I don’t know how to quit.
I don’t even know what that is, quitting. I’ve trained through some pretty serious
injuries, finished a teaching credential I didn’t plan to use, and worked to
save relationships that weren’t worth saving, because I’m not a quitter. Sounds kinda dumb when we say it out loud
though…
Our whole lives we are taught not to quit, to finish what we
start and honor our commitments. There
is merit in those behaviors, but there is a time and a place for them. There is also a time to quit. I read somewhere that people who are not
bound by this code of honor are happier and more successful, and I’m starting
to see why. Think of all the things we’ve
been told since childhood and have accepted as truth:
“If you quit now, you will always be a quitter!” My husband quit Gi Jiu Jitsu after receiving
his purple belt. He went on to become
one of the top lightweight MMA fighters in Europe before fighting on one of the
biggest stages in the United States in the WEC.
That doesn’t sound like someone who’s labeled a “Quitter for Life,” it
sounds like someone who followed a new and different dream. He has recently taken up the Gi again and is
finding he enjoys it, I don’t see a downside here.
“If it’s worth starting it’s worth finishing!” Says the debt I’m still paying off for a
degree I’m not using. Just putting one
foot in front of the other, high school, college, career, was not my path, but
I took it and I stuck with it. The
classes I enjoyed the most weren’t the classes in my major (Horticulture), they
were History, Philosophy, Psychology, and Literature. I don’t want any of those things for my
career either, but they were a lot more fun.
When I discovered fighting, yoga and nutrition were my true passions, I
was too blinded by my commitment to make a change. I have no regrets, but I do see a downside
here.
“If you quit, you’ll let your whole team down!” This week I learned that by not quitting, I
was letting my team down. I suffered an
injury at work and was trying my hardest to be a “team player” by not going to
the doctor, not filing a claim, and continuing to work. My boss gently pointed out that if I wasn’t
working at full capacity I was hindering the operations of the store. I didn’t look at it like that, I felt a great
relief when he have me permission to go get the rest I needed.
And so, I too give permission to quit! With the following exceptions:
1) Parenting, if you have children you better be in for life.
2) Because it’s hard.
Most things worth having don’t come easy, don’t be lazy.
3) Because you failed.
Fix it and go try again.
4) Because someone else wanted you to quit. You can only give to others when you are satisfied
with your own situation.
I’ve had several well-meaning people ask how much longer I
plan on fighting. The answer has been
the same since the day I walked into SLO Kickboxing. I will fight until it’s not fun anymore, and
I will continue to learn and grow as a martial artist for the rest of my life...
unless I decide not to.
Good stuff, I like your writing style, Katie!
ReplyDelete