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Life Is More Like Surfing The Ocean
Than Walking Dry Land 
 
By  Leo Babauta  
 
April 18, 2012                                                                             Issue 922    

  

Summary of this article
 

I'm sending along this blog article because I really liked his analogy about life: Life is not like walking a chosen path on dry land. It's more like riding the different waves over the ocean heading somewhere and enjoying the trip.

 

I'm not sure I agree with everything he says, but it's good to think about. Surely in our relationships with others, things to always be fluid.

 

God bless your family and your marriage.

  

Jim   
 

Life Is More Like Surfing The Ocean Than Walking Dry Land

 

By Leo Babauta

 

There is something about my mind, and many people's minds, that is overly optimistic.

 

We think we can do so much each day, and so we over plan. We fill our plans with so much, confident we can do it all, ignoring the evidence of the past when most plans didn't get done and most things didn't get crossed off as hoped. This time, we will do better. This time, we will be disciplined and productive and get more done.

 

What I Learned on Vacation

 

My family and I recently went on a short vacation to sunny and sublime San Diego for four days. As usual, I had lots of goals and expectations (I can't seem to help it).

 

I bought a book and planned to finish it in just over 4 days of vacation! I brought a yoga DVD, planning on doing yoga every morning as the kids slept in. I thought I could do some beach running every morning too. I had lots of work I thought I could get done too. And of course, we were going to walk around and explore San Diego all day, hang out at the beach for hours, and eat at lots of restaurants.

 

Guess how much of that got done? I did read a fair amount, but only about half the book. I didn't even open the plastic wrapping on the yoga DVDs. I did almost no work. I ran for maybe 10 minutes at the beach once. We did a lot of walking and exploring and eating, and hung out at the beach a fair amount, but little else.

 

I over planned. I was overly optimistic. I had lots of goals and expectations.

 

Not Over Planning in Real Life

 

In our daily personal and work lives, we overload ourselves and over plan. We are overly optimistic about what we can do, despite past evidence. We set too many goals and have too high expectations.

 

Here's what I've learned from my vacation and the last couple years:

 

Leave plans to a minimum. That's not to say you won't do anything, but plan as little as possible - most of what you might plan won't get done anyway. Why create a fiction? Leave wide open blocks with few scheduled appointments when possible.

 

Learn to act fluidly. If your day is mostly wide open, how do you fill it? Flexibly. You don't have plans or goals, but know how to pick your priorities fluidly, in the moment. At this moment, what is the thing you're most excited about? What is the most important thing you can do? What can you do that will change your life the most? This is a skill that you learn by practice, but planning ahead what you should do makes no sense when the landscape is changing constantly.

 

We are not walking a path, but surfing a sea. Most people look at goal setting as picking a destination, then figuring out a path to get there. That assumes you're walking on land that will change very little, and that while you will have unforeseen obstacles, you'll be on stable ground and the destination won't move.

 

That's not at all true - life is more like the sea, ever changing with no fixed paths or destinations, with swells and currents and waves that change everything at every moment. The ultimate skill, then, isn't setting a destination (goal) or a path (plan), but surfing. In surfing, you take whatever waves come, learn to judge the waves as they come, learn to ride the wave as it changes, not as you planned. It's going with the flow (literally), and changing what you do depending on how the flow changes.

 

Your plans might fall apart, but life will be greater for it. While nothing went as I'd apparently hoped it would on our trip, I was completely happy. We still filled our days with exploring and trying new things and play, and living in the moment meant I didn't care that I didn't get the work done or do the yoga or accomplish the massive amounts of reading I'd hoped.

 

Life changes things, and it's when we cling to our goals and plans that we are unhappy or stressed - when we learn to surf the wave as it comes, we can be very happy, no matter what comes.

 

 

  

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Jim Stephens
The Marriage Library
 20112011