Can We Have It All?

Sometimes I am confused by thinking we can’t have it all (e.g., when appointments collide), but at the same time, I know that we can have it all (when considering who we really are and realizing that we already have everything we can have). Perhaps it is only in this physical world that we can’t have it all at the same time. That is what gives us options for various decisions and ways of developing.

These thoughts stem from a dilemma I faced due to my daughter’s birthday party and my prior commitment to a market. Both are scheduled for the same day, and for several reasons, my daughter cannot pick a different day. However, my daughter is turning 29+1 (don’t dare to complete the calculation) and, of course, that has priority. Plus, I have been planning something for her birthday for a year. Still, I need to participate in that market also for many reasons.

I offered to organize the party at our place the day before. So she has no work but can only enjoy the party. But I learned that her closest friends don’t have time that evening. “I can’t have it all”, vibrated in my head. I have to decide on one event, which will result in the cancellation of my participation in the market. It bothered me a lot. And only after weeks, I began thinking of a probable compromise. Before I suggested my idea, she came up with the same suggestion: We split the event. We go out with her and her boyfriend on one day, and the next day she celebrates with the rest of the party. Sounds like a deal to me. I can’t have it all, yet I can have it all.

This is only a little personal story, but it stands for many situations in everyone’s life, doesn’t it? Sometimes we stand in front of a crossroads, and for the longest time, we believe we have to make a decision between two choices, without even considering further options. It makes us run in circles until we take a step back and look at the whole situation with a distanced mind, and solutions appear.

Yes, there are situations in which we have to decide between the options. Those are the profound decisions we make in life. Sometimes, life pushes us to let one thing go to move on to something better (even when we don’t know it at that moment). However, if we think we can have it all, we will look for solutions. If we think we can’t, we might try to push through our preference. Then we overlook that maybe we can find compromises. Perhaps we cannot have it all completely, but we can have (the essential) parts of it all. Instead of frustration and the question “what would have been if I had decided differently”, we make a satisfying experience that serves everyone. And that is the point: it is not about the individual, it is about finding a connecting link between two or more individuals or possibilities. It makes us creative and look for more. And that is even more uniting!

In Love and Light


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The purpose of my blog is to inspire and shine a light on the beauty and power of the wonderful being inside your body. You came into this world to share what only you can give. Remember who you really are, conquer the world the way you always wanted to, and become the blessing to us all that you were meant to be.

25 Comments

What a wonderful way to work through the dilemma and find a solution. It’s just an example of how we can take off the blinders and see things differently. Thank you for sharing and happy birthday to your daughter!

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There are always options on hand and as you say , if we step back and look at everything as a whole it can guide you in your decision making. A bigger and better opportunity awaits you as you celebrate your daughter’s birthday. 🌞

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Where there’s a will, there’s a way Erika. But even if there wasn’t, it will give an appreciation of what you missed, more respect of what the experience could have been…but the gift of an even greater love because of what it meant to you ❤️

Great post kind lady, and thank you for sharing that appreciation of what it spoke to you 🤗❤️🙏

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Probably, it comes down to that saying. There is also a quote that says: “if you want something, you will find ways, If you don’t want something, you will find excuses.”

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The concept of “having it all” is clearly loaded with potentially undesirable traits such as self-entitlement and frustration/bitterness when things do not go our way. However, the concept and acceptability of compromise is so much more conducive to a rewarding life. Because we cannot have everything on our terms does not mean that we have to go without.

In so many situations, commitments can be rescheduled to avoid a conflict of time. A desire to increase one’s income in order to achieve a specific need, can simply be the driving force to explore various options, and be the motivating force to then pursue the appropriate one.

Given that we have the freedom to move around our country, or even move to a different country is a wonderful option, but such choices will inevitably impact others. Our desire for close personal contacts will be severely challenged when we re-locate, just as the reverse is guaranteed if a close friend or family member moves. Perhaps we could be living a short walk from close relatives, and suddenly they move. We can still see them, but now a scheduled trip is necessary.

In summary, wanting “it all” is nice high-level concept however, if it becomes a driving force, the result can be a totally self-focused (and ultimately shallow and quite lonely) existence. There is much value in accepting what we have with gratitude.

Erika: Having a daughter reaching 29+1 is wonderful ….. and congratulations. I would love to have a daughter that age but that is not possible. However, instead of wishing for a 29+1 daughter, I will content myself with my wonderful grand-daughter who was 29+1 earlier this year! Of course I am also very proud to have a daughter (her Mom) who could be around your age!

Finally, while aiming for more is not necessarily a negative thing, one should always acknowledge and respect what we have and celebrate our life accordingly. The fact that I am alive to write this, and you readers are alive to read my perspective on this topic, is worth a celebration. Let us celebrate today because there really are no guarantees about tomorrow!

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You hit the nail on the head, Colin. In wanting it our own way locks doors. But aiming for more makes us look ahead and beneath. Solutions appear we might have not considered before but they open up while cooperating with each other and wanting the best for everyone.

It made me smile to hear that you are having a grand-daughter in my daughter’s age. Just because of my daughter I learned that not only the sad happenings can make you celebrate the moment but also the joyful ones. My daughter is going to have a daughter of her own this year. I so enjoy her pregnancy with her and will absorb every moment watching that little one developing and growing. We only have one moment, Now. As you said, you never know how long that moment will be.

Thank you for your comment, Colin. As always, I appreciate the time you took and you sharing your experiences with us!

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Hi Erika – Coincidence Eh! While your daughter is looking forward to the birth of her daughter ….. my grand-daughter is about 8 weeks away from having her own daughter!

If you have not already grasped the perspectives involved, this is my experience:

I go into a restaurant, or a coffee shop, and I realize that I am being served by somebody considerably younger than my grand-daughter! I recently had to go to a medical clinic for some tests and, once again, the young lady looking after me was younger than my grand-daughter. It is quite a moment when that realization occurs! A sense of humour is a definite benefit! 🙂

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OMG, so many synchronicities. That’s amazing!!
Oh, yes, maybe not that often yet but I get to see this kind of perspective more and more too… lol

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Erika, we buy way too many things, but using a metaphor, we run out kitchen counter space. Continuing the metaphor, how many times have you used that bread maker, that popcorn maker, that waffle iron, that panini press, that George Foreman grill, etc. Keith

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