For a long time I wasn’t very fond of making decisions
because I was afraid of deciding wrong and facing the consequences of my poor
choice. My motto was to never decide today what you can avoid deciding
altogether. Lately I’ve realized that to date, I’ve managed to live through all
of my bad choices … even the time I decided to try gas station sushi.
I think my hesitation to make definitive decisions started
very early in life. I remember being a five year-old sitting at the dinner
table trying to decide if it was better to try to eat the disgusting cottage
cheese so I’d be allowed to leave the table or to refuse to eat the cottage
cheese and take a spanking and be sent to my room. It was only the first of
many lose-lose scenarios we all face in life.
To my horror I learned that refusing to eat the cottage
cheese resulted in a spanking and then being forced to return to the table and
eat the dreaded curds of death anyway. I choked down a few bites of only to
immediately gag and throw them back up which resulted in yet another spanking
being served another helping of cottage cheese. I remember my dad telling me I
would sit there until I “learned to like it.”
Eventually I fell asleep at the table and my mother
mercifully put me to bed. I never learned to like cottage cheese but I did
learn that sometimes procrastination is less painful than making a decision. By
simply sitting and doing nothing I was able to avoid being spanked and eating
cottage cheese. It was a lesson that stayed with me for a long time but didn’t
always serve me well.
As a young man I avoided making decisions with the way
Hillary Clinton avoids polygraphs and Donald Trump avoids marrying American
women… with zeal and passion. I drifted through my early years following the
path of least resistance just going along with other people’s choices.
When I was 17 years old I dropped out of high school, got
married and joined the Navy. Before I was 21 years old I had voted for Jimmy
Carter, started smoking weed, became a father, lived on an ice shelf next to an
active volcano in Antarctica and bought a Chevy with a 5.7-liter V-8 engine
during the gas crisis. Does any of that sound like there were decisions being
made in my life? Heck, even if I had been making bad decisions I would’ve
avoided a lot of that just by pure chance!
By age 23 the path of least resistance led me to a small
town in South Carolina in a failing marriage, living with my in-laws, in debt
up to my eyeballs and stuck in a job I hated. It was just like being back at
that table again facing the cottage cheese … it felt like a lose-lose scenario
so I did what I did best … I smoked weed, ate Doritos and waited to fall asleep
at the table.
Fortunately my father-in-law was a retired Navy Chief who
had no problems making a decision. So
when the day came that he was tired of me living in is house and whining about
life he looked me in the eye and said the words that would change my life. He
said, “Son, sometimes you just have to strap on a pair of balls and make a decision.
Get off your ever widening ass and do something even if it’s wrong!” I was
pretty sure he was throwing me out of his house but I was very sure that those
were words to live by.
I’ve been making my own decisions for a while now and on
occasion I even get one right. The lesson I learned from him was that life is a
series of decisions and if I don’t make them someone else will make them for
me. I also learned that when you let someone else make your decisions you could
end up eating cottage cheese or living in South Carolina. The horror!
Over the years I’ve made plenty of poor choices and I don’t
regret any of them…except eating cottage cheese or maybe kissing that stripper
in Singapore or investing my re-enlistment bonus in Beta Max stock. The point
is that letting someone else make your decisions is worse than making a bad one
of your own and this is coming from a guy who once decided to take a date to
watch Riverdance ….that was worse than eating cottage cheese!
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