My bike was dark green with hand brakes and tall like a ten-speed, but I don't remember having any gears to shift. I do remember that my feet could barely touch the peddles and that there were no training wheels. I had no idea how to ride it.
My dad was confident--not that I could ride it, but that I would learn. You see, my father was a graduate of the John Wayne school of parenting. Remember the western where John Wayne finds out a boy doesn't know how to swim, so he throws the boy into the middle of the lake and encourages him to kick and paddle until he makes it to land?
Dad took all of us to a huge field, set us on our bikes and pushed us until we were going fast and then let go and encouraged us to peddle. Imagine a slow motion crash with two or three pumps to the peddles, an arching curve to the left, and a really bad landing. And then imagine about a ninety-nine trial runs before I finally made it.
But make it I did, and I wore the wheels off that first bike.
Some life lessons when you face a new and challenging situation:
- You can use a mentor. Someone who's done it before. Someone who can help you gain and build momentum. Someone who can encourage you from the sidelines. Someone who can help you get back on the bike when you fall.
- It takes time to learn. Take the time to learn. Learn by listening. Learn by studying. Learn by doing. It's hard work, but lessons well learned are lifelong possessions.
- Concentrate on what's in front of you. Don't waste time in fear and doubt. Neither will help you accomplish the task. Save your energy and brain capacity for the work in front of you.
- Persevere. It can be discouraging to not get it the first time. But nobody gets it the first time. You're doing something new, remember? Keep trying. Until I succeeded, ALL my first attempts at riding a bike ended in a crash. But each ride was longer than the previous ride. Eventually, there was no crash and I was off and running.
One last thought. What would life be like if we didn't have these challenges? Awfully boring, I think. My greatest growth, my deepest learning has come during times of change. We don't need an absence of change, we just need a better attitude when we face it.
Victor Frankl said it better: "What man actually needs is not a tensionless state but rather the striving and struggling for some goal worthy of him. What he needs is not the discharge of tension at any cost, but the call of a potential meaning waiting to be fulfilled by him."