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Being Young

Ah, the glories of being the right kind of young. For those it means a body that works well, a future that looks set, a plan and help that builds confidence.  That straight line to their future is clearly laid out before them.  They can see it as clearly as they can see the sun rise on a cloudless day.

For some their young life is filled with pain, worry, and strife. They can’t see any line to the future much less a straight one because nobody else around them has ever seen it either. It’s like the Loch Ness Monster of futures. Nobody they know has ever seen it.

And then some are in between. The line might have been spotted, but it’s lost or covered up in large areas by the dirt of life; hate, confusion, distractions and more.

The Illusion Revealed

So, who is the lucky one of the three above?  The answer? None of them. And all of them.  It all depends on how you react to discovering the illusion of the line.  Or the reality of it.

To give just one example, I have a friend who for 45 years lived a charmed life.  Her line was as straight as could be. She had a wealthy and happy upbringing, good friends, health and education.  She then met and married a man who seemed to have a great future himself and had 2 healthy and beautiful kids.  The life she envisioned came true.  Until her spouse became the least likely thing she could ever imagine, a crack addict.  We were having a discussion about this destruction of her family and life when she said “Nothing like this has ever happened to me, I don’t know why it’s happening now.”  My response?  “Be grateful you had 45 years of a charmed life first, most people don’t have anywhere near that luck.”

Coming up against the truth that the straight line is an illusion didn’t ruin her, even though it could have. She was a very smart, resilient and adaptable woman when she got over the trauma she refocused on finding a new line and was successful. It included an amazing career she never would have had and a new husband who led the way on adventures all around the globe.  But most importantly it helped her have sympathy and understanding for others who didn’t live her charmed life but who suffered the ‘slings and arrows of outrageous fortune’ in ways she never understood before.


Drawing and commentary © 2016 Marty Coleman | napkindad.com

Quote by Victor Hugo, 1802-1885, French author