High expectations are the key to everything.- Sam Walton
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- Expectation is the root of all heartache.- William Shakespeare
We create them all the time but once created they take on a life of their own. We expect that the food in the supermarket won't make us sick, we expect our parents to tell us the truth, we expect Teachers to educate our children And most of the time we get what we expect. But every now and again something very different happens from what we expect and it shocks us. "How could he/she/they/it do this to me? This isn't what I expected at all!" It's as though there has been a breach of contract, an unspoken deal has been broken. We get upset as though we have been personally attacked.
Expectations are not future reality. They are not contracts with the Universe. They are not something outside of us that is a part of nature. They are simply beliefs we have accepted about the future. Very often our expectations are based on what we think are probable outcomes, on the projection of patterns we see, or simply on the basis of hope. Sometimes we base our expectations on what other people have said or what we thought they said. Or our expectations are based on meanings we have created to make sense of our immediate world. But, however they come to be, WE are the ones who create them.
Whether consciously or not we choose these beliefs and they are our creation. Sometimes they can lead to unpredictable, and perhaps, disastrous results when we are not fully conscious of our creations. For instance, perhaps I love my son so much that I want him to do well in school so that he can go on to a good college. As I envision his great success in life, I create an expectation that he will study hard and get good grades. However, if he should find that what he really wants to do is spend his time surfing and hanging with his friends, I may well be very disappointed. I might be so disappointed that I withhold love to a large degree to show my disappointment and in so doing poison my relationship with the son I love so.
The same holds true in our relationships with each other. I may not give a new friendship a chance to grow because by my own expectations I have sabotaged it before I gave it a chance to grow or maybe unfairly I have placed Expectations on another without verbalizing to them what my Expectations are. That would hardly be fair!
With this in mind it's easy to see that we often make expectations simply based on how we think the world works. And most of the time the world works the way we think it should. This leads to a very powerful understanding that if we want to change our experience, then we need to change our expectations. That is to say that conscious expectations can be used to great effect, especially when we choose to expect good things, situations and experiences that help us to feel GREAT.
But when we make our expectations unconsciously and are not aware of having done so, then the expectations are like rogue thought-forms. They have a way of creating a "reality" that may be in alignment with how we think things work but may be a far cry from how we want them to be.
What happens when our expectations, conscious or not, are unfulfilled? This is the source of the disappointment that expectations are famous for. What we do with that disappointment determines how much pleasure we can have in the ensuing moments. If I created my expectation as a kind of unspoken pact with another person then I'm likely to feel cheated, angry and/or hurt. Things didn't work out the way I thought they would, so someone is to blame. What's important here is not to find out why things didn't go the way they "should" have and who is responsible for that. The real question is who decided that things should go a certain way and that any other way was unacceptable. And I think we all know the answer to that one.
- Expecting the world to treat you fairly because you are a good person is a little like expecting a bull not to attack you because you are a vegetarian.- Dennis Wholey
Another way to deal with unmet expectations is to reframe the experience. Suppose I expected to see a movie tonight but when I got to the theater I discovered that the movie had moved on. Besides feeling disappointed or angry, I could immediately look around for something else. I could take this as a gift and look to see what else is playing or what other interesting, cool things might be around.
For me and knowing who I am, letting go of most expectations might be better. Certainly, letting go of the expectations of how anything specifically will be experienced is good. If I am hiking in new territory, I'm there to experience what there is there. I may have some specifics that I feel are important, things I want to see, particular experiences that are appealing, questions answered, but I am most likely to enjoy this friendship by limiting my expectations to those general ones in the nature of having fun and learning more about something. In this frame of mind disappointment easily melts away as learning always leaves room for surprises.
Expectations are a form of focus, just as intentions are. However, they are a kind of focus that disallows doubt and that is their great usefulness. Once we have become clear about what our desire is and we have chosen to have that desire met, then we put some effort towards meeting that desire and expect to have the desired result. This puts our whole being behind bringing our desire into reality and the expectation is the strongest expression of our will. It is much stronger than hope or optimism. It is a visceral kind of faith that involves the body as well as the heart and mind because it removes room for doubt.
We often sabotage the creation of what we want by letting our doubts sap our energy. When we allow our focus to be dispersed by questions that start with, "What if" then some of our energy is dealing with the very opposite of what it is that we desire. I am famous for this, espically in times of stress when I am stretched to thin!
But what happens when even our conscious expectation doesn't come to pass? The first thing to do is to look at what did happen. Very often what we find is that we have brought into being "the nearest equivalent" of what we had desired.
If I have chosen an expectation intentionally as a way of influencing my experience and what I expected did not occur then I'm left with valuable information. I do not necessarily have an emotional response, simply that what I expected did not occur. It may well be that the nearest possible circumstance was created instead. Or it may be that a part of me felt that what I was expecting would not be in my best interest. All this leads to the point that we choose what assumptions and meanings we make about any results and that determines the experience we have at that point.
- Nobody succeeds beyond his or her wildest expectations unless he or she begins with some wild expectations. - Ralph Charrell
The first is to remember that expectations are related to reality only as tools we can use to influence reality. Don't mistake them for reality itself.
Secondly, make expectations a conscious choice. If you encounter disappointment that gets under your skin, then you know it was an unconscious choice of expectation and you didn't take responsibility for it from the beginning.
Thirdly, you can expect anything you want. There are no limits to what you can imagine, what you can desire, and what you can expect to come to you. You are energizing your desire by your expectation in a very powerful way. There is no reason to hold back on influencing others to fulfill your best self.
And finally, even with no doubt that your expectation will be fulfilled, it may not happen. Something will happen, though, and by looking at what did happen as the closest thing possible given the current circumstances, you can stay balanced, grateful, and happy.
- Whatever we expect with confidence becomes our own self-fulfilling prophecy.
- - Brian Tracy
Expectations used in this way are a form of control, with the threat implicit or implied. They are intended to override our free will. As we grow into maturity we learn to assert our free will more and more but the habits of yielding to the expectations of others can be hard to break.
- I do my thing and you do yours. I am not in this world to live up to your expectations, and you are not in this world to live up to mine. You are you and I am I, and if by chance we find each other, then it is beautiful. If not, it can't be helped.
- - The Gestalt Prayer - Fritz Perls
So that's my rant in a nutshell on Expectations vs. Reality? And so will I change my EXPECTATIONS of the people in my life? Probably not! I hold different people to different standards based on my relationship with them, but will I always have an EXPECTATION? The answer is Yes! What I can promise is this, my EXPECTATION of you will never be more than I EXPECT of myself. I have promised myself to step back and give myself the gift of time to regroup and relax the expectations I place on myself!
God Bless my friends!
Junann Smith Amaral
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