During the colder months, ladybugs tend to find their way in through one small window in our house. Each day I find anywhere from 7-12 ladybugs, I gently capture them and return them to the outside.
On more frigid days like today though, I let them live inside this small room in my house they’ve entered. I’m not an expert on ladybug environments but I’m guessing that an outdoor temperature of 36 degrees is a less than ideal condition for them.
I don’t like it that they’re going without food and water for a while, I like it even less when I find them curled up and crispy on the floor. But I guess the life of an insect isn’t an enviable one.
As I look at the ladybugs sitting near my window, I start thinking about certain decisions we make, those choices that at the time seem like good ones, but in the end we wish we’d never made them.
I’ve had predictive dreams and meditations where I learned that I would do x, y and z. And when the opportunity arose, I did indeed make those choices. Only later x, y and z turned out not to really yield the positive result I had hoped for.
Now, if only those particular predictive dreams had included a little counsel that perhaps I shouldn’t to make those choices. Now that would have been really useful.
Not all of our decisions and investments work out the way we’d like for them to. And it stinks when our proverbial smoke alarm didn’t go off soon enough – or that we decided to tune it out when it did go off. But it happens to everyone.
And we really can’t predict the amount of learning and insight we’ll gain from an experience, particularly the difficult ones. So perhaps it’s a good thing that no one stopped us from making those choices. Sometimes we just aren’t willing to learn it any other way. If it hadn’t been this difficult situation we chose to learn through, it just would have been another one.
All we can do is accept responsibility for the situation, and learn from it. Then as we work to forgive, we have to remember to forgive ourselves as well. We all make mistakes.



