We don't necessarily need to revise something we did or an aspect of who we are as much as how we view it
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCJq1K6EOqZBcANBqrzubH4qxUd-hhrFxw4HE5D6jHYwb5Twjw70MHWwMBF3d2-vsVgXms5xqsKzr1XCxhgcJkR7jESf2XlP1OQaVVxhDjt9lKqVirpFP9Wrp_msGSsUg84TfVbbd1g8g/s1600/1632842311895052-0.png)
Instead of starting this off by telling old stories or even a recent "old story," I am sharing this movie clip that pretty well sums up an aspect of myself that has gotten me into trouble ("A brief shining moment ... and then that mouth." Though it's usually by email)... A brief shining moment, and then that mouth The thing is, I am attached to this identity. I love this about me the way I love it about this movie character. I am still growing in mindfulness and my communications but I've been thinking, what if instead of revising so much of what I slipped in an email (okay, I will just share my once in a blue moon slip up happened and I said some harsh--albeit truthful--things in an email to a private school I was frustrated with, that I did an imaginal revision scene, so in my last email I acted as if I'd not sent the earlier one and reframed it, but I still haven't changed the story about the school; my feelings haven't changed as they respon...