I got a work-related email Thursday that made my stomach churn. It was from a client asking me about an issue I’d managed to avoid to avoid talking with him about. I knew he wouldn’t be happy with a decision I’d made related to his account — and I dreaded the day when I would have to deal with it. That day had come.
For a few minutes, I stewed in my unhappiness. I worried about how I was going to handle it. And then something finally clicked in my brain. I forced myself to ask the question I needed to ask.
“What is it that I need to learn from this?”
It sounds ridiculously naive, but for the last few years, that one question has saved me from a lot of grief. It doesn’t protect me from my own mistakes, but it puts me in the right frame of mind to deal with problems. But this isn’t some technique I learned from a book.
It’s something I learned from the experience of a woman who says she died briefly and visited heaven. It might sound crazy, but it’s been useful for me.

U.S. wasted $60 billion in war funds: Is anyone honestly surprised?
What if a state government shut down and no one noticed?
Now that his threat is truly gone, I realize my father hated himself
We will destroy ourselves if we don’t learn to love our enemies
Memory Lane is seductive when
Life is like flying a plane as you assemble it from a box of parts
The Alien Observer: Minneapolis riots might be preview of future
Insanity is part of being human – and we’re all potentially unstable
Donald Trump is no conservative; he’s an immoral, narcissistic liar