Tool For Tuesday: In A Relationship, Do I Want to Be Right Or Do I Want To Be Happy?

 

"Do I want to be right or do I want to be happy?" asks The Mom Who Took Off On Her Bicycle

“Do I want to be right or do I want to be happy?” asks The Mom Who Took Off On Her Bicycle

“Oh I am not going to apologize to him,” my friend Joelle (I wrote about her here) said. “He was wrong. He acted rude. He insulted me.”

And yet—it’s three weeks later and almost every day Joelle tells me the same story. According to her version of events, he was wrong. And Joelle refuses to be the one to make the first move.

“If I go talk to him, then it’s like I’m saying he’s right,” she told me. “He should be the one to apologize to me.”

“Do you want to be right—or do you want to be happy?”

Really, does it make a difference who is the first to try to make amends? Our pride often gets in the way. And our pride can slip into self-righteousness.

It is hard to be the one to reach out first. Especially if we know we’ve been seriously wronged. But when we hold onto blaming others—then they’re living rent-free in our heads. We can find another way to fill ourselves up.

What’s more important to you: being right or being happy?

Tool For Tuesday: Maybe it’s time to reach out to someone we’ve been putting down.

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About dianabletter

Diana Bletter is the author of several books including The Invisible Thread: A Portrait of Jewish American Women (with photographs by Lori Grinker), shortlisted for a National Jewish Book Award, a novel, A Remarkable Kindness, (HarperCollins), a memoir, The Mom Who Took of on her Motorcycle, and The Loving Yourself Book for Women: A Practical Guide to Boost Self-Esteem, Heal Your Inner Child, and Celebrate the Woman You Are, an Amazon top-seller in several categories, and The Loving Yourself Workbook for Girls. She is the First Prize Winner of Moment Magazine's 2019 Fiction Contest. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Commentary, tabletmag, Glamour, The Forward, The North American Review and is currently a reporter for The Times of Israel. Diana and her husband have six children and an unofficially-adopted daughter from Ethiopia. They live in a small village on the Mediterranean Sea in northern Israel.
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6 Responses to Tool For Tuesday: In A Relationship, Do I Want to Be Right Or Do I Want To Be Happy?

  1. HeidiBarr's avatar juliabarrett says:

    You know, the title made me laugh. We all want to be right, I guess, but being right should not become a goal in itself. Yeah, guys are wrong a lot of the time, but so what? I learned a great deal from reading the book Not Without My Daughter. Really put things in perspective.

  2. Hi Diana,
    Love your new photo!
    As my hubby says, “Happy Wife, Happy Life.”
    Life is too short to hold a grudge.
    I hope Joelle takes back control by clearing the air.

    • dianabletter's avatar dianabletter says:

      Thanks, Tracy. You reminded me of that joke about the guy who says, “Don’t go to bed angry…stay up fighting!” Ha!

  3. Joelle is fortunate to have a patient and helpful friend. She seems to flounder her way in and around many of her posts, and through your advice to her we all learn.

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