| The Evolution of Coping
Portage
April, 2002 Newsletter
from Deb Martin, Transition
Coach making life an adventure and transitions
flow smoothly at http://www.portagecoach.com
Welcome
Welcome to my Portage
Newsletter.
My intent for this newsletter,
if anything, is just to present the musings of
a wandering woman. I've
learned a lot about myself in this process of
writing and from your feedback.
I appreciate that feedback. Keep it coming!
And a special thanks to those
of you who have passed this newsletter on to
others.
I'd love to hear your thoughts,
insights and understandings. deb@portagecoach.com
In this issue...
1) The Evolution of Coping
2) Quotes
The Evolution of Coping
Last week, two people told
me they are “coping.” That concerns me. The
first time I heard this, I
grab the dictionary and I learned that to
“cope” is “to struggle or deal,
esp. on fairly even terms or with some degree
of success.” Even though
I read the words “even terms” and “degree of
success,” coping is just about
the last thing I want for anyone. It's the
“struggle” part I hate.
The second time I heard it,
I looked in Thomas Leonard's book, The
Portable Coach, to see what he might
have to say about coping. This from his book:
“Toleration vs. Cope—When
you tolerate, you view the thing you are
tolerating as solvable. When you
cope, you've basically resigned yourself to
the problem's long-term presence.”
Ouch!
From this I began to think
about
the evolution of coping; evolution being “a
process of gradual, peaceful,
progressive change or development,”—yup, the
dictionary again. It's the
“peaceful” part I like. Now we're getting
somewhere. Coping, while it can
be managed with a degree of success often is
less than peaceful.
How can
someone move from coping to peace? Here's what
I came up with:
1. Cope
2. Tolerate
3. Engage
4. Experiment
5. Create
Most often, coping and
tolerating
are ways you choose to think about something.
If you take the toleration
you view as solvable and start to do something
about it, you've engaged.
Engaging implies both some action and a change
in attitude. You're becoming
involved in a way that may just start to give
you energy.
When I engage with an experimental
attitude, I look at what something is and also
what it is not. There's
a bit of discovery and unknown in the
experimental approach and that makes
it much more fun.
Now, creating is my
favorite. It's an approach that causes
something unique to come forward.
Creating generally ignores the ordinary
processes and uses an inventive
mind. Creating moves way past “dealing with,”
past “doing something about,
and even past “doing something to” a
situation. Creating is taking a situation
and making something new “with” it. Creating
is a way of strengthening
your coping immune system.
Can you move from Coping
right to Creating? You bet! But if you find
yourself emotionally or physically
struggling because you're coping, just take
the steps. How can you merely
cope if you are climbing?
Quotes
“However, never daunted,
I will cope with adversity in my traditional
manner ... sulking and nausea.
“ ~Tom K. Ryan
“Whoever says LIFE IS A BITCH
AND THEN YOU DIE, hasn't decided to be happy
yet.” ~unknown
“A wise man will make more
opportunities than he finds.” ~Francois Bacon
“Life loves to be taken by
the lapel and told, "I am with you kid. Let's
go." ~Maya Angelou
Want to see pictures from
last year's campout? Take a look at: http://www.portagecoach.com/CCC3/CCC3Pics.html
Happy Easter

Peace and much love
Deb
Portage is published 12 times
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