Turning
Old Clichés into New Maxims:
You Made Your Bed, Now Lie in It
By Richard Eyre
Note: This column appears every two weeks …with
an old cliché replaced by a new maxim each time. Click
here to read the full introductory column.
This
one was said to me, with considerable conviction, by a well-meaning
business associate. I was preparing to leave the consulting
firm I had helped build because I wanted to change my focus
and spend more time writing.
“Let
me give you a little advice that you haven’t asked for but that
you sure do need,” said my older colleague. “You don’t just
walk away from a profession you’ve spent years learning. You
don’t try to change course in mid-stream. You’ll be starting
from ground zero. You’re too old a dog to learn new tricks.
You’re doing fine. You’ve invested a lot to be where you are.
You’ve made your bed, now lie in it.”
“It’s
a rut I’m in, not a bed,” I tried to explain, “and I’m not even
sure I made it. It was pretty much made by circumstance and
things that just happened.”
This
old cliché is great as long as its intent is to remind us that
we need to keep commitments and to accept the consequences of
our actions and choices. But when it starts to mean “Stay what
you are … don’t change … don’t risk … be satisfied … you can
only be what you are now,” it becomes limiting and counterproductive.
As
he was advising against a career move, my colleague was advocating
the low-risk status quo over the high risk of change. “You’ve
made your, bed now lie in it,” was his way of saying, “Don’t
leave your comfort zone.”
What
he didn’t realize was that I needed to leave that comfort
zone. A more useful cliché for me at that point in my life was
“What doesn’t move begins to rust.”
Comfort
imprisons more people than prison bars do, and I knew that it
was time to move on. I understood that a well-conceived change
has the power to expand both the quality and quantity of our
lives. Quality because life becomes more interesting
(the more we’re challenged, the more awake we become). Quantity
because changes seem to slow time down (compare how fast
the weeks turn into years when you’re in a routine with how
wonderfully long and full a week seems when you’re in a new
place and experiencing new things).
*
Tennis has been important to me over the years because
it’s the one thing I do consistently to stay in shape. Tennis
also seems to serve as a metaphor for life. Like life, it is
such a mental game, and attitudes have so much to do with how
well we do.
For years I had been dissatisfied with my backhand.
I knew it was my weakness (as did everyone that I played). It
had little of the topspin or the control or the confidence of my forehand. I had tried several “adjustments”
and had practiced endlessly hitting against a wall or ball machine.
One spring I decided that what I needed was not another
adjustment or more practice but a whole new stroke.
I read articles, consulted a coach, and designed the
heavier topspin stroke I wanted. It required a completely different
grip, a different back swing, even different footwork than what
I had been using for twenty years. It felt foreign, difficult,
awkward, and downright insecure.
But the alternative was to stay the same, to stay in my comfort
zone, to fail to improve.
I finally got it to where I could hit the way I wanted
to in practice or with the ball machine, but in a match it was
so much easier to revert to the old stroke.
Maybe you really can’t teach an old dog new tricks, I would think. Maybe change really is
too unpleasant, too risky, too hard.
Maybe you do just have to lie in your bed once you’ve mad it.
Still, as hard as it was, I noticed that I was enjoying
tennis more. It was different! I was losing some points that I used to win,
but I was winning some that I used to lose — and I was progressing,
I was getting better.
*
Teddy
Roosevelt spoke with pit about the “cold and timid souls who
have never known either victory or defeat” and with admiration
of those “who were actually in the arena” … who try, who strive,
who change.
“Multiple
careers” is a notion that excites and intrigues people, but
not all of them can make it happen. “Try something new” is a
motto few dare to live by.
Comfort
is the enemy.
Restlessness
can be our ally.
The
new maxim is:
GET
OUT OF YOUR BED BEFORE IT GETS TOO COMFORTABLE
Life
is too long and too potentially wondrous to spend in one place,
in one profession, in one interest. Commitments should be kept,
most particularly those to family and to God. But we should
have no commitment to rut or to routine.
Next column we will take a look at a downright dangerous
cliché about keeping your nose to the grindstone.