Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→We All Have It Coming, Kid
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January 22, 2016 at 9:59 am #93341AnonymousGuest
“We all have it coming, kid” is a quote, best as I remember, from Unforgiven, a movie with Clint Eastwood as main character. The plot, simplified, is that a man cut a woman’s face… on purpose and Clint Eastwood, a “kid” (young, inexperienced man) and one other man were hired to kill the man that cut the woman’s face. The kid shot and killed that man but was feeling very badly about having killed a man. To make himself feel better, the kid said: “Well, he had it coming.” And Clint Eastwood replied with the quote I gave here.
My question to you, dear reader, is what do you think this means… we all have it coming…?
anita
January 22, 2016 at 11:52 am #93365SeaislandParticipantfor me
We all have it coming kid–
NOW I leave people alone and let life catch up with people who have really hurt me.
I have learned you cannot out a$$hole an a$$hole–they are too good at it. They win when you react in a way that is not your authentic self. I am glad that I am no longer (as) vindictive–but have surely paid for wasted time trying to get even or try to make them understand hurt they caused me. I tried to “give them what they had coming” and hurt myself, my morals, my beliefs, and wasted my time.but on less serious wrongs committed against me–I have also I have judged people and “when I walked a mile in their shoes” found out –good people make bad mistakes and I have made my share. So “they didn’t have it coming”
Tuff question Cocoa Lady
Seaisland
January 22, 2016 at 6:52 pm #93381AnonymousGuestDear Seaisland:
Thank you for commenting on my thread. I like your input… It is always, almost always a good idea to let people enjoy… or suffer the consequences of their actions, this is how they learn, or not, but at least they have the opportunity to learn. If a person has been an a$$hole to me, then he or she will suffer the consequence of not having me in their lives. Now, I used to think it was no big loss, not to have ME in their lives, and maybe well, probably people do not think it is a great loss, those who hurt me or disregarded me or ignored me… this is why they did all this, they did not value me. But that is the best I can do- they do not have me in their lives, the Cocoa Lady as you called me!
anita
January 23, 2016 at 5:08 pm #93438jockParticipantThey win when you react in a way that is not your authentic self. I am glad that I am no longer (as) vindictive–but have surely paid for wasted time trying to get even or try to make them understand hurt they caused me. I tried to “give them what they had coming” and hurt myself, my morals, my beliefs, and wasted my time.
Well said Seaisland. I think you are right on the money. Staying mature with an immature adult is the challenge for all of us.
And as Anita suggested, ignoring these people is the best policy as we just get on with our lives.January 23, 2016 at 5:13 pm #93439jockParticipant“We all have it coming”
Not sure I agree with this quote. Does it mean we all have to pay the price for our mistakes sooner or later? Well, it is kind of like karmic debt; we do good today and sow a seed for future happiness and likewise if we do bad today.
Just the quote is a very negative one, only focussing on how we have to pay for our past sins. Or am I way off target here?January 23, 2016 at 6:55 pm #93450AnonymousGuestDear jock:
As I think of this quote now, I don’t see it as we all have to pay for our sins, not at all. What I get from it is that we, you, jock, me anita, Seaisland and every single person reading this and otherwise every person in this world has it coming. It coming is death. We will all die… the good, the bad and the ugly. We all have death coming, and not only that, but pain and sickness, and it doesn’t matter if we sinned at all or how much. I think it is some kind of delusion to think that if we are good, we will be protected… we can do our best to maximize our chances to be healthy and safe, but we all have it coming.
What says you, jock?
anita
January 23, 2016 at 7:39 pm #93460AnonymousGuestDear jock:
And thank you for commenting. I really don’t know what the person who wrote the script meant by the sentence, I am guessing. So your guess is as good as mine. Would like to discuss Karmic Debt with you, do you believe in the concept?
anita
January 23, 2016 at 8:32 pm #93464jockParticipantof course it could be “death” too, as I reread the original post Anita.
re Karmic Debt:
well I don’t think they are fully realised in one lifetime. I mean how can Stalin, Mao or Hitler’s be fully realised? They got off lightly. It is possible for suffering to make us better people, more compassionate but not all the time. If I apply karmic debt to my own life, I seriously think I still have some debt to pay for past sins. Example, quitting jobs too easily. Deep down I think I haven’t suffered enough for this yet, which makes me apprehensive about the future. But there may be a danger here of masochistic choices, which are not helpful.January 24, 2016 at 6:02 am #93469SeaislandParticipantThanks for the kind words-Jock and anita.
I hope you realize you have suffered enough, and we all deserve to forgive ourselves–I have to say that to myself, so today I am saying it to us.
In the movies-Clint Eastwood could say anything– and I think it could be thought provoking and sound like a life lesson. Until in real life he talked to an empty chair at the republican convention without a script did I realize he needed a director/producer and several takes. What Eastwood said as a cowboy I could usually ponder over and make some life lesson of value or open my mind to.
On topic of westerns-there was/is a writer of many books (more than 100) named Louis L’Amour. His daughter compiled quotations out of books and published a book, one of my favorites. I have dog-eared, yellow highlighted this book for years.
My very favorite quote is-
A mind, like a home, is furnished by its owner, so if one’s life is cold and bare he can blame none but himself. You have a chance to select from some pretty elegant furnishings.
Louis L’AmourSeaisland
January 24, 2016 at 9:59 am #93483AnonymousGuestDear Seaisland:
Good point about scripts vs real life: delivery of lines is different, very different than the lines one comes with spontaneously. I am far, far from worshiping movie stars or other celebrities. But movies, the images, sounds on the big screen are provide a powerful delivery of concepts. As to your favorite quote, I am not having a good reaction to reading it because I believe that a child who was unloved and mistreated does not choose those furnishing in his or her brain. Unfortunately one is stuck with those furnishing until the person goes through the long and difficult process of healing. And once healed enough, the choice of furnishing has already been selected through the process, piece by piece, over time.
Dear jock:
I appreciate you answering my question. My thoughts about your answer:
You wrote: “It is possible for suffering to make us better people, more compassionate but not all the time.”- I agree with that, possible but not necessarily so and often it is not so. Most abuse of others in the world is delivered by people who suffered themselves and pass on the suffering to others.
As to what you wrote here: “I seriously think I still have some debt to pay for past sins. Example, quitting jobs too easily. Deep down I think I haven’t suffered enough for this yet, which makes me apprehensive about the future.” Understandably to me, if you believe you didn’t pay enough yet for past mistakes or … sins, then you would be apprehensive- it is not a calming thought to imagine the ways you are yet to suffer. What you are describing here is a core belief, a long held deep belief. In the Cognitive Therapy I attended there are exercises done on paper during the therapy session: stating a core belief like that and examining it scientifically for accuracy, being open to maybe it is so, maybe it is only partially so, or completely inaccurate.
Would you like to examine this core belief, that you are yet to pay with pain and suffering for your past mistakes (or future mistakes)?
anita
January 24, 2016 at 10:28 am #93486SeaislandParticipantanita–
I understand completely. For me it was–taking out the furnishings I “inherited” and trying to put in my own thoughts. My childhood had abuse, secrets, with way too much church. I was around very opinionated people and it seemed that my head was so full of their opinions I didn’t or couldn’t block out seeing thru THEIR eyes. I want my own thoughts (furnishings) and I find trying to keep the beautiful thoughts and purging the old or new that don’t fit (the improved version of my life) therapeutic.
What works for me certainly might bring up unpleasant thoughts for someone else. It has happen to me on other post. It was good for me to examine and go thru remembering that. It opened a door that I need to give some thought to.
thanks for your honesty
you are much appreciated for it and many other talentsSeaisland
January 24, 2016 at 10:41 am #93488AnonymousGuestDear Seaisland:
Amazing- as I saw a few moments ago that you posted, I was worried, worried you felt rejected by my post and maybe (my automatic tendency… an old furnishing) you will attack me. Then, still before I read your post, I said to myself: It is okay. I expressed my thoughts and feelings honestly, and there is nothing wrong with it. I can’t and shouldn’t tailor my thoughts so to not trigger others (walking on eggshells). Then I read your post, and how refreshing- your healing path meeting with my healing path on this very post of yours! It made you think of how you react to posts and examine… And it makes me think right now: I may share a quote or say something that makes me feel good but it may trigger discomfort in someone else. In one quote one can see this … and another can see that. And it is OKAY to share it all, with respect and understanding. So thank you, Seaisland.
And as you explained above what that quote means to you, it makes sense to me. What I saw in your quote before you explained is the old criticism playing in my mind (again, an old furnishing)- “Forget the bad stuff… it is all in your head…” etc.
Hoping our paths meet again this way:
anita
January 24, 2016 at 11:28 am #93491SeaislandParticipantYES
but what is also interesting -is YOU have made it clear (to me) on a post that you would trust and express how you really felt. I trust YOU to tell the truth and hear MY truth. Someone else I might have “jumped the gun on”.BUT-except for Jock I haven’t ventured out and trusted anyone else-not to attack me–I even over imagined and interpreted something Inky said as personal–and I WAS WRONG. Sorry again Inky.
So it is also a step forward for me to “know” you are just telling me your truth and its ok for me to come back again–and tell you mine.
I feel almost like a well adjusted grown up -lol
SeaislandJanuary 24, 2016 at 11:37 am #93493AnonymousGuestDear Seaisland:
I thought of the word Trust before I read your latest post. I thought to myself that this is what it must have been, that you trusted me. And then I read it in your latest post. You know, now that I know for sure that you trust me, it is not an option for me to betray your trust. Trust from someone who lost it before, to get the trust of one who was betrayed in the past, this is such a precious, valuable thing, something that needs never be broken. I am moved by your trust of me. It means so much to me. I assure you, I will never break it. It is only with trust that we can venture and (the quote is working for me so far) and replacing those old furniture….
But always keeping in mind, that far from all people are worthy of trust. Believing otherwise is delusional. It is a good thing though, a very good thing to be able to evaluate individuals for trustworthiness and place it where it is deserved.
Thank you, Seaisland for trusting me. Your trust in me is well placed!
anita
January 24, 2016 at 11:59 am #93495SeaislandParticipantI know you are right–I thought I would never get fooled again and have been betrayed over and over….after I was sooo “smart”.
But I do know my trust in you is well placed–if it ever goes wrong-we will back up and fix it. I know your intent–you and I are wounded and may make mistakes. But there is trust, a knowing.
off to watch football and eat chicken wings with the significant other.
peace out
Seaisland -
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