|
Play The Mistake
By Alan Cohen
Just before Christmas last year, Rob Anderson went into a convenience store to
purchase three $1 Powerball lottery tickets as stocking stuffers. The clerk
misunderstood Anderson’s request and erroneously printed one $3 ticket. When
Anderson called the mistake to the clerk’s attention, the clerk offered to
nullify the ticket. Anderson decided to just go with the current of events, he
accepted the ticket, and purchased the three stocking stuffers in addition. Rob
went home and tossed the mistaken ticket on his nightstand.
The day after Christmas the winning numbers were announced and Anderson figured
he would check the mistaken ticket just in case. That was when he realized the
mistake was no mistake. He had just won $128 million, the largest Powerball
jackpot ever paid in the Kentucky lottery.
Sometimes what seems to be going wrong is really going right. From a human
perspective it may appear that things are working against you, when they are
really working for you. That’s why it’s important to be vigilant for what errors
might lead to.
When my friend Stephanie visits her parents every year at Thanksgiving, one of
the highlights of the family’s traditional meal is “Mistake Salad.” “Many years
ago mom was preparing a salad using a cookbook,” Stephanie explained to me.
“When mom finished, she realized that she had accidentally merged the recipes
for two different salads; one portion of the ingredients for a salad described
on the left open page of the cookbook, and another portion from a different
salad described on the right open page. The salad turned out better than any
other salad we had had, so now she replicates it every year as the famous
‘Mistake Salad.’”
Speaking of salads, have you ever heard how the famous Caesar Salad began? Cesar
Cardini was working in a small restaurant near a tiny airport near Tijuana,
Mexico. One night during a rush of customers, the kitchen ran out of salad
ingredients. When the next salad order came in, Cardini threw together whatever
scant ingredients he had on hand. Behold the birth of one of the world’s most
popular salads! (Originally it was called “The Aviator.”)
Robert Louis Stevenson noted, “Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but
of playing a poor hand well.” Yet what is a poor hand, but a good hand in the
making? What is a minus, but half of a plus waiting for a stroke of vertical
awareness? And what is an error, but something to parlay to create something far
more valuable than what would have come had the error not occurred? As Ralph
Waldo Emerson noted, “A weed is a plant whose virtues have not been discovered.”
All of life is interpretation. It is not the events that occur that make or
break a life, but our interpretation of them. We can make anything out of
anything, so why not make it what we would choose?
Years ago I was looking for a new location for my office. I found a site that
was suitable but not great. In expedience I decided to rent it, and asked the
realtor to get me a contract. The realtor kept delaying and delaying, until just
a few days before I had to move. When I asked him about the contract he
confessed that the owner did not want to rent to me because he had seen one of
my books and did not agree with my philosophy. I grew angry and complained about
discrimination. Yet when I consulted my inner guidance, it advised me to simply
let it be.
That day as I was driving home I decided to take an alternate scenic route.
Along the way I noticed a storefront for rent. When I inquired, I found the
owner to be a lovely woman who had been using the space for tai chi classes. We
liked each other immediately and I rented the space. The facility was in a
beautiful area, close to my home, with more space and far less rent than the
space from which I had been turned away. Ultimately I blessed the original
landlord for denying me. He was the vehicle by which I received something
greater.
Life is trying to love you, and apparent mistakes may ultimately serve you. It
is said that “disappointments are the hooks upon which God hangs his victories.”
Nothing ever gets so bad that it cannot get good, and often the good that comes
after the bad is greater than the good that came before it.
The next time we encounter a mistake, Rob Anderson would be a good guy to
remember. As he deposits his annual checks for millions of dollars, he would
probably suggest that we, too, do not resist errors, but let them work in our
favor.

Alan Cohen is the author of many popular inspirational books, including the
bestselling, The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore and his new metaphysical
thriller, Linden’s Last Life. Listen to Alan’s weekly radio show Get Real on Hay
House at www.HayHouseRadio.com .
For more information about Alan’s books, programs,
or his free daily inspirational quotes via email, visit
www.AlanCohen.com , or
phone 1‑800‑568-3079. |
|
Advertisements
|