The Daily Q: Platitude vs. Pivot

Platitudes and Pivots may seem similar — both suggest a directional change, after all. But they are actually quite different.

A platitude is a bit of a scolding, which nobody needs right now.

On the other hand, a pivot is a deliberate and empowering choice. It is, in fact, a self-care strategy.

But — this is important — the pivot happens in the context of honesty and compassion; a platitude is just kind of mean.

An example…

I had big plans for Claire in 2020.

Claire’s Big Plan: Chase more balls.

Claire’s Big Plan: Chase more balls.

I spent months and months fine tuning her obedience skills — an entire year, in fact. I intentionally did not finish her CD in 2019 after her amazing performance at the last Specialty. I knew — after 25+ years of doing this — that Claire has the potential to be a High in Trial dog.

And so I was training specifically for the 2020 Specialty, and had her other obedience shows mapped out based on her High in Trial potential.

Claire ball Unicorn.jpg

But that is not all.

Claire had early and often breed ring success. She finished her championship ridiculously easily at 17 months, and got a group placement soon after.

Her Grand Championship was also easy peasy, and completed at like 20 months. One memorable Best of Breed was over ten or eleven Specials, including at least one ranked male.

All that as an adolescent — and always owner-handled.

And so maybe you can understand why I see some fun potential in this dog.

Claire with ball April2 2020.jpg

Then I did something that is really hard for me: I practiced patience. I let her grow up — and we trained. And trained.

Claire is now three and ready to sparkle and shine. 2020 was to be her year.

Spring snow — yep.

Spring snow — yep.

Cue the pandemic.

Dog events might not be your thing but I bet you have a thing or two that has been disrupted, and so you can maybe relate to what this might feel like to me.

A platitude would look like this: “Self, at least Claire is young and you can show her again — someday (knock on wood).” Or how about: “Self — quit moping about this and get a real problem — people are sick and dying out there.”

Platitudes are both ineffective and additive — they don’t help us cope with hard feelings, and they toss Shame into the emotional stew.

The pivot is different. It is based on honesty and self-compassion. I acknowledge and feel my feelings: sadness, disappointment, regret, and so on. I recognize those emotions as the normal response to my lost dreams, and I create space to sit with them.

And then I pivot.

I make a conscious choice to turn in a different emotional direction. But because I have given all those feelings their due, Sadness, Disappointment, and the rest of that crowd are not yelling in one ear while Shame shrieks in the other.

Nope. Those feelings just needed to be felt. That is the nature of feelings.

Platitudes try to ignore feelings — to dismiss them as unworthy, and the Feeler as shameful for feeling them.

Pivots build a foundation on feelings. They are a choice made because of feelings — not in spite of them.

And so I felt my feelings — and I pivoted.

This is getting long and so I end by saying this about that — Perspective is a related topic for another day.

In the meantime, cry those tears for your lost opportunities and when you are ready and able — consider a pivot.

Stay safe and distant and well. And together. We got this.