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Tips on Coping with Changes in Your Life

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Life's a Beach! - Published Columns
Wednesday, 20 July 2005 00:00

I’d like to thank the many Wave readers who have responded so positively to this new column! Interestingly, a number of emails included questions about coping with changes that occur in life. I guess that’s due to the fact that many of us are “transplants;” having left family, friends and familiar places behind, in favor of living here on the Delaware shore. And, by the way, you vacationers sunning yourselves on the beach right now--Don’t turn the page, thinking this doesn’t apply to you! Many of us “locals” also started out traveling here on vacation, and, for us (and maybe for you), that special attachment always continued well past Labor Day. Memories of the bandstand at twilight, the smell of hot fries mingled with Sea & Ski, or the early morning sight of dolphins glistening offshore, ended up leading us, ultimately, to the settlement table. So read on!

Even when you know that a change is going to be good, the process can still be very difficult. The happiness and anticipation will almost always be bittersweet, but there are little things you can do to make transitions in your life a little less traumatic.

To start, write down the good things the change will bring. Emphasize the positive aspects. For example, you may be saying to yourself: “I’m relocating to the beach full time. It’s what I always wanted to do, but I’m really going to miss my old friends, and moving is stressful.” If so, then write: “Yes, but now I can enjoy everything about the beach on a full time basis. My old friends will still visit, and I’ll make new ones. Moving is indeed stressful, but it’s temporary. When it’s done, it’s done. The pleasures of living where I want to live will be permanent.”

Another example: “My child is going off to college and I’m going to miss him.” Put pen to paper: “Yes, but my child is successful. He made it to college. She’s going to advance her life. The purpose of having a child was to successfully raise him or her to adulthood … and it’s working.”

Remind yourself of the positive aspects of the changes you have chosen to make. Add to your list as you think of more. Don’t write down what’s negative; this will just bring you down. The written word, in a simple and short-handed fashion, is an amazingly effective way to keep your negative emotions in check. Keep in mind that you almost always have choices. If you don’t like one change, you can choose another. It’s OK to make course corrections in your life.

Unfortunately, some changes are not as easy to endure. We all suffer losses and traumas we did not choose or anticipate. In these cases we find effective ways to cope with the loss, and, in time, figure out what to do next. Tolerating and surviving a failure, a disappointment or a rejection isn’t easy, but the inner strength we gain can actually open up opportunities later on. Imagine getting rejected for a job you wanted. At first, it’s devastating. You’re going to feel sad for awhile. However, as time passes, you realize that you don’t have to focus on this job anymore. You’re liberated. You can now focus on something else—something that will likely be just as good or even better. Don’t just take my word for it. Think back on rejections or disappointments in your past. Didn’t things often end up being just as good or better?

Change is part of life. Life is dynamic and prone to variation. Imagine a world in which nothing ever changed! There would be no inventions and conveniences; no computers, medicines, automobiles or airplanes to make our lives more convenient. We would see far fewer places, enjoy far fewer choices, and possibly not even live as long as we do now. If you never experienced or learned anything new, think how stagnant life would be.

Over the years, I have talked with many depressed people. One common theme in their lives is that, for whatever reason, they don’t make changes. Because of the lack of variation and fresh experiences, life becomes a sterile quagmire of mediocrity. And to think, the only truly depressing thing about all this is that it never had to be!

So change is good, right? Think of the progression of your life as an airplane flight, a train ride, or an automobile trip. It's not always comfortable or convenient, but it's the only way to get where you really want to go.

Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D. is a psychotherapist and author practicing in Ocean View. He can be reached at 302-539-5986, by email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , or through his website at www.DrHurd.com.

 

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