Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Choice of Not Making a Choice



Dear loving people,

It was at her retirement that Rose realised she had spent 26 years of her professional life on the same post as Administrative Secretary of her company. Bihndoh – her colleague on the other hand recruited on the same day with Rose had grown to become Director of Operations. With much regret Rose told her friends, “You see, I made the wrong choices. I chose not to step out of my comfort zone, I was so afraid to apply for promotions or for other vacant posts; I never ventured to seek more training. I opted to remain on the same spot, doing what I thought I was best at. Bihndoh was more daring, she would try the seemingly impossible and it paid off. She’s the director of operations and here I remain, a mere secretary. Chaiiii! This world ooooh!”

This is what happens, “When you have to make a choice and don’t make it, that is in itself a choice” William James says. I don’t know what you think?” but that is an undeniable fact. Not making a choice is a choice. Letting things happen by default is a choice. If we choose to give up our right to make a choice - we have made a choice. We always have choices, even if we do not like the ones available. Not liking a choice does not mean we do not have a choice. We are constantly presented with choices. Every day we make hundreds of them, some small, some large, and some life changing. Each choice that we make shapes our lives and determines what other choices will be available to us.

Often I ask my junior colleagues what they want to do, where they plan to be in a couple of years or just how they like to spend an off-day. Guess what? Some get so embarrassed and even offended. One of them who became a close friend told me one day that at first she thought I had this boring residual people-pleasing tendency. But when she began to look at it more closely, she realized it was actually about relinquishing the tiny decisions, since inevitably there are lots of large ones that she had to make. That became an eye-opener for her.

It took me considerable time to come to terms with the concept of not choosing. At one moment, I thought I was going nuts. After all, if I did not choose, then anything that happened was not my fault. It took years for me to understand that when we don't make a choice and we simply let things happen, or we let others make our choices for us, we have given up our personal power. At times it can feel freeing to give others the opportunity to choose for us. After all, if they chose it is their responsibility, right? Wrong. Giving up the right to choose does not mean we give up responsibility. We are still responsible, even if we choose to be irresponsible.

The truth is that, every day we make countless choices that affects our lives in major ways. Do we stay with a job or take a risk and follow our dreams? Do we tell someone how we feel, or do we wait for a better time? Then there are the decisions we make by making no choice at all for example when we remain in a job that we really want to abandon, or we stay in a position even though our heart’s pulling us to another one.

At times, the only choice we have is to choose our attitude and how we will respond. These choices are powerful because they allow us the power to stay in control of the internal even if we cannot control the external. Choice is a conscience response. That response is compelling because it allows us to make choices over how we will act in any given moment. When we choose our responses, we decrease the number of times we will regret doing something that we felt we were forced to do.

Life is a constant stream of choices. That can be overwhelming and sometimes downright exhausting if we put pressure on every decision, in fear of doing the wrong thing, or making a choice and then somehow missing out because of it. These big life choices may seem completely unconnected from the tiny decisions we make about how we spend our time, but it all comes down to the same question: Do we want to take responsibility for now?

Not making a choice can be a dangerous choice. When we decide not to choose, we decide to give our personal power away. We give our power away either to a person or situation. Making a choice, even if it is only how we will respond to a situation, allows us to maintain our personal power.

Making choices, and being mindful of our choices, is important because it not only helps us maintain our personal power, but also to take responsibility for the outcome. By taking responsibility, we remove ourselves from the role of victim. Being a victim is a weak position to be in and removes choices we may otherwise have. To claim our personal power, we must make choices and accept the responsibility for those choices.

We’re the only ones who can identify what we want and then do something about it, whether it’s what we do with our evenings, what we do with our jobs, or even what we do with our lives. We can see this as something stressful, and wait it out; hoping someone or something else will tell us what’s the best course of action. Or we can tune into what we want in any given moment, knowing that no matter how things turn out, we will be happy for finding the strength to follow our instincts and choose.


Zig Ziglar says that "Every choice you make has an end result.”

No comments:

Post a Comment