Kirby and I put everything on hold
yesterday to sit down and watch the Formula One (F1) Grand Prix in Melbourne,
Australia. It was a fantastic race. This year saw the introduction of new cars
with new specifications and rules, and as a result many drivers struggled, and
some did not finish the race.
One driver who is particularly
popular is Daniel Ricciardo. He is 24 years of age and is incredibly talented,
as well as being an overall genuinely nice man. It is very rare to see him
without a huge smile on his face. And he is Australian.
He has taken up the place in the Infiniti
Red Bull Racing team left by fellow Australian, Mark Webber, who retired from
F1 last year.
Ricciardo had me dancing around the lounge
room yesterday as he took second place and his first ever place on the podium,
alongside German, Rosberg, and Danish rookie, Kevin Magnussen.
You are probably wondering now why I am
writing a summary of an F1 race. But there is a reason.
This morning we woke to find out that
Ricciardo had been stripped of his second place and disqualified due to a
technicality. I could have cried – actually, I almost did as tears were sitting
just on my lower eye lids.
Ricciardo’s team is appealing. Hopefully
they will be successful and Ricciardo will be reinstated as the second place
winner.
The whole saga has reminded me that dreams
are so very fragile. We came so close to our dream of having children realized.
We appealed, in a way, through using IVF, but our appeal was not successful.
Ricciardo came so close to having his dream
of a place on the podium realized. It’s not over for him, and I can only
hope his dream is fulfilled.
Everyone has dreams of doing, having and achieving
different things in their lives, but nothing in life is guaranteed, despite
what many self-help gurus, be positive mantras, and just believe quotes say.
I now have the dream of being a successful
novel writer. I also have the dream of travelling more. And I want to do more
hiking, get a kayak, and have more outdoor adventures.
Will I do all of this?
Will I achieve all of this?
I don’t know. I’ll do my best, but I just
don’t know. I guess the next thing to think about is whether it’s worth trying.
If success isn’t guaranteed then why put my efforts into anything? After all,
we tried IVF and that didn’t work.
It would be so easy to give up, spend my
life watching television, and living a basic life just getting by. But I can’t
do that. I have to try. It’s true that there has to be a balance between
keeping on trying and realizing when it’s time to move on and readjust and
rethink my dreams, which is a tricky thing to do. It’s very hard to know when
it’s time to move on.
I have learnt a lot through trying to have
a child through IVF. One of the biggest lessons is how to deal with broken
dreams. I have more understanding of how sometimes my dreams need to be given
up, of how important it is for me to grieve for those dreams, and of how I can
create new dreams even though I’ll never forget the dreams I once had. I am
stronger than I thought I was. That
strength does not mean I don’t ever get upset or cry or get angry. Instead it
means I know how to be with and gently move through those times.
I know so much more about myself than I
used to, and I don’t want to let that knowledge and the lessons I have learnt
go to waste. I can apply all of it to pursuing new dreams, and I will.
Whatever happens, I’ll keep going.
If things fall flat, if the trail to my
dreams goes cold, if I find I can’t keep going with one or two of my dreams,
then I’ll get up, get back in my car, and try again on a new track.
If Daniel Ricciardo can do it – then so can
I.
2 comments:
This is really good! I hope you get your podium finish in whichever arena you choose.
Thanks Mali - and you too!
Post a Comment