Fluid and Unpredictable

Long ago, I read that it was important to stay fluid and unpredictable, and I was so charmed by those two words together that I took them as life theme. I already knew that rigidity led to nothing but grief. Rigid belief systems break at the first serious challenge, rigid social systems disintegrate and fall to rebellion, rigid lives end up bleak and unfulfilled. “Rigid” so often means “brittle,” a word that’s only attractive when it’s paired with “peanut,” but a fluid approach to the world that accepts its unpredictability with open arms and a firm conviction that chaos is, at the very least, interesting often leads to joy. Someone close to me once said, in exasperation, “You’re such a Pollyanna!” but I don’t think I’m unrealistic. I just look at change as something with huge potential, sure to make me look at the world in a new light, learn something new, become someone new. Things don’t always (or even often) turn out as I planned, but my life has never been boring. I chalk that up to fluid and unpredictable.


Or as Berkeley Breathed and Opus would say:



How did you meet joy with open arms this week?


(Also, if you’re on Daylight Savings Time and you haven’t reset your clocks, today is the day to Fall Back.)


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Published on November 03, 2019 02:31
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message 1: by Helen (new)

Helen I'd call that being adaptable, flexible. Having a plan is recommended, even necessary for some people, but one should always be prepared to change those plans and be open to new and unexpected experiences. A positive approach always leads to more happiness than a negative outlook.


message 2: by Kerrie (new)

Kerrie Howard My mom is a healthy 97 years young - she is one of the most positive people I know. I believe that attitude has a lot to do with her longevity


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