A 2 year old - A puddle - An analogy on life.
One and
More…
two words in the English dictionary that independently are quite
innocent,
but together end up being the undoing of many.
Just one more!
I watched as this beautiful
little girl walked around to the front of the puddle, unaware of the abrupt
ending that her blissful adventure was about to endure. She stepped into the
water, one step, two step, JUMP! Jump, smile, splash! She jumped again, and
again, loving the effect she was having on the seductive brown liquid as it
sprang up to her knees with each bound she took. Jump… splash… wobble… and then
she fell. You could see as the joy was ejected from her face only to be
replaced by a dumbfounded expression as her once friendly fluid turned into an
icy, abrasive, collection of melted snow. Her hands hurt and she was no longer
sprinkled with droplets of water at her knees. She was now soaked, clothes
saturated and cold, with no hope of completing her independent journey to the
house. What feels like crisp, nipping, New England air in the early days of
March, can quickly be transformed to piercing, bone-chilling, mid-January
temperatures with the addition of wet clothes. She was brushed off, scooped up,
and carried inside to warm up with dry clothes. One more time through the
puddle was one time too many.
We see this happen time and time
again in our adult lives. We insist on staying out just one more hour after an
already late night. We go for that extra cocktail. The snooze button gets hit
just one more time. We eat another helping of food, we gain one more pound. Our
goal of fitting into that bikini can be swept away one cupcake at a time. People
have the tendency to indulge, surround themselves with these indulgences, and
wonder why they haven’t been able to stop indulging. We want to have it all. We
hoard ‘til we can’t sit, we eat ‘til we can’t move, we party like rock stars
and we shop ‘til we drop. Not being able to say enough is enough can leave us,
much like my daughter, distracted, fallen flat on our faces, and completely
off-track from completing our goals. We’re left sitting in our own hypothetical
puddle of mucky water with our heads spinning wondering what just happened.The real problem is, we never know when that “ONE MORE” is the one too many. Hindsight is 20/20, and barring the obvious self-destructive behaviors, like, I don’t know, walking off a cliff, is it even possible to know when you've reached the edge? Waking up with a hangover is a clear sign of over doing it the night before, but by how much? Did you really just have one too many? Would you still have woken up with a hangover if you only had a couple of drinks? Do you know your own limits? How far over the speed limit does it take to get a ticket? At what point does enjoying your favorite treat, after a long day in the office, turn into a glycemic balancing act for the rest of your life?
I don’t have the answers. Even if I did, my answers wouldn't apply to anyone else. I can only hope to learn from my own blunders. I can’t see the future, but I can choose to live without blinders on because, sometimes, if we’re paying attention, we’ll notice the caution signs. We all need the occasional distraction or the occasional treat, or sometimes the occasional bump on the head to get us motivated again. The trick is knowing when something is a distraction or a priority, a dead end road or an uphill battle worth fighting. We all fall down it’s a matter of dusting ourselves off and getting back on track.
All I know for sure is that the next time I’m outside with my daughter, I’ll smile and watch her, and if she sees a puddle to jump in I’ll tell her, “go ahead, one more time!” She might fall down again but she’ll keep learning to get back up! Sorting out priorities from distractions is a long way out for her. Right now, all that matters is… PUDDLES ARE FUN!
Powerful and thought provoking!!! I still love mud puddles!!!
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