By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
I don’t normally by lotto tickets because the odds of winning are so powerfully against winning. Yes, I know “someone eventually wins,” and “if you don’t buy a ticket you don’t have any chance of winning.”
When the payout on the recent Powerball got so high though—a half-billion dollars—like lots of folks I decided “why not?” I bought a $3 ticket and let the computer pick the numbers for me.
The odds of being attacked by a shark are 1 in 11,000. The odds of being the lotto winner are about 175 million to one.
On the way home, my son and I fantasized about what we would do if we won the half-billion dollar payout. We decided we would take it in one lump sum rather than a yearly payout. Two days later, when we had the drawing on television, we got out our ticket and compared the numbers to the Powerball numbers, and of course, we did not win! We were mildly disappointed, but we were not crushed by losing. We expected to lose. The odds against us were just too high, so that we didn’t expect to win.
Expectations for my son
I think many times in life our expectations are what cause us problems. Expectations, versus reality not measuring up to the expectations, cause us grief many, many times. I can think of several times when my expectations were very high for something to happen, and when it did not happen, I was crushed, because I expected it to happen.
Back when my son Patrick first started his criminal career, I could “see down the road,” even without the benefit of a crystal ball, that if he did not stop the way he was headed, he would wind up with a criminal conviction. That would totally demolish my expectations for him of a college education and a successful professional career. From the time Patrick was a little kid in all the gifted and talented classes at school, I expected that he would be a “big success” in life. His IQ was in the top half of the 99th percentile. My little darling was a genius and could have done anything he wanted to successfully.
As I saw my expectations for his life slipping away, I still held on to what I now call “malignant hope:” The hope that somehow, some way, I could find just the right words to say to him, to get him to “see the light” and to “change” his behavior. I couldn’t let go of my own expectations for his success.
Obviously he did not share my expectations, and in fact, fought tooth and nail against anything I wanted him to do ”¦ study in school, quit stealing, quit running the streets at night.
Job expectations
Other times I have had other expectations that did not come to pass. I had a job that I dearly loved and would never have voluntarily quit. But it was down sized to part time and that forced me to quit in order to obtain health benefits for both myself and my husband with another job. I was devastated because I had expected that I would stay at that job until I retired at 65 or 66.
As it turned out, though, it was a godsend, because shortly after I left the job I loved and took a “weekend option” job that I really didn’t like, but it was only two days a week (Saturday and Sunday) and full benefits, my beloved stepfather was diagnosed with cancer. My part-time job allowed me to be with him throughout his treatments and his subsequent death 18 months later. That was time I was able to spend with him, and ended up being some of the best months that he and I spent together. Quality time. I am grateful.
I also lost my husband about a year after I took the weekend option job, and so I was able to spend more time with him before his death as well. For that I am grateful. At the time I lost the job though, when my expectations of being at that job I loved were quashed, I was devastated. Before long I was actually glad that my expectations were not met.
Expectations and pain
As for my expectations that my son Patrick attend college and become successful at whatever job or career he chose, I finally realized that he had been successful at the career path he had chosen. Not the path I would have chosen for him, but the one he chose for himself.
I don’t consider a criminal who gets caught a high percentage of the time and goes to prison a “successful” career. But for some reason that I am unable to fathom, Patrick considers himself a success. I guess if I could have a bumper sticker it would say, “My son is an honor student in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.”
When we expect someone else to change to meet our desires, when we expect them to quit doing what they are doing that hurts us, themselves or others, our expectations are what cause us pain. We must learn to quit expecting things to happen that are not going to happen. It doesn’t matter if it is winning a lotto drawing against all odds, or if it is that the person we love will “see the light” and quit behaving in a dysfunctional manner. We must accept reality, and expect what is likely to happen.
I used to have a sign in my office; I wish I still had it. It said, “I feel so much better since I gave up hope.” I didn’t know at the time just how right that sign was.
Since I gave up hope that my son would change, I no longer have unmet expectations. I no longer hold on to that malignant, cancerous hope that ate at my every thought during every waking hour. I accept the fact that he is not going to change.
I may buy another lotto ticket some time, but I won’t expect to win. If I lose, I will not be crushed by the losing because I am going to keep my expectations real.
In AA they say, “our level of serenity is inversely proportional to our level of expectation.” Which leads me to the serenty prayer:
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the diffence.
Which, to us, here at LF. could be simplified by pointing, first, at “them”, secondly, at “us”, and thirdly, to a higher-power.
In a way, having expectations, is a way of playing God. It is a way of saying I know best, or I am the one who should decide what will be.
EGO….Easing God Out.
Better to let go and let God.
Thanks for adding that serenity prayer, Kim, because it is right on. We can only have any control over the things we can control, the rest is up to the Universe/God (whatever you believe) or under the control of someone or something else.
There ARE things we can change…mostly about ourselves….and we have to do those things….because we waste a lot of time and energy trying to change the things we can’t, and emotional energy on the expectations that we can change them.
Hope you and pinky doodle are having a good weekend! (((hugs)))
Yes, Oxy, Pinky and I are doing fine….we are trudging the path to happy destiny….and, I do mean, trudging.
It is cold and dreary, here, and work is drudgery, but, I try to maintain an attitude of gratitude. I have a warm house, food to eat, clean water, and my sweet, soft, warm, fur-person to love.
Talked to my daughter a little while ago, and she triggered my envy. I am only now becoming aware of it. She had to make sure I knew of all the holiday parties she had attended, all the nights out with friends, her tickets to the pro foot-ball game, the skiing trip to Colorado her family will take after Christmas, all the while telling me that she’s just not into it this year….not a word about my plans for Christmas…..and On Thanksgiving I worked all day. I don’t know…..
Yay, Kim…I love your post at 1:05PM! 🙂
Good article Oxy! Thanks for this.
I have reminded myself throught the previous years, to keep the expectations low. Expect only things from myself……and even then I disappoint myself too!
If we learn to ‘go with the flow’……and take what happens it works better for me at least.
The emotional diappointments with my family have been the last of the litter in the case of spathville. I don’t have any expectations now in regards to them, I don’t bother with them…..ANY of them.
On another note…..I let go of my expectations for my eldest Jr several years ago…..many of you know this was a hard thing for me to do. WELL……that was the best thing I coulda ever done!!! He’s made so much progress on his own, he’s finding his way!
I sooooo expected him to graduate from HS on time….and it crushed me he didn’t.
CRUSHED ME!
He was so capable…..but too mindfarked emotionally from spath dealings to pull it off.
IT was MY expectation for HIM…..that crushed me!
Guess what he completed this week! And all on his own.
He got his diploma!!!!!
HE realized it was holding him back, HE enrolled in the last few classes…..HE CHOSE THIS and HE completed it. Never discussed it with me until he had a question.
I remained calm and reminded myself NOT to have ANY expectations for the outcome.
I told him, if he wants something bad enough……HE will find a way to complete it. (Whatever in life that applies to).
LIFE is up to HIM…..he’s an adult.
Make it what you want my love and be happy!!!!!
I see him moving forward….s.omething that I never saw a few years ago. I saw stagnant, victim, depression, anger etc……
I am ONE PLEASED and PROUD MAMMA…..for him!
Do I expect it to continue…..NO…..I HOPE it does.
Hope and expectations can be two different thoughts.
Yay Erin!
congratulations to Jr.
Not only spaths but a lot of manipulative people will use our hopes and expectations against us.
A friend of mine has an overweight husband and she tells me she wishes he would exercise and lose weight. From what I know of him, he sabotages himself because he knows that it bothers her.
He’s not a spath AFAIK.
Some kids will sabotage themselves just to make their parents feel bad.
People do the strangest things and they don’t necessarily have to be spaths, I guess.
Erin I understand what you are saying about your oldest Junior, and it is difficult to sit by and watch a SMART kid fark off school and not graduate etc. WE know it will hold them back in life. WE know this and we KNOW that…and if we could just find a way to get that knowledge into their heads….duh!!!!!!
Sometimes it works out, sometimes not. Like with my oldest son….I EXPECTED he would keep his agreement he made with me about returning here to live and keep his word. He had never before kept the SAME agreement to live here (as an adult) so why I expected he would THIS tiime I’m not sure. Maybe because after his brother’s minion tried to kill him and he said “Mom, you’re a prophet” that MAYYYYYY-BE he had at last learned a lesson, BUT if he did, it didn’t last too long because he chose to LIE TO ME again….and that was the end. It broke my heart because of MY EXPECTATIONS of son C.
Sure I could have had some HOPE for him but not EXPECTATIONS because when I had the expectations that he would keep his word and he broke it I was CRUSHED.
I’m not sure what the difference in HOPE and EXPECTATIONS are but I guess hope is where you want it, but aren’t sure you will get it, but with expectations you are SURE you are gonna get it. So if you hope something and it doesn’t come true you’re still ok, but if you EXPECT something and it doesn’t materialize then you are crushed.
I am really glad that your oldest kiddo is doing well and making progress on his own. In the end we can only save ourselves and as much as we love them our kids have to save themselves as well. Good to hear from you. I’ve been missing your sage advice here lately. (((hugs)))
Thank you Skylar and Oxy, I am very proud of his progress!
I think that, in our society, we have an entitlement issue. We feel entitled to expectations.
We expect others to ‘play’ along with our ‘roles’ that we have developed for ourselves.
When others do not…….we are ‘let down’.
Erin, that’s wonderful………and, I am cogitating about “expectations,” this evening.
Wonderful, wonderful……
Brightest blessings
Thats good news EB.