You're Just One Small Adjustment Away From Making Your Life Work

No matter what your personal beliefs or traditions are about Easter, most people recognize that it symbolizes resurrection. It may be a holy resurrection or the regeneration of nature after the death of winter, but renewal is in the air.

The first thing I saw on this Easter morning was a baby bunny rabbit. He had survived the coyotes and hawks, so far, huddled under a flowering shrub in a domesticated zone of the Arizona desert. It was, in fact, that precise moment that I remembered it even was Easter Sunday. I had been reflecting the past week on the delicacy and unpredictability of life. Ever an optimist, however, I had a trio of related but uniquely different experiences that reminded me of regeneration this past weekend.

First, I saw a man dragging a cross up Catalina Hwy, trudging up the side of Mt. Lemmon in Tucson, AZ. This wasn’t just a small, fake, or Styrofoam cross, or the one carried by a fleet of believers in an annual ceremony where they plant and observe it on Easter Sunday. This was a substantial 4 x 4 constructed wooden cross, and he carried it alone. He was near the 6,000 ft. elevation marker, though I don’t know where he began (I looked for and saw no nearby car parked). He was followed by a lone woman, dressed in similar camouflage fatigues. The cross had a small wheel attached to its base, so he was technically pulling it, one of the short branches slung over his shoulder. He wore no sign. No cameras were rolling. I could only speculate as to his purpose. Was he planning to go past 10,000 feet to the summit? Had he begun at 2500 ft, the base? I admired him, whatever his reason. He was having his own transformation, whatever it may have been, physical, spiritual, emotional, or all three.

Another very inspiring event was a wonderful author whose never say quit spirit made her choose to resurrect a set-aside manuscript for a second look, another chance to find it the perfect home where it would be appreciated and cared for with the respect and love of story it deserved. [Writers always inspire me. It’s not an easy job. It can be one of the loneliest and most insecure jobs, too. The value or goodness ranking of a story is subjective. Good writing is more uniformly appreciated, but all the ingredients of a novel combined leave it open to opinions on all manner of things by all manner of people. Backlists are underappreciated too, says I.]

My third Easter experience came in the midst of a three planes, three liftoffs and touchdowns, and two layovers Easter Sunday trip home. A mere 14 hours later, when I finally arrived home, I was still thinking about it. I absentmindedly (on this amount of sleep there is very little mind left at all), stuck my earplugs into the plane’s movie sound as I flipped open my laptop to edit a manuscript. The movie was the same one we’d seen on the flight out, so I didn’t plan to watch it. It muffled the crying baby and loud talk across the aisle. The only thing that made me pause and look up was one great line in a fairly bad movie. This may not be exact, but it’s close: “We’re all just one small adjustment away from making our lives work.” How true is that? Life is as amazing as you want it to be.

I have spoken with several people lately who have written or are in the process of writing a book they always said they could, they should, or they might. Whatever your bliss…follow it! Let this season of rebirth and regeneration serve as a resurrection of your childhood belief that the world is filled with endless possibilities. Then do something about it. Change is movement, not stasis. Have a blessed Easter.

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