
Tearing Down to Rebuild
6/16/2010

When we complain we are tearing down an undesirable structure in order to make room for something new.
We all
know someone who has elevated the process of complaining to a high art.
Sometimes funny, sometimes exhausting, these people have the ability to
find a problem just about anywhere. In its more evolved form,
complaining is simply the ability to see what’s not working, in one’s
own life or in the external world, and it can be quite useful if
followed to its natural conclusion—finding a solution and applying it.
However, many of us don’t get that far, and we find that complaining
has become an end in itself. In small doses, this is not a big problem,
but if complaining has become a huge part of our identities, it may be
time to take a good look at how we are spending our energy.
Complaining is a person’s way of acknowledging that they are not happy
with the way things are. In a metaphorical way, when we complain or
criticize, we are tearing down an undesirable structure in order to
make room for something new. But if all we do is tear down, never
bothering to summon the creative energy required to create something
new, we are not fulfilling the process. In fact, we are at risk for
becoming a stagnant and destructive force in our own lives and in the
lives of the people we love. Another issue with complaining is that we
sometimes tend to focus on other people, whom we can’t change, as a way
of deflecting attention from the one person we can change—ourselves. So
transforming complaining into something useful is a twofold process
that begins with turning our critical eye to look at things we can
actually do something about, and then taking positive action.
When we find ourselves complaining, the last thing we need to do is get
down on ourselves. Instead, we can begin by noticing that we are in the
mode of wanting to make some changes. But rather than lashing out at
somebody or an organization, we can look for an appropriate place to
channel this energy—not our neighbor’s house, but possibly parts of our
own. Finally, we can ask ourselves the positive question of what we
would like to create in the place of whatever it is we want to tear
down. When we do this, we channel a negative habit into a creative
process, thus using our energy to change the world around us in a
positive way.
By Madisyn Taylor http://www.dailyom.com/articles/2010/25929.html
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