Can’t Be Won, Just Played

Buchart Gardens - photo by Mary Dessein
Buchart Gardens – photo by Mary Dessein

How would you like to have Jack Lemmon telling you a story? A doozy of a story at that? A Steven Pressfield story.

“It’s a game that can’t be won, only played.”

Jack’s seventy-six year old voice, filled with wisdom and humor, recounting the lessons he’d learned about dignity, the appearance of it, and which of those two actually has value; the lessons he learned watching a man not only look for his authenticity, but to regain belief that such a thing exists. Jack’s voice resonating with a kindness and acceptance that only comes with facing fears over and over, surviving losses over and over, and then standing back up in order to keep on walking.

To find one’s authenticity in part requires that you get out of the way and let it surface. Robert Fulghum wrote about the time he saw a bumper sticker, “Don’t believe everything you think,” which set him off on a creative, introspective tangent about the truth in that statement as he reviewed his life.

I can relate. Times my brain told me to do one thing, seemingly logical and allegedly most efficient, while my authentic self, call it intuition or gut feeling, urged me to do something else. It seemed safer to believe what I thought rather than what I felt.
A significant factor, beyond my perception then, was that my brain is in cahoots with my ego. Of course, I did what my brain told me. I believed it. Was it that I wanted to look smart, appear competent, or to be right? Surely part of the equation. Just as surely, I got in my own way and had no clue I was the impediment, the derailer, the creator of the negative result, not random chance or bad luck.

True self versus ego, eh? Thinking my way through my out-of-balance checkbook register works well. Thinking my way through the conundrum of how to respond to a colleague’s ongoing rudeness or to a friend’s loss of a parent, not so much.

Jack, as his character Hardy Greaves, recalls the conversation six decades before between Rannulph Junuh and Bagger Vance.
“You don’t understand,” Junuh spouted back to Bagger’s advice.
“I don’t need to understand. Ain’t a soul who ain’t got a burden to carry he don’t understand. You ain’t alone in that.”

He responded, “I don’t need to understand,” because he understood a bigger, all encompassing truth?

Being told, “You don’t understand,” has shut the door on many things in my life, as I believed that a high level of understanding was the pivot that mattered. Assuredly, sometimes it does. Yet we come across the bigger truths which “You don’t understand” keeps us from seeing when we are locked in the belief that we are alone. The mistaken belief that our individual circumstances, feelings, fears, sorrows, mistakes, tragedies have to be understood exactly. That they have to be experienced by someone else so they know what we’re going through.

What difference might that realization have made when as an alcohol and other drug counselor, clients said to me, and to other counselors, “You have to be an addict to be able to help me.” Their idea that they were special and therefore alone? There is a phrase for that, ‘terminal uniqueness.’ I remember one lanky sixteen year old in particular, ambling up to me after I had spoken to a group of high schoolers about drug abuse, with his baseball cap pulled low over his face, sporting a whisper of a wannabe mustache, long arms dangling out of his off-white denim jacket, and stating it as if this were E = MC squared, he said, “You can’t help me unless you’re in recovery.” Did that allow him to keep using because no one was qualified to help him? A whole ‘nother discussion.

Over time, without divulging my personal history as that was a clear professional boundary, my response became, “Why is that? We don’t require gynecologists to be female, marriage counselors to be divorced, oncologists to have cancer, or judges to have been incarcerated. Why does a drug counselor have to have been addicted?” Sometimes, they would stop and go, “Oh.” Other times, they blew me off with the classic, “You don’t understand,” alas, shutting their door to the invite of change.

What a concept: I don’t have to understand your exact experience and feelings to be here with you, recognize what you’re going through, and support you.
You don’t have to understand my exact experience and feelings to be here with me, recognize what I’m going through, and support me.

“Time for you to choose.”
“I can’t,” Junuh shook his head at Bagger.
“You can. You ain’t alone. I’m right here with you. I been here all along. Now play the game.”

You are not alone.
Neither am I. If I am silent and still, my authentic self will speak, whether quietly or with a charge of adrenaline.

“It’s a game that can’t be won, only played. So I play.”
Thank you, Steven.

The Gold Ring

Straight-jacket escape performer, Boston, Oct., 2013. Photo by Mary Dessein
Straight-jacket escape performer, Boston, Oct., 2013. Photo by Mary Dessein

“Do something, even if it’s wrong!”
When I heard my father say those words when I was a kid, I cringed. How old-fashioned, how out-of-it. Anybody knows that doesn’t make any sense. Truth be told, I was a tad embarrassed that my dad was so clueless.
Now fifty years later, I realize how clued in he actually was. I hope he is smiling.

Inaction, waiting for something to happen, or for an answer to appear have not worked well for me, although it has taken decades for me to recognize the many facets of inaction.
Caution is one thing. Inertia is another. Preparation and research can be a part of the action. ACT: Action Changes Things, I was told recently. Ask questions, go to the meeting, act on a decision, do something new, follow up on a lead. Waiting to see what will happen often insures that nothing will happen. Life is not a merry-go-round which keeps taking you past the gold ring until you grab it.
That sneaky little voice inside that says, “People will think you’re stupid.” “People will know you don’t know what you’re doing.” I have been suckered by that fearful part of me so many times. Yee gods and little fishes, fear is a thief. So is self-doubt and the part of me that allows it.
People might think I’m stupid? So what? If they do, their judgment is their business. People who know me already know I’m the best thing since apricot jam on a flaky croissant. I might be embarrassed? I have been embarrassed so badly so many times, what would one more be? Once it went past my ability to keep track of on my fingers and toes, counting my faux pas became like counting the stars in the sky: an endless and not very useful diversion.
A couple Thomas Edison’s quotes, “I haven’t failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that don’t work.” And, “The most certain way to succeed is always to try just one more time.”

Do something, even if it’s wrong. You’re going to learn something.

Dr. Howard W. Jones died last month at age 104. He still worked part-time until he was hospitalized two weeks before he died. Ground-breaker, life-changer. He and his wife, Dr. Georgeanna Seegar, pioneered in-vitro fertilization and so much more. He once said, “If I have a legacy, it’s of someone who…did not have any qualms about proceeding with the unknown because it was fun to do.”
Jack London said, “I’d rather be ashes than dust.” He knew a little bit about living, his legacy still ripples through literature.

If a mistake moves me forward, is it wrong? I say no. Dad was right (yet again), “Do something.” Pretty soon it is ten years later, or twenty, or the fiftieth birthday has past, and we’re waiting for…what exactly? Opportunity that comes on a nice platter polished with a guarantee? A possibility of success in a gilded frame? The gold ring determined to be valuable by other people?

Jodi Picoult, Dmitri Matheny, Antonio Rocha, Geoffrey Castle, Kevin Costner, and Meryl Streep did not stand around waiting for a bus that might come by. Like countless others, they did something, even if somebody else was shaking their head.

At a training recently, Elizabeth Ellis said to us, “I’m a storyteller (or writer, or…, you fill in your own blank), what am I going to do about it today?”
So something didn’t work? Okay, what am I going to do next?

Getting in my way

Clouds over Washington
Photo By Mary Dessein

What a concept – things I say and do which sabotage the goals I proclaim to have. Most of the time, I don’t see these obstacles as self-erected: not allowing enough time for traffic; trying to squeeze too many tasks in before I leave; saying yes to others’ requests when I need to say no; procrastinating; minimizing the negative consequences; or the ever useful tactic of blaming people, places or things for my problems.

Another concept: getting out of my own way! I watch amazing fiddler, Geoffrey Castle, go non-stop in perfecting his craft; insightful, compelling writer, Stephanie Kallos, follow her intuition in draft after draft of a novel; master storyteller, Elizabeth Ellis, perform, write, and teach with such generosity while she travels back and forth across the country; and dynamic writer and teacher, Bill Kenower, come alive when talking about writing. Passion. Belief. Determination?

At a luncheon recently, I heard a peer say they didn’t know what else to do besides what they were doing. Is that fear leaning against the door of opportunity? If so, how do I look inside myself to sort out what is really important to me and how to get there? Get there from the safe, known, perhaps mediocre, place of here?
A friend and I were talking about dreams. His was to work at a job he enjoys and is well-trained for in Hawaii. Seemed feasible and fabulous to me. “Oh no, I’ll never get to do that,” he said. His answer to why not was vague and the conversation shifted to something else. Are we back to fear again?                                                                                                                               Do I put things in my own way so I don’t have to even approach failure or disappointment – easily two of life’s more profound teachers. Have I put the illusion of safety between me and what will truly fulfill me?