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.

Can we find peace online when social media have become toxic?
We don’t know how to love until we learn to set our egos aside
Why can we sabotage ourselves?
Objective reality has now become offensive in dysfunctional culture
In the name of ‘fairness,’ everyone forced to pay for expensive chair lifts
Thugs attacking private property aren’t anarchists; they’re vandals
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Brush with high-speed blowout leaves me thinking about death