put them on hold.
One evening in early December, after working another long day, Ben
leaves the office late in the evening.
Sitting on the commuter train, he
reflects on the fact that his two daughters are almost young adults.
He wonders what his wife will do once they leave home.
A close colleague of his has just gone through a bitter divorce. Ben wants
to know what went wrong. And could it happen to him?
“What happened?” Ben asks his colleague one night over a glass of wine
at a nearby café.
“She was angry at me. Said I never gave her the intimacy she wanted in
our marriage. She also resented staying at home while I pursued my career.”
Ben is certain his own wife isn't angry like that. But then. . .he isn't
completely sure. It isn't a topic they ever discussed.
Ben's colleague is shattered by the painful failure of his marriage. As they
leave the café that evening, he tells Ben, “You ought to ask Liz what she'd
like to do now that the kids are growing up. One of the last things my wife
told me was, ‘You always focused on
your dreams, but never asked about
mine.’”
Great artists and leaders stay as close to their dreams as we stray from
them. “Dreams are the touchstones of our characters,”
wrote Thoreau, a
man who delighted in his own imagination. Van Gogh told a friend, “I
dream my painting, and then I paint my dreams.”
On the train home, Ben thinks a great deal about what his colleague has
said. He is right—he and Liz never talk about it. He doesn't think about her
dreams, let alone his own. He enjoys his work, yet sometimes he wonders if
the ladder he is climbing is leaning against the wrong wall.
That night, over a late dinner, Ben looks up at Liz and asks her a simple
question:
“What
are your dreams, Liz?”
“What?”
“I am wondering. . .what dreams do you have? You used to talk about
going back to school, perhaps getting that degree. Do you remember?”
Liz looks down at her plate, and when she looks up again there are tears
welling up in her eyes.
“You've never. . .you've never, ever asked me that before,” she says. They
stay at the table and talk for two hours.
She pours out her dreams, her
hopes, and her fears. He just listens. It is nearly midnight before they go to
bed.
Relationships atrophy when you take them for granted. Don't just go
through the motions! Treat your spouse or partner like a newlywed. Treat
old clients like brand new ones. Greet a friend as if you haven't seen him in
a year. Use this simple question—
what are your dreams?—to show you
care and to help reconnect people to their greatest longings.
Absorbed by the details of our day-to-day lives, we are rarely allowed
to dream. Invite a friend or loved one to share their heart with you.
Ask:
“What are your dreams?”
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