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Give Me Liberty, Or Give Me Death – Fate Versus Choices

Yes, I absolutely chose this image because Im from Philly

Philly, represent!

Fate vs. Reality

I don’t believe in fate. I don’t believe in destiny. And as much as I want to imagine that somewhere in the world, there’s one lucky* special person out there who would make the perfect gouda to complement my oversized glass of Merlot, I think that’s a bunch of happy horseshit, too.

It’s certainly a nice idea, me skipping off into the sunset with my new hot pink Brazilian thong rammed properly up my Hawaiian Tropics buns, sipping a piña colada with some stupid little flower in it, accompanied by a tall, dark, semi-scruffy (what can I say, I dig a 5 o’clock shadow) picture of perfection with an unnaturally white smile who just happens to share the same passions as I do, including global travel, entrepreneurship, reading, writing, philosophizing and Donkey Kong.

While this is certainly not an unrealistic or unattainable scenario, the fact of the matter is that if this were the case, my Hawaiian Tropics buns Pennsylvanian winter cellulite and his well-defined biceps did not find one another as the result of any divine intervention. Regrettably (fortunately?), Hasselhoff is not my soul mate after all.

Soul mates do not exist. Fate does not exist. And destiny sure as hell is on par.

Cynical, aren’t I?

Before plummeting into a fit of despair, allow me to qualify my claims and explain why this perspective is a good thing, and how being a little cynical can increase your quality of life exponentially.

Here are the standard definitions of fate, kindly copied and pasted, courtesy of dictionary.com:

1. Something that unavoidably befalls a person; fortune; lot.

2. The universal principle or ultimate agency by which the order of things is presumably prescribed.

3. That which is inevitably predetermined; destiny.

4. A prophetic declaration of what must be.

5. Death, destruction, or ruin.

Now, is it just me, or did anyone else notice that the same word by which people often refer to with affection — “It was fate that we met that night!” — also means “death, destruction or ruin?” That should have been a big red flag right there.

Here’s the deal: Pie-in-the-sky constructs like fate and destiny imply that we have no choice in the matter. All systems are a go, and you’re essentially just a pawn. A marionette. A puppet. You might as well be Bert or Ernie. You’d be just about as productive. You’ve got no control.

Is this you?

I don’t know about you, but the only time I’ve truly lost control involved me, a London tapas bar, and a Spaniard. That aside, the rest of the time, I, like you, are continually making conscious decisions about how I choose to spend my time and, ultimately, my life.

  • Did you drag yourself out of bed this morning, force yourself to sit through rush hour traffic and then miserably sit through work today, relying on 24 oz. cups of coffee to make you look like you care? That’s was a choice you made.
  • Do you wish you could travel but complain you don’t have the money? Did you go out and lease a new car this year? That was a choice you made.
  • Are you stuck in an unfulfilling relationship, and have resorted to becoming a bitter, old maid because you’ve been together for so long, that it would just be too difficult to start anew? That was a choice you made. (That you should really, really remedy right away.)

As a matter of fact, every single thing you did today was a choice that you made. Even attending that pointless, let’s-congregate-in-the-conference-room-so-we-feel-like-we’re-being-productive staff meeting.

You’re probably thinking, “Ashley, you piece of *@&$, I have to go to work because I have to make money.” Technically, no, you don’t have to go to work at all. No one is making you. No one has a gun to your head. You’re making yourself because you want what’s offered in exchange: Money. But what if you wanted something more than just money? (I should hope you do.) Can dragging yourself to your job tomorrow morning give you what it is you want beyond a paycheck? If the answer is no, I’d seriously urge you to reevaluate what choices you’re making, and where you might be able to make better ones in the future in order to balance things out a little.

Too many people rely on the “if it’s meant to be, it’ll be,” or my personal favorite, “everything happens for a reason.” That is the biggest bunch of absolute @*%$! I’ve ever heard.

NOTHING happens for a reason. Things happen because you make them happen (or don’t).

Why am I raining on the parade?

Because too often, people use these nonsensical, feel-good mottos to dictate the course of their lives. When things go wrong, it’s much easier to take a deep breath and convince yourself that it wasn’t you who made a bad choice.  No, conscience, it wasn’t my fault; everything happens for a reason. Whew. Good, I was beginning to worry there for a second.

This is nothing more than a lazy avoidance of responsibility for your actions, and a justification for that avoidance.

Now for the good news: Once you start acknowledging the fact that your entire life is within your control, you don’t just reap the negative consequences of having made a poor choice, you also reap the limitless positive benefits of recognizing your power and then using that power to create the life you want. You are not a marionette. You are a human being with opinions and emotions and likes and dislikes, and you’re also a human being who is entitled to what it is they want out of life. All you’ve got to do is choose it.

I was fortunate to come to this realization years ago, and since I credit it as having been my most valuable and effective life tool. Many people ask me how I am able to travel the way that I do. Really, there’s no secret involved. I am not more capable, more intelligent or more savvy than any of you. What it comes down to is simply the fact that I choose to find opportunities for myself. I actively seek them out. I do not travel because it was in my cards, or this was my destiny. I travel because I choose to, and I make it happen because it’s important to me.

Once you realize the world is your playground, and you can choose to live any reality you’d like, then it simply becomes a matter of prioritizing. If you want to go hit the town tonight and spend $100 on overpriced cocktails and cover charges into clubs full of sweaty, questionable people wearing sparkly lycra, go ahead. Alternatively, you could skip tonight’s meat market and put that $100 toward a plane ticket fund, and then mingle with sweaty, questionable people WITH ACCENTS in Spain 6 months from now. Is there even really a question?

I guess I should probably wrap this up with some well-thought out, clever closing, but to be honest, I don’t feel like it. So I’m choosing not to. See how easy that was?

*Disclaimer:  All funny cross-out words are the stylistical trademark of Andrew MacPherson, and I blatantly stole it for this post.  You want to see someone who puts this principle into action and really chooses their lifestyle, on their terms?  He’s your man.  I’d encourage you to go see what he’s up to, but be careful. He’s addicting.

Thoughts? Agree? Disagree? Think I’m evil? Would love to hear any stories about making conscious choices to improve your life, and what the results were!

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About the Author: Ashley Ambirge is the sarcastic, brash, hot-sauce-addicted founder of The Middle Finger Project, where she gives the evil eye to mediocrity, fervently questions societal assumptions, and aims to inspire readers to flip a cordial bird to the shoulds, and live how they want. Whiskey shots strictly optional.

  • Bigredtomato
    If you haven't got enough money, then there's two ways to deal with this. Earn more money or spend less money. Everyone assumes that they need to earn more, but quite often spending less will get the same resort.
  • TMFproject
    Fantastic point! Well-received!
  • You know the thing where someone is having a bad day because of a car accident or some other event and someone else tries to make them feel better by saying, "well... everything happens for a reason" and opines about not knowing what the reason is but they're sure there is a reason so everything is fine so in so many words "buck up little camper"? It's adorable that they're trying to comfort someone, but it always makes me want to launch into a philosophical tirade. Then I remember that someone's minivan has been damaged and perhaps now is not the time.

    I first used that overstrike thing in a post that I legitimately updated. Using it in any context seemed cheesy at first, but adapting it for use as the other voice in my head is kinda fun. I have a suspicion that I stole that usage from someone else, but let's just chalk it up to fate.
  • TMFproject
    Perhaps harsh, but I find myself annoyed when someone dies, and everyone comforts using "everything happens for a reason." No, Auntie Dorothy died because she ate artery-clogging saturated fat everyday while alternating with a pack of Marlboros. I've had a lot of people die, so this is not because I'm simply insensitive to that. I've probably had more people die by age 21 than people do in their 40's. But the point is that those phrases are purely crutches that people use so they can avoid negative feelings. Everything does happen for a reason, but it's usually not the one you'd like to believe.
  • Win: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Existentialism
    Fail: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonance

    And yeah, I think things generally do happen for a reason. Just not the dumb way that people use that phrase. You didn't bomb the LSAT because you were meant to find your calling as a yoga instructor. You bombed the LSAT because you didn't want hard enough. The hurricane didn't come through because you were meant to move to California, you just happened to be in the way of physics.

    Now, if you wanted to move from hurricane alley to California all along, use can use these seemingly random occurrences to justify things your heart wanted all along. And I suppose that's ok. Just rather roundabout.
  • Dude, you hit it head on. Personal accountability is the key to moving forward. Too many people think that someone else is going to bring change to their life. It's not the case. Take responsibility for where you are. Once you realize YOU are the one who made the conscious decision to be where you are you'll start being a lot happier.

    Now, i'm not going to be idealistic here and say that changing at that point is easy...it usually isn't. But personal responsibility is definitely an important first step in the right direction.
  • "If you want to go hit the town tonight and spend $100 on overpriced cocktails and cover charges into clubs full of sweaty, questionable people wearing sparkly lycra, go ahead. Alternatively, you could skip tonight’s meat market and put that $100 toward a plane ticket fund"

    I thought about this a lot when I was living in Chicago, especially on Sundays with regret on how much I spent over the past two days. I called it my "sweet experience" fund. Bars/clubs and taxis around all night are such a money suck.
  • TMFproject
    I love it! My "sweet experience." I've just come to find that spending money on experiences is just so much more worthwhile than anything else you could possibly buy, so I try to keep that in perspective. As much as I love going out and doing x, y and z, I need to be conscious of the impact it's having on my personal goals as well. I admit that in the past I haven't always been as "responsible" with my money as I perhaps should have been, but usually it's been in the name of doing something cool, and even if I have to endure some financial strain as a result, it's always worth it.
  • I totally agree with you. I don't believe in fate and a lot of people use it as an excuse to avoid doing something. It's easier to complain than to take action.
  • TMFproject
    Yes, if I constantly believed that anything I did had no impact, and in the end some other unknown external force was going to have the final say anyway, I can imagine I'd find it hard to remain motivated. Why would you bother doing anything at all?
  • All right, I agree with you completely on this, but my mind just, kind of, comes to the same conclusions in a different way. I know everything I do is a choice. I take responsibility for my actions. And, when something goes wrong, I think, "I was meant to learn this lesson. My intuition drove me to make this bad decision and now, here, is my lesson. [Brace yourself.] Everything happens for a reason."

    I guess it's the same thing, just different semantics. But, I do believe there is something beyond us that helps to determine our actions. I call it my gut or my intuition or the Universe, but either way, I'm still taking full responsibility of what I do, but I am also giving myself the choice to say, "I made this fucking terrible decision, because I needed to learn about what it means to make a fucking terrible decision."

    Ya know?

    Also? Clubbing in Spain! YES!
  • TMFproject
    Hey, Jamie! I liked your take on things, and definitely believe in following one's intuition 100%. I suppose the only difference is that I would be inclined to say, "I made this fucking terrible decision, BUT ITS OKAY, because I needed to learn about what it means to make a fucking terrible decision," versus a causal relationship in that x happened because of y. I think of them as two separate and distinct things, because I'm sure there are lots of times when you might say, "I made this fucking terrible decision, but I've already made this one in the past and did not need to relearn it. Shoot, maybe I'm an idiot," in which case x did not happen because of y, x happened because I was an idiot. [And I made that choice!]

    Ha, listen to us philosophizing. We'd be way better at this over 3 bottles of wine at some quaint little outdoor cafe on some sexy cobblestone street. And then straight to the club for sweaty, questionable men!
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