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MohitSharma921
MohitSharma921

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Why Crises Aren't Always Bad

Remembering that you simply are getting to die is that the best way I do know to avoid the trap of thinking you've got something to lose. you're already naked. there's no reason to not follow your heart. ~Steve Jobs

I believe that dying takes many forms. Beyond death of the mortal body, it are often the death of a dream, the expiration of hope that a career, a relationship, or physical health will proceed needless to say .

Death can are available the shape of somebody receiving a diagnosis of a significant illness or suddenly losing her job. Death are often quite physical. It can are available the shape of an emotional, relationship, or financial crisis that changes everything.

For former accountant and financial planner Lisa Fittipaldi death came within the sort of sudden legal blindness at age 47.

It's not hard to imagine the anger she felt at the prospect of living life in near darkness. it isn't hard to imagine the bloated feeling of loss that rose in her belly every morning as she woke and sunk into her restless mind nightly that she tossed and turned, trying to sleep but awake , fearful, and anxious.

It is hard to imagine that Fittipaldi would at some point call the crisis a blessing. But she did, consistent with the publisher comments for her book A Brush with Darkness: Learning to color After Losing My Sight.

"I truly feel that unless blindness had toppled the carefully maintained edifice I called my life," she said, "there is not any way that i might be the kinder, more fulfilled person i'm today."

That insight took years though.

Two years after Fittipaldi was declared legally blind something miraculous happened. Her husband gave her a watercolor paint set and told her to try to to something, and she or he did. consistent with the much told story, she produced a painting of three jars that surprised her and her husband.

Fittipaldi had never been a painter, so she had to draw upon other talents, knowledge, and passions to assist her with the painting process. She used her knowledge of calculus and her memories of trips to foreign lands to supply lively, colorful paintings that realistically portrayed diverse cultures.

Fittipaldi's story perfectly illustrates the human tendency to avoid change until something or someone forces it upon us and therefore the potential gift of finally accepting the change.

I love to observe the MTV show MADE. Each episode features a youth who says he or she wants to be "made" into something very different from his or her current persona (such as, a shy boy that desires to become a lady's man or tomboy who wants to become prom queen).

As knowledgeable coach starts to figure with the youth and set tough goals, the youth (with only a few exceptions) starts to whine and rebel.

"I can't do that ," he or she usually says at some point. Then, after a come-to-Jesus talk from the coach the youth submits, and voila! He or she reaches the goal (usually to everyone's surprise).

More than a decade after Fittipaldi's crisis she has become a documented artist and sold quite 500 paintings. She has founded a non-profit organization, and written many books. quite a decade later her crisis has morphed into a really unlikely miracle.

Also Read: erictric.com

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