Mistakes a/k/a Sub-Optimal Decisions

You are not the mistake that you made, unless you continue to do it. โ€“ Rodney Stotts According toย the Tessian Report, โ€œa mistake is a decision or action that produces an unwanted or unintentional result. As emotional beings, humans make mistakes because we cannot always make objective decisions โ€ฆ ย Because of this, we sometimes make decisions that are suboptimal.โ€ In addition, Kathryn Schulz adds, “The kinds of things that we can make mistakes about are essentially unlimited.โ€ Okay. But some blunders hurt. They haunt, like the pain I feel at choosing to maintain my excellent, eighth-gradeย attendance record rather than walking my dog home [two miles] and securing her. I thought my little, Cocker Spaniel mutt would wait for me outside the school. I never saw Ladyย again. A vagabond once sat beside me at a bus stop and asked for a doughnut from the bag Iโ€™d just bought. My 33-year-oldย self was offended. I still regret my huffy, tiny-hearted stinginess. In โ€œ7 Reasons Why Itโ€™s OK to Make Mistakes,โ€ย The Odyssey Onlineย says, โ€œEvery mistake โ€ฆ is a valuable lesson gained.โ€ ย They add, โ€œYour mistake doesnโ€™t define you. โ€ฆ It simply makes you human.โ€ Quora answers the question,ย What happens when we make mistakes, with: โ€œTo be brief we learn our lessons if mistakes are not deadly or fatal.โ€ Okay. Aย flub, foul-up, fumble or foolishness is survived. Aย lesson learned. But remorse, regret, pain persists. What to do? Consider: Time passes unhindered. When we make mistakes, we cannot turn the clock back and try again. All we can do is use the present well.ย  — Dalai Lama We are built to make mistakes, coded for error.ย — Lewis Thomas We’ll just have to try to make better mistakes tomorrow.ย  — Alexandra Bracken We all make mistakes, but one of our biggest mistakes is continually revisiting the past.ย — Bryant McGill This post opens with Rodney Stott’s words about mistakes. See this former drug dealer’s storyย [3 minutes] Support Stott’s work, The Earth Conservation Corps’ย Anacostia Raptor Watch Buy his book,ย Bird Brother, A Falconerโ€™s Journey Story Talk Inย Saving Grace, a woman flies to England to escape toxic experiences. Hereโ€™s how a British doctor describes her medical care, โ€œDo you know,โ€ shaking his head in disgust, โ€œ95 percent of those types of medications are prescribed in America? And America only makes up five percent of the worldโ€™s population. โ€ฆ ย In 1996, the rate of diagnoses for Bi-Polar Disorder was one in 20,000. And do you know what it is today in America? One in twenty. And they think itโ€™s going up to one in ten [because] the drug companies are pushing these terrible drugs.โ€ Saving Grace, by Jane Green:ย A rivetingย novelย about one womanโ€™s journey to save her familyโ€•and herselfย [Amazon] Good Reads Reviews Shop Sandra’s Gallery   Art available with or without text, framed, on canvas, as posters as well as tote bags, tee shirts, journals, puzzles, phone cases, ornaments, face masks, towels, blankets, cups, pillows, shower curtains and moreย  Shop All Art and Collectionsย HERE.

Einstein # 12: The Difference Between Clever and Wise

A clever person solves a problem. A wise person avoids it.ย  – Albert Einstein I canโ€™t add to Einsteinโ€™s words but want to share that this is International Dark Sky Week. It encourages us to enjoy starry skies and reduce light pollution.ย This week, those who rise before the sun can see the crescent skim Saturn, then Jupiter, backed by the constellation Capricorn.ย Read more. Since 2002, the third Thursday in April has been National High-Five Day. It began when students at the University of Virginia gave away lemonade and happy hand slaps. BTW, the High Five uplifted the earlier ย โ€˜low five,โ€™ also called “slip-slapping”, “slapping the plank” and “soul shake”ย Read more. Whether by clever means or wise, succeed and soar enjoy high-fiving folks Thursday and star gaze all week … always! Shop “Hydrangea,”ย this week’s Featured Art. Blessings & best wishes. Ramadan This weekโ€™s new crescent launches Ramadan. ย These thirty days are best known for prayer and fasting, when Muslims eat and drink nothing from daybreak to nightfall. As a month that focuses on the inner life, these four weeks and two days offer much to any spiritual practice. Gossip and arguments are avoided. Patience, compassion, mercy, forgiveness and gratitude are highlighted. What a wonderful way. This year, Ramadan starts at sundown, Monday, April 12.ย  Read more. Photo Credit: PNGTree.com

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