Upon reflection, maybe "growing a set" in my dream was metaphorical in another way. Let me explain. Jane's excellent article talked about our beginning to enjoy saying "no" to AL and to other things that are unhealthy or undesirable. Sometimes, that takes some balls.
Case in point, I got up this morning @4:30 for a kayaking trip that my fiance and I have been planning all week. Over coffee, he tells me that his dad invited himself along so that the two of them could fish. Understand that his dad once spent 90 minutes describing the spawning habits of the large mouth bass in excruciating detail, while I was trapped with him in a small boat -- which is not the way I want to spend my only day off this week. So, I told my fiance that I've decided to stay home and work on our deck garden instead. Now, he's downstairs throwing a man-tantrum, saying that I "bailed" on him and throwing things about. I'm sitting here, calmly planning a great day ahead -- visiting the farmer's market, cooking Croque Monsieur for brunch, planting Dahlias...
In the past, on AL, this would have been a very different experience. First, it's Sunday so I would have woken up hungover or still drunk. I'd have been trying to coax my body and brain into moving, packing AL on ice for the trip, etc. I'd have said, "yes" and then hid being miserable in a sea of wine. What a waste!
Oswald Chambers says that it's seldom a choice between a good thing and a bad thing; rather, it's a choice between "what is good" and what is "not good enough." I'm beginning to see how AL handicaps us into choosing the lesser thing.
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