Monday, January 5, 2015

Patience in the D

“It takes heart to fight for something that so many consider a lost cause - a strong mind to breathe life into that cause and prove so many wrong. Keep your heart true and your mind strong, Detroit.”

“Will you just be patient?!? Remember, patience is a virtue.” This statement, I venture to say, is often accompanied by a rolling of the eyes, a deep sigh and a disgruntled “I know...” Hello again everyone, it’s been awhile since I’ve written to you, so I believe it’s that time again. Patience in the D is what I’ll be discussing as this New Year is now upon us. So sit back and grab a warm cup of your favorite brew. I hope you enjoy my latest ramblings on Detroit, golf, CrossFit and life in general, and how all of those require a little thing I call patience.

“What we have to remember is that we can still do anything, we can change our minds, we can start over. The notion that it’s too late to do anything is comical. We can’t.. no, we must not lose this sense of possibility, because in the end, it’s all we have.”

Detroit. Our city has had its ups and downs throughout the years, there’s no denying that. I would like to boast that it is on its way up, but this comes with a sense of patience with the process. We aren’t going to wake up one day and, BAM, a similar city dynamic of Chicago or Boston or even NYC has popped up where the derelict streets used to lie. Instead, we take small steps in the right direction over time - Mr. Illitch’s “District,” the M1 Light Rail, and countless new residents in apartments and lofts downtown, just to name a few (and hopefully a Lions Super Bowl eventually, once the refs cut us a break). Detroit, the great American comeback city - a city where even the smallest of initiatives can make a positive impact. Give it a few more (patient) years, and we’ll have come back even more so than ever before. Somewhat freshly out of law school, I can say that we all face a similar challenge in developing our careers. We may not be where we envisioned ourselves professionally just yet, but, again, with patience and small steps in the right directions, we will get there. And that is a journey I am still embarking on.

“The loneliest moment in someone’s life is when they are watching their whole world fall apart, and all they can do is stare blankly.”

There were moments in time when Detroit seemed to have fallen into this same moment – where the city continued to fall apart, and people felt as though nothing could be done. However, over time, there has been new life building throughout our city. Patience. All of the developments downtown have come from hard work, dedication, and patience. The arrival of a new year has a way of inspiring people to create goals. Whether big or small, the end of one year and start of the next always seems to motivate people to make changes in their lives for the better; and these goals you seek often require patience. If you’re trying to accomplish anything in life, it will come with the same dedication and hard work we have shown Detroit, and most importantly, yes, I’m going to say it again - PATIENCE.

“First, you must see; second, you feel; third, you trust. Trust is the epitome of golf. It is the freedom to swing and let go. Great athletes compete best when they are free… And this, this requires rhythm, balance, and patience.”

I’ll admit that, at times, patience is something I struggle with. Except in one thing... Golf. I read a spectacular book recently about this wonderful game, which is where the above quote comes from (Golf’s Sacred Journey, if anyone is interested). If you play golf, and especially if you play golf competitively, you know how much patience is a factor - not only in practice sessions at the range, studying your swing to make even the most intricate of changes to improve it, but when you are actually competing. Hit a bad shot? If you get angry, get ready to hit at least 5 more bad shots. Patience is key.

Yet that is part of what makes the game so humbling. Some days everything is on point; you hit lasers at the pins, you sink every putt. And then, there are the other days… you might not be able to hit a fairway even if your life depended on it. You play with what you have that day – and you play with patience. Mastering a golf swing takes a lifetime of dedication, so stick with it; I promise that you won’t be disappointed if you do. Because when you’ve had patience with yourself and with this game, and everything comes together, it truly is a beautiful thing.

“Whether in golf or in life, it’s time to get out of your own way and let the real you shine. Find what you do well and perfect it.”

In anything you choose to dedicate countless hours of practice or training to, for one reason or another, you’re bound to fall into a bit of a funk every now and then. My particular one in golf lasted an infuriating year and a half. In 7 qualifiers, I found myself in the alternate spot in 5 of them, I missed it by one stroke, one single stroke… 5 times. This game takes an immense amount of mental strength and focus, two things I had lost, and had spent much too long trying to find once again. Patience. Have patience. Change your mentality, the swing is there, but have patience. And then, this last September, there it was. My old golf game had come back. But the tournament win wasn’t what was most important to me – it was the feeling of knowing I had found my game again. And that, undoubtedly, came with patience.

“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”

If life is not going your way, things tend to spiral; one negative thought piles onto the next until you feel as though you’ve lost control. This is a point when you absolutely must find patience, not only with yourself, but with all of the curveballs life throws at you. So if you’re having these same struggles in something you’re passionate about, keep going. Do not give up. Have patience with life’s path – trust it will all turn around for the better. And it will turn around, because you know deep down that it will, and that is exactly why you keep working at something you love. And if ever down the road, any of you care to get a round in at the golf course, I always love the company.

“Every champion has convictions, but perennial champions have convictions based on foundations. These foundations become the first line of defense when facing adversity.”

CrossFit. I’ll make this topic short, because CrossFit talk gets annoying sometimes. We have all heard of the proverbial “plateau” you hit. Everyone chugs the kool-aid right out of the gate because you often make so much progress so quickly, then you hit that wall and gains come at a slower pace. This requires patience. But we all know that.

If you’re like me in CrossFit, your own worst enemy often is yourself. I would describe myself as tall and gangly (and albeit, competitive), and in an environment where you’re often surrounded by those lifting more than you or working faster than you, patience with yourself becomes key to not losing your mind. Following a change in boxes, I wrote on their whiteboard of goals “to have confidence in myself again.” So I suggest you do the same – set goals for yourself, and have patience in the process of working towards making them reality.

If you ever find yourself frustrated with not progressing as quickly as you’d like or not hitting your percentages lifting on a given day, stop for a second. Step back, remind yourself it is only CrossFit, and if you’re upset over a workout (even though, yes, I know, the Open is coming up soon), I suggest you make changes to your perspective on life and what is truly important. Instead, laugh at yourself for reacting this way; remember it is just fitness, and get back at it harder the next day. Gains will come.

“No light, no light in your bright blue eyes; I never knew daylight could be so violent
A revelation in the light of day, you can’t choose what stays and what fades away”

Relationships. I’ll be going in two different directions with this topic, so hang in there with me… There are many times in life where patience is a necessity. What I am about to discuss is not one of those times. Insanity is defined as doing the same thing over and over again, but expecting a different result. If you find yourself in a situation or a relationship where you have to convince yourself to be patient, but in a negative way – that if you’re patient, he or she will stop ignoring you, stop lying to you, stop disrespecting you, stop pushing you off to the side whenever someone better comes along – WARNING, you’ve now exhibited traits of insanity, not patience. If you keep yourself in hurtful situations like this, you only fuel the downward spiral, which I will say is not something to easily dig yourself back out of. In these instances, cut that toxicity out of your life for your own good, and shift your patience onto yourself, and onto trusting that your life will fall into place as it is meant to with whom it is meant to.

Marriage. Ha, no, not me crazy, I’m not getting married right now. Everyone else may be, but not me. When the list of engagements seems to constantly be growing, anxiety can run quite high, and this is where patience, once again, becomes a necessity – patience that you will also, one day, find the person you are meant to spend the rest of your life with, to find happiness with, to start a family with, to grow old with. Past relationships, no matter how good or bad they may have been, teach us lessons. Each person that comes into and out of our lives has an impact on who we become. Some remain, and some do not. Yet there is the hope that we all find the person who truly makes us a better version of ourselves. And patience will always be there to help us along the way.

“’For I know the plan I have for you,’ declares the Lord, ‘plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’” Jeremiah 29:11

At the end of the day, no matter what life throws at us, we must always keep on going. My friends have reminded me many times that you have to have faith that you are exactly where you are supposed to be at any given moment in your life. If it is not a moment or reality you had ever pictured for yourself, then you have to remember that patience is what you seek. Be patient with God’s plan for you, that on His time, you will have everything work out for the best. And when it does, you can sit back and smile, for patience helped get you to this point. So, to end, I leave you with a quote from one of my favorite classic American books, and well wishes for your 2015. Approach this New Year with an open mind, a hopeful heart, ambitious goals, and patience. Oh, and a few trips to Detroit, of course.

“Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter – tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther.”