Fixing others that aren’t broken

Often in life, especially with people who matter to me, I have wanted, with good intention, to help them and to fix them. If I saw them doing something that I had learnt painfully was a mistake then I so wanted to save them from that pain.

What I have now learnt is people are not broken and they didn’t need fixing, it was me who needed to adjust my perspective, as they weren’t me, I was stuck in autobiographical mode, what mattered to me.

Also, I am now learning to focus on me, not that I am broken and need fixing either, but if I work on being a role model, being inspirational, being a leader, being true to myself, then perhaps if someone does want to change something and then they may see something that I do or have done that might help inspire them.

The whole thing is ratcheted up to a much higher level of desire to fix and help when it is your own children, but here it is even more essential that I am a good role model rather than a fixer of things that are not broken.

Of course, like everything, it is a work in progress for me and learning to let things be is hard, but so worth it.

Ahead of the giant leapers

One step.

Then another.

Two, three, four, ten, a hundred…

Each step has a purpose.

Each step is small.

Sooner than we expect we are there.

Easier than we realise, we can continue.

We are looking back on all the struggling giant leapers who are wondering why we are ahead.

If we were meant to be leapers, we would be like a frog.

Don’t be a giant leaper, be a small stepper.