A fellow went to Zumbach the tailor to be fitted for a new suit of
clothes. After Zumbach altered the suit, the man stood in front of the
mirror to check the fit. At first glance he noticed the suit jacket's
right arm sleeve was short. "Say, Zumbach, this sleeve looks short.
Would you lengthen it?"
"The sleeve is not too short," said the tailor. "Just pull your arm back a few inches and the sleeve fits perfectly."
The man withdrew his arm a bit, and the sleeve matched with his wrist.
But this movement rumpled the upper part of the jacket. "Now the nape
of the collar is several inches above my neck," he said.
"There's nothing wrong with the collar," Zumbach insisted. "Your neck
is too low. Lift the back of your neck and the jacket will fit well."
The customer raised his neck a few inches, and sure enough the collar
rounded where it was supposed to. But now the bottom of the jacket
rested high above his seat. "Now my whole rear end is sticking out!"
the man complained.
"No problem," Zumbach returned. "Just lift your rear so it fits under the jacket."
Again the customer complied, which left his body in a contorted
posture. Zumbach had convinced him the problem was not with the suit,
but him. So he paid the tailor for the suit and walked out of the shop
in an awkward position, struggling to keep all parts of the suit in
their right places.
On the street he encountered two women. After they passed, one commented, "That poor man is really crippled!"
"He sure is," the other replied. "But that suit looks fabulous on him."
Our families, friends, schools, religions, and society prescribe many
suits for us to wear. Some of them fit and many don't. If a job,
relationship, living situation, or spiritual path does not match you,
others may try to convince you that you have a problem. A good, strong,
wise, devoted, or mature person, they tell you, should be able to stay
in this position and even enjoy it. Yet if such an arrangement does not
bring you happiness, you only cripple yourself by trying to stuff
yourself into it. Your problem is not that you cannot live up to the
standard you have chosen; your problem is that you cannot live up to a
standard others have chosen for you. You will never walk comfortably in
an ill-fitting suit prescribed by a shortsighted tailor. Your inability
to adapt is not a sign of your weakness, but the strength of your inner
guidance to remind you where your passion lives. So what you thought
was wrong with you may be what's actually right with you.
When Dave Barry was in junior high school, he was the class clown and
often got into trouble for cracking jokes during lessons. Dave's
teacher scolded him, "You'd better get to work, Dave Barry—you can't
joke your way through life, you know."
Now, forty years later, Dave Barry is the most successful humor writer
in America. With many popular books to his credit, he writes the most
widely syndicated humor column in American. Oh, yes—along the way he
won the Pulitzer Prize.
The junior high school teacher was way off the mark. Dave Barry is
joking his way through life, and doing quite well at it. He is bringing
laughter to millions, helping lighten up their difficulties, and
earning a hefty income. What he was told was very wrong with him, was
very right indeed.
No one knows your passion and purpose better than you do, and no one
has to live with the results of your choices more than you do. That is
why you must be very honest about what fits you and what doesn't.
Seminar participants often ask me, "How can I find out what is my life
purpose or passion?" I tell them, "Begin to tell the impeccable truth
about how everything you do feels. Is it a fit or is it not? Be true to
your inclinations on the little decisions, such as where you go to
dinner and with whom. When your daily decisions reflect your
intentions, you will discover the big picture for your life."
Robert Louis Stevenson noted, "To know what you prefer, instead of
humbly saying 'Amen' to what the world tells that you ought to prefer, is
to have kept your soul alive." Keep your soul alive, and you will be
amazed at how easily and naturally your body, relationships,
prosperity, career, and entire life follow.
ALAN COHEN is the author of many popular books, including best-selling
The Dragon Doesn't Live Here Anymore and Mr. Everit's Secret: What I
Learned from the World's Richest Man. In 2005, Alan is offering a
Personal Mentorship Program for a small group of committed students.
For info or to receive Alan's daily inspirational quote and monthly
newsletter, email 1800568-3079, visit www.alancohen.com, or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708