Over to France

Bonjour and thank you for stopping by. My name is Renie and this is the story of my first trip (avec mon mari) to France. We flew into Paris and then journeyed south-eastward by car, through so many beautiful villages, to arrive in Nice. It was four weeks of amazingness. We were totally smitten and our lives have been forever changed! If you would like to have a peek at what we experienced, then please read on….. And if you would like to venture further with us, as we work out our future Over to France adventures, then please read on a bit further still…

What is Courage?

Today is our 33rd wedding anniversary.

I love my husband to bits. But after all this time, it still amazes me how opposite we are in so many ways.

We are totally opposite in physique.

I lived in the same house until I got married.  Clive lived in more than twenty.

I am extremely ‘aesthetically affected’ – Clive not so much.  He can work amongst chaos, whereas I need to have my surroundings in order before I can even begin to think clearly.

I am quick to speak, often before thinking.  Alas, there have been many times when I have started talking only to wish I hadn’t.  But then the problem is, if you start a sentence and then stop after the first few words, people tend to look at you funny.  Clive is a lot slower to speak and, as a result, doesn’t normally regret what he says.

Pregnant pauses in conversations are super-uncomfortable for me, whereas Clive is quite at home in a conversational lull.  Thinking time, you see.

Clive thinks people chasing a ball around a field is serious business.  I think it’s just weird.

I get excited – easily, and about many things.  Clive doesn’t get excited, like EVER.

Clive has an inbuilt compass.  I get lost in my own house.

I get scared and anxious.  Clive simply doesn’t.  He honestly, truly does not worry about things.  He doesn’t get butterflies in his tummy, he doesn’t get a dry mouth, he doesn’t get a racing heartbeat.  He doesn’t experience feelings of dread.  No hot or cold sweats.  He doesn’t experience low moods.  He doesn’t experience panic.  

When undertaking a venture, Clive thinks about things and plans what he can.  Then, if problems arise, he just works his way through them – no panic, no dramas.  That’s why he doesn’t worry.  He doesn’t see the need.  Problems will arise, and they can be sorted out.  Mr Pragmatic, all the way.

I often wish I could swap brains with him, just for a little bit.  I would like to know what it’s like to be him.

He’s lived with me long enough now to have a fairly good understanding of what it is to be me.  When I complain about the unfairness of it all he always replies with “Honey, we’re all wired differently”.  Sigh.  (That’s me sighing, not him.  I do most of the sighing in our household.)

But while we’re still alive and kicking, there is always room to work on ourselves and re-tweak that wiring. 

Along the re-tweaking line, I’ve been doing a bit of reading about courage this week.  

I love this quote by Nelson Mandela: “I learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it. The brave man is not he who does not feel afraid, but he who conquers that fear.”

I feel quite encouraged by that.

I’ve also come across a beautiful author by the name of Susan Cain, who writes “…we all know that fear is a universally powerful emotion, and we all know how terrible terror feels. Thus, we should grasp that feeling afraid and acting anyway is a form of nobility.”. Isn’t that just lovely? She also writes that “Courage is a habit, a muscle you can exercise. Most of us aren’t born courageous, so we shouldn’t expect to magically acquire it without practice.”.

Another wonderful author, Brené Brown, describes courage as a habit or virtue. “You get it by courageous acts. It’s like you learn to swim by swimming. You learn courage by couraging.”

Well, I did a bit of couraging practice myself this week and have subsequently learnt the following:  

  1. Starting a petrol weed-eater is not easy.
  2. Weed-eaters are heavy.
  3. Extendable hedge-trimmers are even heavier!
  4. Mowing lawns is satisfying.
  5. Leaf-blowers make a real difference in life.
  6. Weeding (properly) can be EXTREMELY time-consuming.
  7. I can drive a manual transmission truck (a baby one anyway).  Yay me!
  8. Wisteria might one day take over the world. Honestly.

Thank you R.A.It encourages me every day. xx

9 responses to “What is Courage?”

  1. Marlene Whitehead Avatar
    Marlene Whitehead

    Bon anniversaire! I too am in awe of Clive and his fearlessness! A few years ago I decided to learn to swim, I was in my 50’s but inspired by my mum who told me how wonderful it was! I enrolled at a private gym where they did one to one lessons. From the first lesson I couldn’t take my feet off the floor, I didn’t trust a float would keep me up or those woggle things! Then I read an anonymous quote in a book: The lady is no longer afraid of the spider, she takes strength from her courage in its presence! I changed spider to water and as I practiced swimming (with my eyes closed) I repeated to myself, I am no longer afraid of the water, I take strength from my courage in its presence! I made the water my friend and although it took me a year I eventually learned to swim up to 30 lengths!!! Courage is what comes from fear and strength from overcoming fear!

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    1. Oh Auntie Marlene, what a wonderful story and such a powerful quote too. Thank you so much for sharing. I will be putting that into practice in my own life. What an inspiration!

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  2. Had you thought that you are the fortunate one having all those experiences. Clive may have lived in a lot of houses /places, is this what has caused him to be numb? Can you imagine life without excitement, maybe he just doesn’t show it. Clive has always been practical, serious, thoughtful and kind, yes and unexcitable. His father’s son. Written by his mother, who is so pleased to have such an excitable, interesting , talented, caring beautiful inside & out daughter in law.

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    1. Ah thanks Julie. That’s very kind. I was exaggerating really about Clive being unexcitable. He does get excited every now and then (but that’s usually when he’s watching people kick a ball around a field!). We are all wired differently, as he says. Just as well really.

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  3. Happy Anniversary! I read this thing once. It was about wanting to experience someone else’s life. (You know….you see someone who has all the experiences/stuff/knowledge/beauty/whatever that you don’t, but would like to and you wonder what it would be like to be them). Well, you actually get to experience their life. There’s just one rule. You have to do a complete swap. You get every single thing about them. Including all the stuff you don’t usually see. And that’s usually not so glam.I thought the concept was interesting.

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    1. Thank you! Hmm, yes that’s certainly food for thought. The grass is always greener on the other side. Still….. xx

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  4. Hi Renie

    Yet another inspired blog from you. You are so very courageous and don’t even realize it! For a starter you married my brother, which in turn meant you had to become part of our family, two very courageous actions, and you have stuck around! You carried, birthed, and nurtured two beautiful humans who are a credit to you (oh okay and Clive). You also are courageous in your self reflection…. it is not easy to look at oneself and then share it. You are one of the most courageous people I know. If you ever doubt yourself, not that you should… a wee trick that I have learnt, is that sometimes it is best to “fake it, till you make it” and before you know it you are actually “achieving it”. Love and hugs on your anniversary xoxox

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    1. Thank you dearest Teenyweeny. Those are very kind words and they mean a heck of a lot. xxxxxx

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  5. You two are the perfect halves to a whole and complement each other perfectly! So thankful you chose each other back then and that you continue to choose each other, every day!

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