Chapter 9
1. In life design, being happy means you choose happiness. The
secret to happiness in life design isn’t making the right choice; it’s learning
to choose well.
- Over the years, what
have you learned from poor vs. good choosing?
- What examples can
you offer of each?
2. In life design, the choosing process has four steps….
Step 1: Gather and
Create Options
We won’t spend any more time on option generation here,
other than to tell you (again) to write your Workview and Lifeview, to create
mind maps, do your three Odyssey Plan alternatives, and prototype conversations
and experiences.
- What have you
learned about yourself from this first step?
Step 2: Narrow Down
the List
So, what exactly do you do with too many options? Simple.
Get rid of some. First, if it turns out that a lot of your options group
together into categories, you can break your list down into smaller sub lists.
That may help you get to your top contender for each option type. But
eventually you’ll be in that overwhelmed-by-too-many-options place and have to
get rid of a bunch of those jams. How? Just cross them off your list. If you’ve
got a list of twelve options, cross out seven, then rewrite your list with just
the remaining five on it and go to step three.
- Where do you
encounter too many options? How do you
downsize?
Step 3: Choose
Discerningly
Now, once you’ve done the preliminary work of gathering and
narrowing down, the hard part starts: actually choosing. The key to step three
is to make discerning decisions by applying more than one way of knowing, and
in particular not applying just cognitive judgment by itself, which is informed
but not reliable on its own. We aren’t suggesting making only emotional decisions,
either. We’re inviting you to integrate all your decision-making
faculties, and to be sure you make space so your emotional and intuitive ways
of knowing can surface in the process.
- Where have you found
it necessary “to listen to your knee or your gut or your heart” as part of your
choosing wisely?
When you finally get down to making a choice from your
narrowed-down list of alternatives, and you’ve cognitively evaluated the
issues, and emotionally and meditatively contemplated the alternatives, it may
be time to grok it. To grok a choice, you don’t think about it
- you become it.
- Now you have a new
word to add to your vocabulary!
Examples?
Step 4: Let Go and
Move On
The perception that there are gazillions of possibilities
that may have been great but that we never got to is a powerful force against
being at peace with our choice making; even if we don’t know what it was, there
must have been a better option out there, and we missed it. The key is to
remember that imagined choices don’t actually exist, because they’re not
actionable. We revel in exploring a few possibilities, then taking action by
starting with a choice. Only by taking action can we build our way forward. So,
let’s get better and better at building by getting better and better at letting
go of the options we don’t need any longer. This is key to choosing happiness
and being happy with our choices. When in doubt… let go and move on. It really
is that simple.
- What is your
experience with letting go of too many options?
3. Designers don’t agonize. They don’t dream about what could
have been. They don’t spin their wheels. And they don’t waste their futures by
hoping for a better past. Life designers see the adventure in whatever life
they are currently building and living into. This is how you choose happiness.
And, really, is there any other choice?
- How does this
summary speak to your present & future goals?
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