
It was 6:25 am when I left San Francisco to head to Vermont to keynote the women’s conference Zest Fest. My Virgin America flight to Boston went smoothly enough, and in spite of the gusty winds, dense fog, and heavy rain, the plane landed with just a few bumps. But it turns out I only had an hour to transfer to my connecting flight, a little puddle jumper that would take me to Lebanon, New Hampshire, where the conference coordinator would pick me up and drive me to Fairlee, Vermont.
Unfortunately, because the puddle jumper airline didn’t have luggage transfer privileges with Virgin America, that meant going to baggage claim, picking up my luggage, checking in with Cape Air, going back through security and making it to the airline in time (good luck!)
Fortunately, my bag was the first off at baggage claim, and I’m a pretty fast runner, so I made it to Cape Air just in time to find out that my flight was cancelled. Puddle jumper Cessnas just don’t do so well in bad weather. I later heard that this airline cancels all flights if the wind even whispers. (Good to know.)
So, luggage in hand, I found a bus that, for $38 and three hours of driving, would drop me at the Lebanon, New Hampshire airport with unexpected free WIFI as a bonus. Problem solved.
The bus arrived as planned, I got on, they took my luggage, and I settled in with my kale chips. Only the bus driver dropped us at the bus station and told us we had to go in to buy tickets. So I went in, bought my ticket, and when I came back, the bus was gone. With my luggage.
By this time, it was 7:30 pm. It had already been a long day, and I was tired and looking forward to relaxing in my lakefront hotel before speaking at the conference. So, in my old life, this is right around when I would have started truly melting down.
I remember a time about five years ago when, after a 72 hour call shift in Labor & Deliver, during which I had delivered 18 babies, this poor kid at a grocery store couldn’t manage to swipe my granola. And I just lost it and ripped him a new asshole. I remember saying, “If I did my job the way you did your job, there’d be dead people everywhere.”
This phrase flashed through my head. How could the bus driver leave me after he had taken my luggage and forced me to go in, wait in line, and buy a ticket?
But this time, I dismissed the thought instantly.
Instead, I focused on all the plus sides to my situation. Here’s what I came up with.
It would have been easy to get all pissed off over this. Get mad at the travel agent for scheduling such a screwy flight schedule that requires checking out and checking back in with almost no transit time. Get mad at God for making it rain so hard that my flight got cancelled. Get mad at the bus driver for leaving with my luggage and leaving without me. Get mad at whoever gets in my way next just because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
I could have bumped up my adrenaline levels, and with it, my pulse rate and my blood pressure. I could have skyrocketed my cortisol levels, and with it, my blood sugar, insulin levels, and inflammatory markers. I could do that, not just today, but every time some little thing doesn’t go just the way I planned it to go. And I could wind up sick, depressed, fatigued, and ultimately, alone - because who wants to hang out with someone who’s mad at the world?
Sure, I wish I had grabbed that sweater I stuck in my luggage because I was warm and cozy on the bus before he left without me (brrrr…) Sure, I’d like to be in my lakefront room, chilling out before the big event instead of sitting on a cold floor so I can plug in my laptop.
But instead, I choose to set goals, but release attachment to outcomes. I choose to find my joy, regardless of what’s going on. I choose to feel peace, even amidst uncertainty. I choose to keep my mojo rocking this time around, which is, ironically, what I’m speaking about this weekend.
I haven’t always been so zen about things like this. Just ask my husband! It’s been a learning process, and one that I’ve had to practice. I guess we really do teach what we need to learn, eh?
The Secret To Keeping Your Mojo Rocking In Any Situation
There's always a silver lining. It may be hard to discern when you're sitting in the discomfort of it, but I promise, it's always there and you'll often see it afterwards. The practice comes with learning to see it in the moment. So start practicing. I swear it will change your life. What do you have to feel grateful for in the very moment you feel lost, disappointed, frustrated, angry, or sad? Find the gem. Cherish it. Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional. Joy is a choice. Choose joy.
So what do you choose?
Do you fly off the handle when things don’t go your way? Can you be zen about things you can’t control? What have you learned?
Chilling out and feeling grateful,
Lissa
Lissa Rankin, MD: Founder of OwningPink.com, Pink Medicine Revolutionary, motivational speaker, and author of What’s Up Down There? Questions You’d Only Ask Your Gynecologist If She Was Your Best Friend and Encaustic Art: The Complete Guide To Creating Fine Art With Wax.
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Comments
You're so welcome Lili
By Lissa Rankin on Sunday, 11/20/2011 at 1:16 PMxoxo
Lissa
Pilot light
By Lili (not verified) on Sunday, 11/20/2011 at 10:39 AMLissa
Thank you for my daily flame and reminding me of things like this. The last one that stood out was the cheerleading one, always cheering always there. Things hardly ever go the way we plan and it is soooo important to remember to ENJOY our lives. There is always a positive to something negative.
Sometimes we just need to let go and trust in the universe and in ourselves.
Thank you for being part of my personal growth, thank you for reminding me that I am a complete being and thank you for my daily flame that's always cheering me on, even when I'm not listening. ;)
xox
Small world, Jo
By Lissa Rankin on Wednesday, 11/16/2011 at 4:15 PMIt's definitely not a big town! So funny that you know it!
xoxo
Lissa
Lissa's Blog What's Up Down There? Blog Posse Blog
By Jo (not verified) on Wednesday, 11/16/2011 at 4:11 PMLissa,
Love, love, love your story! Great advice! Since I joined your "cool group" I've been learning Shamballa Healing & just passed my Level 3 - Master Practitioner level... I've going to groups with like minds to share & study together, meditation, etc... On a funnier note, I had to share you story with my friend Stephie....as her relatives are from Fairlee, Vermont...we always laugh about we're going to ride motorcycles there, etc....in addition, it's funny because I have relatives from Unity, NH....both are sorta Hooter-ville towns!!
Sweet dreams,
Jo Bunten
Salisbury NH
Joanna, you go girl
By Lissa Rankin on Wednesday, 11/16/2011 at 12:45 PMCongratulations! Don't let anything spoil this special week for you! So proud of you. Joanna STRONG indeed.
Celebrating you,
Lissa
Mojo still rocking
By Joanna Strong (not verified) on Wednesday, 11/16/2011 at 11:57 AMI'm getting married in 3 days. My ex-husband threw a truckload of guilt and "you're out of compliance with the custody court order..." at me last night. I'm choosing JOY this week, as I prepare to marry the love of my life; a man I've loved since we were teenagers and whom I found again after 24 lost years.
Thank you, Lissa, for this reminder that I so much needed today. I am, and will continue to, choose JOY!
Thank you my friends
By Lissa Rankin on Tuesday, 11/15/2011 at 2:33 PMIt's a small thing, to just shift your reaction. We can't change our circumstances sometimes, but we can definitely change how we respond to them.
Bless you!
Lissa
The sweet stuff....
By Jessica (not verified) on Tuesday, 11/15/2011 at 2:10 PM..is the stuff that happens when you could have had events go smoothly! Getting on a bus outside San Francisco airport with only big bills (only an ATM and no shops in sight) with a passenger funding the dollars, :). On the greyhoud in the same city, driver insisting I have a tag for my bag (I thougth the written thing was IT. Not) and then picking me out of the cue -sorry Lissa- to be sure I was on the bus, without the ticket, :). Having a chatty passenger next to you on a plane when you're tired and having the best conversation in a long time, :).
Welcome to the club!
Seriously Good Advice
By Tamara (not verified) on Tuesday, 11/15/2011 at 6:26 AMIt's not like I don't KNOW this stuff, I just don't always DO it! Thank you for showing the way, and blazing the trail. I think that sometimes we just need to be told a thousand different ways that we can in fact, choose to be happy. Kind of like little kids, they hear you, but the message doesn't sink in until you've said something over and over and over!
I can always use a reminder to choose joy, so thanks for that and good for you for turning a lousy night into a not-so-lousy one just by choosing a different path.
Choices
By Shereen (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 10:53 PMThank you for real experience expressed so well and just the reminder I needed today.
Excellent Story
By SandyG (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 6:32 PMI love the honesty of your story, the difference between what you wanted to say/do and what you said/did. You really tied everything together after you told your story because it was general enough where anyone can relate. It's not easy to do but we can all control what we say and do.
This is very inspiring!
By Emmy van swaaij (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 4:06 PMThis is very inspiring! Reading this makes me aware that I can learn to deal with situations in thisnew way.
Thank you, my dear
By Lissa Rankin on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 11:41 AMThank you for reading and caring and spreading the light and for being brave enough to choose joy in your own life.
Big love
Lissa
Mom, you're so cute
By Lissa Rankin on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 10:59 AMOkay, so here's the skinny.
After my flight got cancelled (and there was no other flight going to Lebanon, New Hampshire that night), Matt and Melanie located the Dartmouth Coach, a bus that would take me there. So I got on the bus, they loaded my luggage, and then I assumed we were on our way. But NO! We had to buy tickets (they wouldn't take my cash).
So they took us to South Station, I had to wait in line to get my ticket, and the bus driver said we would leave at 7:35. But at 7:33 when I finally made it out with my ticket, the bus was gone- with my luggage, my dinner, and all my stuff.
Fortunately, the last bus of the day was living- 3 hours later. I found a sweet bus driver who refunded the ticket I had bought and promised me a ride on the last bus out. (By this point, I had been traveling since 6am and the last bus would deliver me to Lebanon, NH by 12:30am, when the event coordinator would drive me another 45 minutes.) He called the driver and told him he had my luggage, and Beth, the event coordinator, bless her heart, went to pick it up, even though I wasn't arriving.
I did make it there. The event was lovely. And I learned some really great lessons. (Mostly, DON'T TAKE A PEE BREAK AT THE BUS STATION OR THEY MIGHT LEAVE WITHOUT YOU!) But seriously, joy is a choice. If we can avoid the temptation to just jump into trigger-mode, even bad situations can be growth opportunities.
Lots of love to you Mom
Lissa
bus trip
By Trish Rankin (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 12:00 PMLove right back at you. Just glad you are safe and not letting things like that ruin your trip. You've come a long way baby! But then you already know that, don't you?
bus trip
By Trish Rankin (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 10:52 AMOkay, so come on we all want to know what happened next. How did you get to Vermont and where did you finally reconnect with your luggage? And aren't you doubly blessed that you have someone to always have your back? Come on! Give it up. Tell us...the rest of the story.
Joy is a Choice
By Anonymous (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 11:33 AMWow--just what I needed to hear today. Thanks so much for being so crazy, honest, out there, and REAL, Lissa. You are the bomb. I love reading all your stuff: it touches me in important, gooey places of change and light-seeking. I appreciate that you care and are brave enough to share and tell it like it is. You're a great role model. This story of yours was a significant one for me.
Ditto
By Nicole (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 1:54 PMThank you for expressing (better than I could) exactly how I felt reading this!!
I agree, the Universe brought you and your story to me today!
By Michelle geil (not verified) on Monday, 11/14/2011 at 1:19 PMThank you and rock on, wondrous, brave, pilot-lit woman of valor (-:
Much love to you.