The ability to move through life’s transitions takes courage and
faith
Tim Connor
Life
is filled with a variety of transitions – changes, endings and new
beginnings. Each of us lives through
many such transitions. The transition
of:
- graduating
from high school or college and starting a career.
- leaving one
job, career and moving on to another.
- leaving a
relationship that is destructive or lacks a nurturing and loving foundation, and moving on to another that you
hope will give you more of what you need
and desire.
- marriage,
leaving the single life behind.
- moving into
a new home or neighborhood
- retiring
and leaving behind the frantic, busy and often stressful life of the busy
professional, executive, -manager or employee.
- moving from
one part of the country to another or even from one city to another in the same
state.
There
are many major life transitions such as marriage, divorce, retirement and
starting a business, and there are thousands of smaller life transitions that
fill our days and years.
Each
of us handles and reacts to these transitions in many different ways. Let me
pull a key concept from the best selling book Transitions, by William Bridges.
Bill shares a simple concept in managing any major or minor life
transition.
Declare
an ending. Spend time in the neutral zone. Create a new beginning. Many people
attempt to begin again – a new relationship, a new job, anything – without
declaring an ending or putting closure on the previous situation. This will
almost guarantee a premature ending to your new relationship or new beginning.
Spend
time in the neutral zone. This is time of reflection, contemplation and
self-evaluation.
I have known people who have spent months in the neutral zone.
Personally, after a previous divorce, I spent over a year in the neutral zone.
This is a time of renewal and self-discovery. It is time well invested if you
want to discover the who, what, why, how, why not and what if in your past and
future.
New
Beginnings. Start, begin and go for it
with confidence, desire, passion, belief and a willing heart and mind and leave
all of the old baggage behind. It won’t
do you any good in a new beginning.
No
one escapes life’s transitions. The key
to happiness and inner peace is the ability to view both the transition process
and its outcomes as in your long term best interests. Years have taught me that nothing happens
without a reason. A life’s transition
enables a person to leave something behind and move into something better. The secret is to accept a transition with
confidence and faith.
Some
of life’s transitions can be planned and prepared for while others come upon us
suddenly with surprise and cause a great deal of anxiety due to the uncertainty
of the future.
Over
the years I have observed many people who have resisted a life transition that
would have ultimately been good for them, due to fear, stress and a lack of
trust in their life process. If a
transition is necessary for you to grow, you can anticipate it, plan for it and
take positive action or wait for just the right time. But waiting isn’t an effective way to face a
transition if you want to create more inner peace, happiness or success. There is never the perfect time to; start a
relationship, end one, start a new career or end one, or many other of life’s
transitions. If you wait too long, life
has a unique way of interceding and pushing you whether you feel you are ready
or not.
What
transition(s) are you experiencing at this time in your life, that you are not
handling with calm, confidence, courage and clarity?
What
transition are you waiting to take action on due to fear or a lack of trust and
faith?
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