TheBanyanTree: Ask For What You Want

Indiglow indiglow at sbcglobal.net
Tue Apr 27 06:21:43 PDT 2010


Monique, I love this!!! Every bit of it!  I too learned to not ask.  Makes for interesting times.  But oh, I think I need to start carrying chocolate chip cookies with me when I travel the freeways!
Hugs,
Jana

--- On Sun, 4/25/10, Monique Colver <monique.colver at gmail.com> wrote:


From: Monique Colver <monique.colver at gmail.com>
Subject: TheBanyanTree: Ask For What You Want
To: "Banyan Tree" <thebanyantree at lists.remsset.com>
Date: Sunday, April 25, 2010, 5:49 PM


Part 1

While growing up, I learned not to ask for what I wanted. Asking would
open me up to charges of being some sort of moron, because what I
wanted was usually considered, well, stupid, whether it was a present
(“What do you want for Christmas?” is a trick question designed to
elicit an answer everyone can mock) or a goal: “You want to go to
college? Are you out of your mind?”

Well, yes, obviously. There’s never been much doubt about that. So I
learned not to ask for what I want. It took years to undo this
training, and I’m still working on it.

Part 2

I was on a business/pleasure trip to Seattle the other day. It’s a
three hour drive from here to there, and so the plan was to drive up,
see a couple of clients, see a friend for lunch in between clients,
and then, on my way out of town, I was going to stop in Bellevue to
have dinner with my husband. He’s in Seattle every Friday and
Saturday, and he hadn’t seen me since, oh, Friday morning when we both
left for Seattle, so by Friday evening he was missing me terribly.

I was very tired by then, and in a bit of pain. I have constant pain
lately, not that it’s anything worth mentioning, but it’s annoying as
hell, and a day of driving doesn’t help it. And I still had a good
three hours driving, at least, before I would be home.

Have you ever been to Bellevue? I think Microsoft’s on a campaign to
take it over, and many of the new buildings have Microsoft signs.
Bellevue has money. And people with money. I cruise around in my old
car and it doesn’t bother me in the least because I don’t have a car
payment.

On the off ramp to turn onto a main street in Bellevue was a man with
a sign. An older man, with a grin on his wizened face, and his sign
said, “Have chocolate chip cookies? Coffee? Anything would help.”

I see people with signs everywhere I go, which is one of the reasons I
don’t carry cash with me. It wouldn’t  last long because I’d be
compelled to hand it out. People say I shouldn’t because “they’ll just
spend it on booze or something,” but I say, “so what?” What do I care
what they spend it on? It’s not a government grant with strict
requirements as to how it’s to be spent. It’s a gift. The person who
receives a gift can do whatever they want with it. I’m not their
mommy, I’m not here to tell them how to spend what money they do get.

Anyway. So I don’t travel with cash. I can’t afford to.

But here was this man asking for something besides cash. Chocolate
chip cookies. And sitting there in traffic, I realized I had chocolate
chip cookies. The really good ones, from the specialty cookie place,
that my charming husband had put in a ziplock bag for me that morning
in case I got hungry on the road, which I always do. But so far, I
hadn’t touched the cookies.

The light was going to change soon, so I rolled down the passenger
side window and said, “Hey, I’ve got cookies!”

He came over to the window and I handed the bag to him, and he was
happy that someone in that long line of cars had something he was
asking for. He gave me a fabulous smile, and it’s quite a good payment
for a few cookies. Where else can you get that kind of return?

And me, I can get myself more cookies any time I want. I can get
myself most things I want any time I want, at least most food items.
No hardship for me.

But here’s the thing. The man on the corner would never have gotten
any cookies if he hadn’t asked for them. It’s not that most of us
don’t want to give others what they want. It’s just that we’re too
busy doing our own thing, and we don’t know what people want unless
they tell us. If you tell someone what you want, there’s always a
chance they’ll say
no. But if you don’t ask at all, there’s a really good chance you’ll
never get what you want. How can you, if no one knows what it is?

We’re all running around doing our own thing. If you’re anything like
me, you have a list of a thousand things in your head that you’re
meaning to do, or get around to, or meant to do, and handing out
cookies probably doesn’t even enter into the equation unless someone
asks for some.

You may have to ask more than once. I’m sure when the man on the
corner put out his sign the first car going by didn’t stop and hand
him any cookies. He may have had to wait quite a while to get any
cookies, and there’s a chance he might not have gotten any at all. But
by asking, he greatly increased his odds.

You have to ask. Tell people what you want, and you increase,
exponentially, your chances of receiving it.


-- 
Monique Colver



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