Do you ever experience “expectational blindness”? I’ll bet you do!
In case you don’t immediately know what “expectational blindness” is, let me give you a simple example that happened to me just the other day.
My wife has been having some back problems. She was lying in bed and was going to get up and get a strap that she uses to do leg stretches. Being the good husband that I think I am, I exclaimed, “I’ll get that for you!”
To make sure I didn’t get lost, my wife said, “It is in one of the two bottom drawers on the left side of the dresser.” I looked diligently, but without success. “It’s red,” she said, giving me another helpful clue. The lady knows me.
“Nope,” I said. I’ve learned to hedge my bets, so I added, “I’m not saying it’s not here; I’m just saying that I don’t see it.”
She got out of bed—painfully—hobbled to the dresser, and immediately pulled out the band from one of the drawers where I had diligently (??) searched.
“Didn’t you see this?” she asked.
“Of course, but I thought it was a scarf or something,” I replied, with enough humility to make even St. Francis proud.
“Well,” my wife continued, “why didn’t you pull it out to see what it was?”
I thought for a moment, and answered with obvious logic, “Because I didn’t think it was the strap you were looking for.” (Now that I write this down, I see that my logic was neither obvious nor logical.)
I was expecting some other kind of stretching band, apparently. And my narrow expectations had caused me to be blind to reality. Hence the term “expectational blindness.”
I would like to believe that my situational blindness is limited to red stretching bands, but I don’t think that would be a healthy belief that is based on reality. The truth is that I have practiced expectational blindness for many decades. I’ve gotten quite good at it.
And, of course, when you’re blind you tend to stumble around a lot. And you bump into other people. Being blind through no fault of your own is a serious matter. Being blind due to your own expectations is just plain stupid.
A twelve-step friend has often said, “An expectation is just another word for a premeditated resentment.” Yes!
Probably, most of us pride ourselves on being open-minded. However, I doubt that many of us are. We all have blinding expectations. Perhaps all expectations are blinding.
I wonder what would happen if I went through just one day without any expectations? Maybe I should try it and find out!
I nearly missed a wonderful gift from my thoughtful, creative wife the other evening. It all started with a phone call, and a silly comment that I made.
I had finished a long day of teaching at the university. It is a hybrid class that only meets on campus three days during the semester. Everything else is online.
I felt that the day had gone well, and I was very happy. The students were smart and engaged—an interesting group. I learned a lot. I hope they learned something as well.
I called the restaurant where I normally work as a host on Friday nights. I had requested the night off, and I was pretty tired. Happy tired, yes, but even happy tired is tired.
Nevertheless, I called. To my joy, they said “I think we’ll be okay. Stay home.”
So, I called my wife, and told her the good news. Yes, the class had gone well (I think), and I did not need to host tonight. I would be home for supper. And then I added, “We can just sit together in front of a crackling fire, talk, and watch a little T.V.”
Now, there was one little catch to my proposal. I like our house, but it does not have a fireplace. So, of course, sitting in front of a crackling fire was not an option. However, my sweetheart is, as already mentioned, thoughtful and creative—and she has a very quirky sense of humor.
I was listening to NPR’s “All Things Considered” on the way home to catch up on the news. Thank God! The partial shutdown is over!
I was almost home, and it was about the time when NPR features a couple of folks—one conservative, and one liberal—who discuss the week’s political news. The conversations are often spirited, but not angry. Hearing some intelligent and civil conversation is quite a treat in these days when yelling seems to be the norm. So, I really wanted to hear what these commentators had to say about the week in politics.
So, I rushed into the house, leaving my computer and books in the car, and barely said “Hello!” to my wife. I am not sure if I kissed her or acknowledged how happy our little dog was to see me. I did notice that my wife had set up the card table in the living room. I rushed over to the radio in the kitchen, and turned it on.
“I made you a nice supper,” my wife said, rather plaintively. It still took me way too long to get the obvious point. I was being a jerk. Yes, I was being an NPR jerk, which may be slightly better than a generic jerk, but only slightly. I can be exceedingly oblivious at times.
However, my obliviousity doesn’t usually last as long as it used to last. I walked into the living room. My sweetheart had a little candle on the card table, and the T.V. was on. There was crackling fire in a fireplace from You Tube on our T.V.
I had three simultaneous feelings: dismay, tenderness, and joy.
The joy and tenderness were because of my wife’s creative thoughtfulness. The dismay was because of my insensitivity.
I turned off the radio. I sat down at the table for a nice meal in front of a crackling fire. I also told my wife how nice this was and how sorry I was.
Now, there’s nothing wrong with enjoying NPR. There’s nothing wrong with appreciating civil discourse.
But there is something profoundly wrong about getting so invested in my own little expectations that I miss grace, that I miss love. Flexibility is not a native plant in my heart. Perhaps it isn’t native to anyone’s heart. But I need to import it, tend it carefully, help it to grow. Sometimes, the wonder in life comes not from having our expectations met, but by something that blindsides us. As George MacDonald used us say, “The door opens behind you.” And sometimes, the fireplace is in front of us.
I don’t handle disappointments very well. That means that I don’t handle life very well.
Life, at least as I live it, is inherently disappointing. (I’m told that death is rather disappointing as well, but that is a subject for another blog post.)
“Life, at least as I live it . . . .” I suspect that the words in italics are what fuels most, if not all, of my disappointments. The problem is not life; the problem is me.
Disappointments flow from two sources, which are not two, but one. One source of disappointments is my expectations of myself. The other source is my expectations of others. Did you notice that in both cases, there is the little phrase “my expectations”?
I expect too much of myself and I am disappointed. I expect too much of others and I am disappointed.
Years ago, I took a course in basic fire safety. One of the first lessons we learned is that, if you want to put out a fire, you don’t aim at the tip of the flame; you aim at the base of the flame. If I simply mull over my disappointments, I’m wasting my time. It is the expectations that feed the flame of disappointment, and need to be doused.
“But don’t we have the right to have some expectations?” I hear someone ask.
My answer would be this: “Yes, we have the right to have some expectations—as long as we are willing to be disappointed.”
There is an old saying that comes to mind. “Always expect the unexpected.” That is one of those proverbs that sounds like a contradiction in terms. Perhaps it is a contradiction in terms. However, it also encapsulates an important truth: The unexpected (a.k.a. disappointment) is so common that it might as well be expected. In fact, expecting the unexpected may be the only expectation that is helpful.
Hopes and goals and plans are another matter. They are important. However, expectations are a drag. When I am marinating in my own disappointments, I am not hoping, setting goals, or making plans. I am just stuck in my disappointments.
And, of course, my disappointments can easily deepen into resentments. And resentments are real killers.
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