Tags
Courtroom, Facebook, Happiness, humor, Judge, Jury, jury duty, Nova Scotia Supreme Court, Sheriff
After the third friend recommended The World Observer Online’s article, Fifteen Things You Should Give Up to Be Happy, I decided to take a look. The first thing I noticed was that 447,611 people had already ‘liked’ it on Facebook alone. If you don’t count titles with “Fifty Shades” or “Hunger Games” in them, that’s more people than bought any book on the top seller lists in 2012. That’s even more people than Like the posts on Facebook pages of Pope Francis, Queen Elizabeth, and President Obama (not counting the ones with pictures of First-Dog Bo, or the Duchess of Cambridge’s baby bump of course).
And all 447,611of them are wrong. People give stuff up for Lent, to be miserable or something. It’s called a sacrifice, for which The Oxford Dictionaries provides the following definition:
Sacrifice:
- An act of slaughtering an animal or person or surrendering a possession as an offering to a deity
- An animal, person, or object offered in the act of sacrifice
- An act of giving up something valued for the sake of something else regarded as more important or worthy
With the exception of a couple of people I would happily offer as sacrifices, guess what’s not mentioned here? You got it: my happiness. Based on the above definition, I can only think of two reasons for me to make a sacrifice. Reason #1: the chance to win obscenely big prizes (Yes, Monty, I’ll sacrifice the washer/dryer and year’s supply of dog shampoo I’ve already won for what’s behind door number three). Reason #2: someone who shares my bed or my DNA needs me. (Yes, I’ll gnaw off my own hand to help my child on the offchance that s/he will serve up some grandchildren someday.)
The article goes on to list no fewer than fifteen (!) things to give up. So let’s just take a look at the happiness bonanza if we make those fifteen sacrifices.
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Give up your need to always be right. But it doesn’t make me the least bit happy to be wrong (which is pretty much what happens when you’re not right).
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Give up your need for control. It’s true that my offspring often refer to me with the C-word (control-freak). Like it’s a bad thing. Like my world wouldn’t just be a better place if everyone did things my way. A few years ago, I was called for jury duty. It was the worst possible time to leave work, but I actually wanted to do it. My smug glow of civic virtue lasted until I met the rest of the jurors. Somehow several newly-minted young voters were called for jury duty and made it onto the same panel. At first the rest of us old-farts were charmed by their enthusiasm and even went along with one young man’s request to serve as foreman.
The trial was straight-forward and everyone knew their role. The defendant, while sentenced to home-detention at his mother’s house, had removed his monitor and was recaptured months later. He admitted to leaving detention, explaining that his mother’s house was in a noisy neighborhood and her TV cable service was cancelled. But he wanted to return to house arrest instead of being sent to prison, so he’d requested a jury trial. We jurors returned to our little room, relieved that we’d done our duty with this open-and-shut case and would soon be back at work. That’s when the young jury foreman and his two-angry-men-sidekicks detoured into TV-La-La Land. “What if the defendant hadn’t called his parole officer because he was afraid of The Man?” asked one. “What if there were rival gang members at the prison who would attack him?” added another. “What if he knew the police were corrupt – everyone knows that, right? – and so he was afraid to turn himself in?” triumphantly finished our feckless foreman.
What if three friggin days of this went on while the clueless baby jury members who had nothing better to do because freshman orientation didn’t start for several weeks and Mom was still cooking their dinners and doing their laundry and Sherlock and Dr. Who were in reruns debated these points with unflagging enthusiasm? Finally on the afternoon of Day Three, as the God help us if this kid represents the future of our country foreman launched into yet another rehash of a plot he’d seen on CSI, I snapped. “Stop. Right. There.” Three young heads shot up in shock. Who let A Mother in there while they were playing grownup?
It was my “You’re-going-to-eat-those-brussels-sprouts-and-you’re-going-to-do-it-NOW” voice. “I’ve had just about enough. We’re going to go around this table and we’re each going to say one word. If you think the defendant took off his monitor and skipped – as he admits doing – then the word you are going to say is guilty. If you think he lied about doing that, then you are going to say not-guilty.” The young man opened his mouth (probably to tell me that ‘not-guilty’ is two words) but stopped when I pointed to the hand he could tell it to. “Not one more word out of you until this is done. Nod if you understand me.” His colleagues wouldn’t meet his eye so he shrugged. [Eye-roll.] “Whatever.” [More eye-roll.]
I pulled out a list of each of our names and made two columns next to them. “Fine. I’ll start. Guilty.” We went around the table, each person echoing me. When it came to him at the end, he started to say, “But…” I held up the hand again. “Did he do it?” The young man rolled his eyes. “Say it.” “Guilty.” As we were leaving, the prosecutor came out to talk to us. The Defense’s only strategy, he said, had been to try to get as many of the young students onto the panel as possible in hopes that they would see themselves as crusaders against The Man. One of the other jurors nodded. “It might have worked, if that Mom over there hadn’t sent them to time-out and made them play nice.” Chalk one up for the control-freak.
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Give up on blame. I never blame anybody. Unless they deserve it. Or I just plain don’t like them.
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Give up the past. If you love something, let it go. If it comes back to you, it’s probably something you gave birth to who wants to move back in with you. Or a pizza. A moment on your lips, and your hips are never going give up the past pizza…
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Give up on… Well actually, I just skimmed the rest of them. They got repetitive, and pretty much fell into my ‘If I ain’t broke, don’t fix me’ category. So there you have it. I’m pretty happy and I didn’t have to give up a damn thing. Now all I have to do is sit back and wait for 447,611 people to Like this…
- [click graphic for link to source]
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Oh Barb…oh Barb. This is the funniest damn post I’ve read in a very, very long time. I would write more but I have to go buy some Poise pads. Thanks for the guffaws!
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Thanks, Cranky! (Sorry I cost your last Poise pad though…)
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I consider it a sacrifice on my part that everyone who meets me is not forced to serve me. They should realize that to be my minion is a privilege. They don’t. Misguided.
I hate (and yes I know hate is a strong word) those articles that tell me what I must do to be happy. I AM HAPPY, YOU *#@@$^%& FREAKS!!
Also pithy inspirational messages. Donkey diarrhea. Appreciate the message of your last picture (I will be stealing that, by the way) much more.
Great story about your jury duty. I admire your patience in waiting three days. Love Larson, and am willing to hit the ‘like’ button 447,612 times…that’s how much I enjoyed this post.
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I think I want “I AM HAPPY, YOU *#@@$^%& FREAKS!!” on a t-shirt.
**And I totally agree about Gary Larson. I would stalk him, marry, and bear his children. Except, you know, for the whole bigamy thing…]
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I have a shirt that says, “If you love something let it go. It it doesn’t come back, hunt it down and kill it.” I still have that shirt but don’t have the courage to wear it through the TSA line…yet.
Loved the pictures!
How easy it is for people to say what you should give up. They really need to “should” on themselves sometime and see how it feels.
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“They really need to “should” on themselves sometime…” Love it!
[‘Should have’ = the past perfect conditional tense of shit]
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You betcha!
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That’s a brilliant shirt, in a slightly disturbing, stalkerish way ;)
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There’s a story behind that shirt (of course). I had lost my husband of 10 years to Diabetes. I had been grieving his loss for 3 years when my best friend told me of a guy who wanted to go out with me. I was reluctant, but she insisted it was time for me to get over my grief. He was funny, charming and made me feel as if the world wouldn’t always be lonely.
Just as I was coming out of my shell, trusting another man to come into my life, he decides I remind him of his ex wife–and he breaks up with me. For weeks, I listened to “love and loss” songs. What do I do to get out of the house? Go shopping. I go to the store and there is a shirt that says, “If you love something, let it go. If it doesn’t come back, it was never yours.” The tears start a slow leaky-faucet drip. BUT….there in a pile next to it is the shirt that says, “If you love something, let it go. If it doesn’t come back, hunt it down and kill it.”
It was the first time I had laughed since he dumped me. And that’s why I bought the shirt. :-)
p.s.: You never get over the grief you feel when you lose the love of your life.
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Fantastic!!!! I just loved how you handled that little pip squeak! There’s nothing like the Mom voice to get things done…I never yelled at my sons…never had to beat the living day lights out of them…all i used was the Mom voice when i was serious. Loved this post very funny!
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Seriously! I think if all generals were required to be Moms, the world would work a lot better by the next day.
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Amen and hallelluyah!
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And Facebook is getting spacier and spacier if you ask me.
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love the pics you chose to accompany this post
I came across a variation of your last pic on another site this morning that made me smile.
It said . . .
“If you’re going to walk a mile in my shoes, bring a case of beer on your way back”
:lol:
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Darn! That one is better…
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So, wait. Are you telling me that I shouldn’t have bought every copy of every self-help book ever published so that I could dig deep down into my soul to figure out where I’ve gone wrong in my quest for happiness? Sheesh. Now I just feel silly. All that wasted time and I could have just been eating ice cream (which makes me happy) and acting like my usual dorky self (which also makes me happy) and life would be fine. Interesting theory, Barb. I wonder if they sell any books about how to decipher and apply the musings of a genius blog?!
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And to think — I give it away for free!
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+1 on numbers 1 through 5. Especially number 2.
You are actually way ahead of me on the jury duty thing. I never even made it onto a jury because, during the selection process, I politely raised my hand and said I disagreed with something the defense attorney had said, and explained why, and that was that.
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I’m with you. I read that list and thought – are you kidding me? Thank you for saying it out loud. You should have gotten 500,000 likes.
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Well, I clicked like, because I like to help people achieve their goals… well some people, but you seem nice. I was not one of the 447,611 people to have heard of this
crock ofuh, list. Who the hell came up with that???LikeLike
Hooray! Only 447,610 Likes to go! Thanks for stopping by.
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