Get up faster. Yeah. I plan to have an ongoing conversation with my next class of fourth graders about understanding and dealing with “failure.” This phrase and story will definitely be part of my repertoire.
Comment by Mary Lee on 8/9/2007 @ 4:58 am
Jason, your moving in story is the type of situation in which I am actually glad I have NOT completely escaped adulthood.
While on the phone with my nineteen year old (who’s away from home just now) yesterday, he said he was feeling pretty stressed out about some of the details he was having to take care of as part of the next step in his young life.
Later I was thinking that, even though I still let myself get stressed out, I’m old enough to know that everything will work out.
In my son’s case, he’s having some of his first real adult-type challenges, and because he is still a kid, he doesn’t yet have the wealth of problem-met/problem-resolved experience to help him get though it.
We adults may still succumb to tantrums, but it’s so true that getting up faster guides you to the next, better place.
Comment by Katie Baird on 8/9/2007 @ 9:31 am
Mary Lee — You can never be too young to learn the lesson of getting up faster. And it’s a habit that could always use more practice as we get older.
Katie — It’s good that your son has someone in his life with some good experiences to share…getting him to buy into the advice is another matter altogether
I am amazed that as I get older, how easy it is to forget some of those valuable problem-met/problem-resolved experiences, especially when you’re right in the thick of one of those potholes. Practice, practice, practice!
Comment by Jason on 8/9/2007 @ 4:58 pm
[...] almost impossible to reverse. Sure, life isn’t all daisies and roses, but how quickly do you bounce back? Rainbow and storm clouds exist in the same sky. One secret to keeping that rainbow above you is to [...]
Pingback by Escape Adulthood » Eeyore or Tigger? on 8/31/2007 @ 9:58 am
[...] few compliments about customer service (as my boss has said, if you do even a little more than you promise, it’s easy to get positive feedback): You guys [...]
Pingback by aka Chief Sales Servant » Sweet Kudos on 1/10/2008 @ 5:33 pm
RSS feed for comments on this post. | TrackBack URI




It’s been twelve days since the first cardboard box made its way through the door of our new office. The vast majority of the boxes are gone, but we still have no Internet. Or phones.
