There’s a big difference between being interested in something and making a
commitment to it. Whether it's making healthy changes to your diet, how often
you exercise, making new friends, changing jobs, saving money or the
decision to be a better partner or parent, it’s making a commitment to yourself
and to others that really counts.
You can tell a lot about a person by looking at what their schedule says.
What are your priorities? Adjust your schedule to reflect what you say you
value. I am often working with my coaching clients on setting and
reaching their most important life goals. It is sometimes useful to
ask, “How is doing what I am currently doing helping me to reach my goal?” It
might not be.
For example, if your partner is unhappy because you are working too much and
you continue that behavior, and yet you say you value the relationship, you
have a dilemma. A true commitment to being a more responsive partner will take
setting boundaries around work, halting the people-pleasing of unreasonable
clients or your boss, limiting your perfectionism about finishing everything in
your emails and on your desk before you leave, and redefining your ideas about
what it means to be truly successful at home as well as at work. Interest in
being a better partner is a feeling, but leaving the office on time as a sacred
ritual to preserve time with your partner is a repeated, new behavior.
Interest is passive, and it might be fleeting. Commitment is continuing to
keep the faith, and do the hard stuff even when you don’t necessarily feel like
it. Commitment takes the long-term view, and recognizes that most things that
are really valuable take some sustained effort.
Parenting comes to mind as a perfect case for the need for commitment. It’s
common to be interested in having children. Most prospective parents picture a
sweet and loving baby or small child who loves you back. As I coach parents
through some of the unanticipated and difficult chapters in parenting, that’s
when I call for commitment. I’m thinking about when your teenager is rude,
defiant, and testing all the boundaries.
Commitment is also needed to have the tenacity as a parent to hang in there
for answers when your child has learning disabilities, physical challenges,
ADHD or ADD, depression, anxiety, or chemical abuse problems. This past week, I
was moved by an NPR interview with David Sheff, author of a new book, Clean, about what he has learned about
addiction treatment in the US through trying to help his son, Nic, now 30, and
sober for 5 years, through his addiction to heroin and crack cocaine. Sheff
never gave up on Nic. That’s commitment. What a lucky guy Nic is to have a
father with that level of care and tenacity.
In marriage, commitment translates into listening to your partner, making a
decision to do loving and thoughtful behaviors (even when you don’t feel like
it), closing the exits by deciding to go direct with courage towards your
partner about any concerns rather than passively complain to someone else,
and continuing your own journey to bring your best self to the relationship.
Being committed in relationships means making a positive decision to create
regular time together for fun and for play. This takes being aware of the
energy you bring into your closest relationship, and taking some effort
and care into keeping things interesting and setting new goals.
It’s okay if you don’t want to be committed to something, but own it. Take
responsibility for not just being interested in the people, causes and changes
closest to your heart. Making a real commitment can inform your daily choices
and behaviors, and that can make such a difference. Interest is passive and
transitory. Commitment is more solid, fixed, and has some muscle and follow
through behind it. With the things you want in your own life, stop to reflect
on whether you are interested or whether you are committed. Make sure to check
that your behaviors match up with your most important commitments.
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Are You Committed?
Labels:
active,
ADD,
challenges,
Clean book,
commitment,
David Sheff,
disabilities,
interest,
Marriage,
NPR,
parenting,
passive,
relationships
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