting effects.  My skin got thicker and my drive to succeed and/or be happy strengthened.

But just because those experiences didn’t kill me, the learned life lessons were not always positive.  I may be stronger but I am also jaded.   The blinders are off and the guards are up.  Having had a boss who blamed her staff for her mistakes, I’ve learned to consider how my ass would be covered before I speak (or type) a word.  Having dated a man who tore me down to build himself up, I’ve learned to be constantly defensive and wary of any compliments.  Being shocked and disappointed by people I love and respect, I’m increasingly mistrusting of new “heroes”.  You get the point.

Being jaded is not intrinsically a bad thing.  Jaded equals smarter, protected and careful.  But jaded also equals mistrusting, skeptical, and in many cases, solitary.  The minimal trials and tribulations in my extremely privileged 26 years of life certainly haven’t come anywhere close to killing me.  But they have changed me, some for the better, some for the worse.  Do we generally ignore the latter for the sake of a saying?  Or to avoid having to say anything else about it at all?

I also wonder about the flip side.  Are there experiences that if they don’t last forever are good just to have had?  Is “it’s better to have loved and lost than to have never loved at all” the counterpart to “what doesn’t kill you”?  Why can’t we all just find comfort in knowing “this too shall pass” and be thankful we’ve experienced enough happiness to remind ourselves it’s possible and to remain open to it?  Maybe we already do and I just wanted to share my friend’s clever, yet poignant, remark…

Considering making jade my new stone of choice,

Jo’van

Quarterlife Crisis: Crisis Resolution(s)

Sting featuring Stevie Wonder “Brand New Day”

The streets have been cleared.  The bottles of cheap champagne and plastic cups disposed of.  Friends are either icing down the painful first day of “I’m going to workout” resolutions or still recovering from the “I don’t remember any of the new photos posted on Facebook” antics of last night.  Yes, it’s New Year’s Day!

Traditionally, only the first second to hour of this day are really important.  We spend a lot of energy getting ready for the Eve.  Parties, new party dresses under heavy winter coats, vague resolutions and sometimes desperate searches for someone ideal (or ideal enough at 11:55) to kiss at midnight.  All (well, at least most) faults of the prior year are forgiven.  It’ll be 2010 soon.  I’ll/You’ll/The world’ll do better beginning January 1st.  Despite specific feelings around New Year’s resolutions, everyone hopes the next year will be a good year, if not, a better one than last year.  And with the economic downturn of ’08 and ’09, I know there are high hopes for a plateau, if not a steady climb out of this mess we’ve created for ourselves.  But finances aside, what are you hoping 2010 will look like?

Of course, we’re all supposed to and I’m sure on some level do hope and/or pray for things like world peace, lower carbon footprints, higher literacy rates, greater human rights, saving the manatees and other such noble goals.  But when you narrow it down to what’s both really important and really feasible in your world, what do you come up with?

In the past, I’ve pledged to do things like get in shape, be on time, call family and friends more often, actually save money (and keep it saved), and whatever other simple things I know I should be doing anyway.  Despite the year I made that particular resolution, I still need to do all of those things.  But I want something new for 2010.  It’d be great to make all of those things real.  But I want something very specific and new for this new year.

In the grand scheme of things, last year was just a little rocky.  But in eyes of a 25-year-old, 2009 was scary and exciting.  God tested and delivered me.  Despite being laid off, depleting my savings, my dog attacking someone, losing my wife, being (somewhat painfully) reminded why I prefer to stay single, and whatever other shitty things that happened, as of 12/31/09, I was in good shape.  I have a new job I (actually) enjoy, friends I’m blessed to be able to call on, family who has no choice but to love me :-), my weekends free for the first time in 3 1/2 years, a prospect of a real relationship, good health, steady income and the ability, the mindset and, hopefully, the heart to only strengthen all of these things.

Ever the pessimist/realist, I resolve to be happy in 2010.  Of course, I won’t be able to completely stop plotting and planning for the worst.  In fact, I hope I never do.  But what I do need to work on is accepting the good just for the sake of it being good.  Good things happen to me.  I need to start enjoying them.

I received some great advice at the airport on my way home for the holidays.  The lady checking IDs at the security checkpoint looked at my smiling ID photo (actually a really good picture) and said, “Smile more often.  It’s a good look.”  Thank you, ma’am.  I fully intend to.

Actually looking forward to what 2010 has in store,

Jo’van

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