"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
My
daughter has her hand in a splint. In a few days we will remove the
splint and have more x-rays to see if we need to see a hand surgeon.
It is hardly surprising that she is injured. She lives on a farm.
She
waters one-ton animals using huge steel tubs. She drags heavy hose
around. She argues with a bull. She hauls wood. She splits wood. She
stacks wood. She camps out with the family on our little ranch where
bear wander and fighting wolves wake them up in the morning. She
likes to shoot. She is a ballerina and spends her time tapping her
toes together in hopes that they will bleed less when she hops up and
down on them in a paper mache box.
Clearly,
this kid was getting injured one way or another.
Except
that she dislocated her knuckle wiping off the kitchen counter. She
has sprained tendons and micro fractures because of the way she held
her hand when she wiped crumbs into the garbage can. I don’t
mind saying that I did not see this one coming.
We
spend a tremendous amount of time trying to be safe and keep our
families safe. But the problem is, we are terrible at assessing risk.
Books have been written about how bad we are about assessing risk.
Even the handful of people who read them agree that other people
are horrible at assessing risk and they move on.
Don’t
believe me? Look up the statistics on stranger abduction. Now look up
the statistics on car crashes. Now try to convince any mother that
drives her kids home from school to avoid the loonies that she is
wrong.
Unless
you are on a swat team or deployed you will probably do nothing today
more dangerous than get in your car. Your kids are safer walking
through the neighborhood (that you picked because it was so quiet and
safe) than they are sitting in your car. But we do not do a great job
of separating out when we feel safe and when we are safe.
You
feel safer when your kids are with you. The fact that they are not
safer doesn’t displace that feeling.
Which
is why fear is a terrible way to make decisions.
Several
years ago I was talking to a dear friend of mine. She was remarking
on something that needed to be done but then added that she would not
be comfortable doing that. I asked her why that would affect her
decision. She paused and then said, “It shouldn’t.”
The
worst thing about this conversation is that she remembers it and
repeats it to me frequently. I am the queen of not wanting to do
uncomfortable things.
We
always talk about comfort zones. We talk about how we got them, what
they include, and whether we should get out of them. We give talks
and tell people to get out of them.
Next
time you talk about “stepping outside your comfort zone,”
think a minute. Is it really so comfortable in there? Have you ever
been comfortable doing or saying something that you later regretted?
Me too.
I
have a long list of things that have come out of my mouth that just
make me wince to think of them now. I have an even longer list of
things that do not yet make me wince but probably should. Maybe
comfort is not the best indicator of morality or wisdom. Maybe, your
comfort zone is not that safe. Maybe you were safer in bear country
than your kitchen. Maybe your kid is better off wandering down the
block than in your minivan.
So
the next time you are deciding what to do, remember to factor in the
risks of pursuing comfort. Comfortable is not safer. Difficulty is
not necessarily danger. And watching wolves fight out the window is
much more interesting than wiping off the counter.
I am me. I live at my house with my husband and kids. Mostly because I have found that people
get really touchy if you try to live at their house. Even after you explain that their towels are
fluffier and none of the cheddar in their fridge is green.
I teach Relief Society and most of the sisters in the ward are still nice enough to come.