The Corkman

Do you want to be right or be happy?

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A good friend asked me this 13 years ago. It is etched in my memory as it caused me to pause for thought.

When I spoke about this with a group a few months back, a lady responded echoing the wish of many in the room: ‘can’t I be both?’

If you are happy to live in your head, focusing on yourself – and if growth or humility isn’t a priority – maybe.

Given that we can do and achieve so little by ourselves – ‘making the situation right’, ‘making the best of the situation’ or learning and growing are generally more elevated and rewarding goals. If you want to develop good relationsh­ips with others consistent­ly, it is never helpful to create a dialogue that ‘makes them wrong’. Nobody wants to be wrong. When we are fixed on ‘ being right’, we invariably reinforce deeper divides, separation and activate the ‘fault-finding’ mindset of others too. As none of us our perfect, we rarely benefit in any meaningful way when we have this type of narrative going in our heads.

Life is about learning, making progress, and growing. It is about improving situations, relationsh­ips and ourselves.

There are few situations when someone is 100 percent right and someone else is 100 percent wrong. Sometimes we make mistakes. Sometimes we allow them to happen. Sometimes we make mistakes by not confrontin­g situations or people or calling things. The ‘ being right’ approach misses the nuances of that.

This is not to take from people (others and ourselves) being accountabl­e – rather it is about the dialogue going on in your head.

Happiness is not to be confused with ‘ignorance is bliss’. What truly brings happiness and meaning over time is growth, contributi­on and helping others etc. The ‘ being right’ approach can bring comfort, temporary moral superiorit­y, and make us happy in our heads but it not on the road to joy, richness in relationsh­ips or deeper peace.

I am not suggesting settling for less. But rather, it is about letting go of a divisive way of looking at things and letting go sometimes of control, winning every battle and arguing every point in your head. Sometimes this can make us vulnerable even – a quality we often don’t like to show others – particular­ly if we feel we should be the bigger better or stronger person.

Further, when you hold on to positions – it keeps you firmly in the past and normally forms a dam blocking growth. When I went to see Thich Nhat Hanh a few years ago, his opening line was:

‘ The first time the arrow hits, it’s painful. The second time it hits, it is 10 times more painful’. Difficulti­es and problems sting. When we keep reminding ourselves of how we were wronged, the pain and hurt amplifies. We reinforce how bad we feel and how wrong others are. Reminding yourself of how right you are only reinforces how wrong others are strengthen­ing feelings of separation and negative difference. What you focus on you feel.

On the other hand, being right – gives us two of our four basic needs–certainty and significan­ce (the other two are love and connection, and uncertaint­y). We always meet our needs. Meeting them in a lower way always often prevents us from achieving our goals.

The ‘ need to be right’ – keeps us holding on to old hurts rather than moving forward and making the best of things.

For your own wellbeing and the wellbeing of your relationsh­ips with family and others, letting go of the ‘need to be right’ can free up much space, time and energy for the deeper joys and riches of life.

We stock water packed in glass bottles or in fully recyclable cardboard packaging. A more economical way in the long run to reduce packaging is to choose a stainless steel drinking bottle so that you can reuse your bottle over and over again. If you drink a bottle of water each working/school day then that’s 260 bottles per year approximat­ely. That’s a lot of plastic per person in one year. We stock Cheeki stainless steel drinks containers for water, coffee, or a smoothie mug.

We stock fully compostabl­e bags for food waste, and vegetable bags, and 100% degradable refuse sacks. Also reusable straws made from bamboo, and compostabl­e straws made from wheat. We stock plastic free cleaning sponges, scrubs, and brushes to clean your pots and pans

The Cheeky Panda Company makes toilet rolls, tissues, and reusable kitchen roll from virgin bamboo. Their packaging is biodegrada­ble and recyclable.

Crisp packets are currently not recyclable. So we are very excited to be part of the Terracycle Recycling scheme. Drop your empty crisp packets into us and we will return them to Terracycle who recycle them into plastic pellets that can be moulded into a variety of products like benches, picnic tables, and even playground equipment.

We will host a Zero Waste workshop in June; this should be an interestin­g event, keep an eye on our Facebook page for date and times.

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