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“Things work out best for those who make the best of how things work out.” —John Wooden
“Why don’t you just take up swimming?” the doctor asked. I was twenty years old, single-minded in my pursuit of a dance career, but the tendinitis had forced me to give up my dream. Surely, I didn’t follow the doctor’s advice. I couldn’t really invest myself in anything else, because surely I might be able to start dancing again at any moment, and I refused to do anything that might jeopardize that possibility. I was unable to dance, but I was unable to move on either.
Thankfully, I eventually did move on. It took about five years, but I finally accepted that a career as a dancer was not in the cards. I found to my surprise that my chances for happiness had not died along with my dream of being a dancer. Someone says that when the Universe closes a door, it opens a window, and I definitely found that window! I found a circus school about an hour away, enrolled in an aerial arts class, and for the next year I did dance in the air. What if, for example, I had discovered aerial arts at twenty instead of twenty-five? What if I had opened my mind to the possibility of a completely different passion? Perhaps, many people had similar experience with me. It’s not always easy to move on and to see the window that the Universe opens after closing a door. It can be hard to keep an open mind when things go terribly wrong, but the happiest people do just that. Challenging as it is, I know it has done us great good to let go of the attachment of how I think things “should” be.
Vocabulary
tendinitis n. 肌腱炎
jeopardize v. 危及,危害
circus n. 马戏,马戏团
aerial adj. 空中的
attachment n. 依附
(不要抱怨生活的不公和困难,带着一份豁达的心态,你也能找到自己的那扇机会之窗。)郭婕改编
“Why don’t you just take up swimming?” the doctor asked. I was twenty years old, single-minded in my pursuit of a dance career, but the tendinitis had forced me to give up my dream. Surely, I didn’t follow the doctor’s advice. I couldn’t really invest myself in anything else, because surely I might be able to start dancing again at any moment, and I refused to do anything that might jeopardize that possibility. I was unable to dance, but I was unable to move on either.
Thankfully, I eventually did move on. It took about five years, but I finally accepted that a career as a dancer was not in the cards. I found to my surprise that my chances for happiness had not died along with my dream of being a dancer. Someone says that when the Universe closes a door, it opens a window, and I definitely found that window! I found a circus school about an hour away, enrolled in an aerial arts class, and for the next year I did dance in the air. What if, for example, I had discovered aerial arts at twenty instead of twenty-five? What if I had opened my mind to the possibility of a completely different passion? Perhaps, many people had similar experience with me. It’s not always easy to move on and to see the window that the Universe opens after closing a door. It can be hard to keep an open mind when things go terribly wrong, but the happiest people do just that. Challenging as it is, I know it has done us great good to let go of the attachment of how I think things “should” be.
Vocabulary
tendinitis n. 肌腱炎
jeopardize v. 危及,危害
circus n. 马戏,马戏团
aerial adj. 空中的
attachment n. 依附
(不要抱怨生活的不公和困难,带着一份豁达的心态,你也能找到自己的那扇机会之窗。)郭婕改编