My family moved to south Texas when
I was three and a half. I have a vivid memory of my parents discovering Spanish
moss shortly after our move. It hung in large bunches off the branches of
trees. Dad saw it as a disgusting invasive nuisance on his trees. He wanted to
get out the ladder and start cutting the pesky stuff off. Mom looked at it and
saw beauty. She loved the graceful way
it swayed in the breeze, dangling from the branches. And she imagined what an
artistic base it could be in her next floral arrangement.
Perspective.
That word has received more
attention lately. Authors have written
about shifting perspectives. People have picked it for their word of the year. Changing
perspective is hard. It’s easier to look at the world through my own natural
lens, even if that lens is short-sighted or pessimistic or self-centered. But challenging
ourselves to see a problem from a different angle opens our minds.
Here are three ways to make a shift
in perspective work for you.
1)
Perspective
helps you see the forest.
One of the most common shifts in
perspective is to back away from a situation and look at it from a distance. We
can put the problem tree in perspective and realize it is just one part of a
big forest. Taking a vacation from a stressful job gives us this kind of
perspective. After we recover from a major injury or illness, we have a
different perspective on each good day of health. A mantra can remind us of perspective. We
adopted the phrase ‘it’s just stuff” in our family whenever someone broke or
lost something. It didn’t take away the pain of the loss, but re-framed it,
reminding us that life is bigger than things. Other losses can take out a whole
section of our life like a ravaging forest fire. The broken heart. The death of a loved one.
The strained relationship. Perhaps time is the only way to create enough
distance to put your “life after” in perspective. However you can, create some
distance. One day you’ll see the beauty of the forest again.
2)
Perspective
helps you walk a mile in their shoes.
I’ve found the highest barrier to
good communication is sticking too hard to my point of view. I’m fond of my own
opinion. I tend to think my way is the right way. So in my marriage, my first
attempt at resolving disagreements is to convince him I’m right. When that
doesn’t work – ok that NEVER works – then I put in the effort to see things from his perspective. My husband loves road travel. I’m a whiny car
traveler. So for years when he brought up road travel, I blew him off with
“when you get your next wife.” After I finally attempted to put my feet into
his road warrior shoes, I realized how important it was to him. And that
motivated both of us to discover some options for me to be a better road traveler.
And that explains why I’m sitting on the couch in our new motorhome writing
this blog post. It also explains why Dad climbed a tree once to cut down a
bunch of Spanish moss for Mom’s floral arrangement.
3)
Perspective helps you grow up.
The ability to change perspective
is a sign of maturity. We’ve all encountered adults stuck in a rut who just
can’t see a different possibility. Perspective shifts are healthy to emotional
maturity. There is no perspective change that compares to the spiritual
maturity boost when we look through God’s eyes. Colossians 3:1-2 in The Message
translation says:
So if
you’re serious about living this new resurrection life with Christ, act like
it. Pursue the things over which Christ presides. Don’t shuffle along, eyes to
the ground, absorbed with the things right in front of you. Look up, and be
alert to what is going on around Christ – that’s where the action is. See
things from his perspective.
Ahem…. Excuse me while I un-shuffle
my feet and elevate my gaze.
What is the one perspective shift
you want to make this week? Will it help you see the bigger picture? Or increase
your appreciation of another’s point of view? Or strengthen your spiritual
eyesight?


Best post I've read in forever!
ReplyDeleteLove this! A shift in perspective opens the door to change and more choices.
ReplyDeleteThanks Marla! Glad you enjoyed it!
DeleteLove this one! Unshuffling and looking up!
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked that one, Tawnya!
Delete