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**Trigger warning** This blog includes an incident of domestic violence and discusses terminal illness; please look after yourself if this might trigger memories or strong feelings in you.
There’s nothing quite like impending death to make you reassess your life. I’ve had a fair few brushes with the grim reaper, that’s a risk you take when you’re a cyclist on Britain’s roads. But my most life changing moment was when someone I loved, who I thought, loved me, made an attempt on my life.
It was a starry Caribbean night and we were on the ferry from Trinidad to Tobago. My boyfriend at the time was a jealous and paranoid man. When he saw me take a seat next to another male passenger he assumed the worst and flew into an unprovoked rage. He dragged me to a deserted part of the ship and attempted to strangle me.
Though that moment is one of the least pleasant of my life, it was the moment that changed me forever. As his fingers pressed into my neck and I felt the steel railing of the boat’s deck cut into my back and the sound of the sea slapping the boat below, I knew then that this relationship was over and that I would do whatever it took to survive.
It took time to escape that relationship, it took further time to seek help but it was that moment, when I stared death in the face, that I knew I had to change my life. Change the poor choices I was making, change the patterns I was trapped in and change my behaviour, if I was to survive and thrive.
I consider myself lucky that I had this epiphany. Many of us are so busy with our lives, the practicalities, the dreams and the fears, that we conveniently forget that we won’t be around forever. Occasionally we have a rude reminder; loved ones dying, accidents or health problems.
What would you do differently if your doctor told you tomorrow that you had six months left to live? Would you think, ‘Nothing – I love my life, my work, I spend enough time with those I love’? Or would you give up your job, follow a dream and spend more time with loved ones? It’s a good exercise to consider because it makes us focus on what’s important and highlights if we’re wasting time on irrelevant things.
Many people who do this exercise realise that they’re not happy with their jobs. That they have drifted into work that doesn’t deeply fulfil them, or that work that once fulfilled them has lost its edge. Or that they love their jobs but feel they could have more impact if only the circumstances were different. Isn’t it odd that generally we only get careers advice once in our lives, when we are teenagers on the brink of choosing subjects that are supposed to map out our interests for the rest of our lives? We have barely lived and yet we are expected to know what we want to do; our thoughts influenced by family and peers, our values still embryonic and yet to be fully tested. So many of us sleepwalk into subjects, jobs, qualifications on the basis of this ‘advice’ or suggestions made by friends or families. How often do we really examine our values, our priorities and what’s important to us?
If you want to improve your life, think about what you would do if you had a terminal diagnoses from your doctor. Think about the values that are important to you. Think about your work/life balance (check out the wheel of life exercise I have on my resources page ). If any of your answers are out of sync with your current life then consider what changes you could make, because no one wants to look back on a life with regret. Take it from someone who very nearly lost their life, don’t sleepwalk through yours. You have the power to choose your own path and change your direction. And if you need a little help working out those values, that work/life balance, your true purpose, find a coach that can support you.