Facing the Fates: Deciding What Will Be When Given Limited Options |
In the Foreign Service, we move to new places every two to four years. We are invited to live in a new country, learn a new language, experience a different culture, share with people our journey and vice versa. Often, we don't always know where we are going to end up. For some, this can be worrisome, not knowing your future. But, here's the thing about some of life's big decisions being chosen for you in the Foreign Service: it is exciting. It is adventurous. It is amazing. It can be tough. It can provide the opportunity to face your greatest fears or to fulfill an unrealized dream long held dear: perhaps both, simultaneously. It is one thing to decide where you are going and then go. It is alternatively another to say, "Let the fates be made and then be happy with it." Here is my take (albeit brief) on facing situations where choice is limited or directed.
Hungry? |
When we have more decision-making, more selection, more opportunity, more options, we are happier, right? Yes and no. Having self-sufficiency, personal independence, and self-determination provides power. But with all the choices in the world before you, and little direction, it can lead to stagnation and even paralysis. What if I choose wrongly? What if I go down a path that proves a waste of time, energy, and resources? There is the inevitability of self-doubt, the what-ifs, and the back-o'-the mind question of what could I have done differently?
So many options, so little time! |
Allowing some amount of flexibility in the decision-making of your future, however, both challenges and pushes you out of your own box of comfortability. It allows you to think of yourself in ways you had not perceived previously. It allows you the freedom of being a part of a process where possibility, synchronicity, and chance collide--sometimes beautifully.
Do ya take the call? |
We got an amazing posting and we are elated about our upcoming future. Cheese! Wine! Art! Music! Italy! Need I say more? (I will, er-hum, in future posts).
Of course, every city is a great post, in its own way, but preferentially some are above others on my bucket list. So this is the post-me, the future me, responding to where I got posted. [And I realize that months have passed without updating the online community about our next posting worldwide. Mea culpa.] In all fairness, I got posted to one of the most intellectually stimulating, soulfully artful, and linguistically interesting places in the world: Bella Roma! We will move from India to Italy by summer of 2014.
New Doors, New Options |
The good news is that most people I've talked to end up adjusting, adapting, and often loving the place they may have not expected or originally hoped for: we learn to live with what we have and be satisfied with what we are given. The future holds great opportunity, yes, but the present is what we live with, day in, day out: better make the best of it. Choices I was not happy with, struggles that I was not ready to face, in retrospect, have become my greatest allies, personal triumphs, and happiest moments. When we do what is always expected, we will know what to expect. Indeed. But expectations are finite, limited to our current perspective: might as well go for what we can't foresee and invite the opportunity to become more than we ever imagined when we were standing still or stuck in the inertia of indecision.
Go Ahead, Walk a Mile |
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