This has been my mantra for the last few years. My son insists on texting instead of calling. âWhelp, you canât push a rope.â My coworker rarely makes a deadline. âYep, you canât push a rope.â You want your friend to sober up. âHmmm. You canât push a rope.â Pushing is frustrating. Itâs trying to force reality. Itâs trying to change someone or a reality that is not within your control. I do it all the time. I tell someone how great I feel since becoming sober. Or how my asthma and inflammation has receded since going sugar-free. I send reminders about the deadline to my team only to have the same culprit miss the deadline AGAIN. All this pushing is exhausting. I cannot force my will on anyone. I am only responsible for myself.

I read a post from Seth Godin this morning in which he wrote, âPeople donât change (unless they want to). Humans are unique in their ability to willingly change. We can change our attitude, our appearance and our skillset. But only when we want to. The hard part, then, isnât the changing it. Itâs the wanting to.â And itâs not my personal wanting to change my child or coworker or ex that works. Itâs their own personal decision. Itâs their wanting. Not yours. Not mine. The only way to push is if they ask you to help them.
Hereâs how to give up pushing the rope:
Relinquish control
For the longest time, especially as a parent, I thought I had control. Like I was the puppet master. If I wanted my daughter to be a great volleyball player, or my son to attend my alma mater, I could make it happen. I could push and dictate and shove my wishes upon my children. I could impose my will. I can take the same stance with projects and deadlines I disagree with and lose sleep over not having the ability to reroute the course toward my way of thinking. I think thatâs why I even started saying, âYou canât push a rope.â I was essentially acknowledging that I didnât have control. I relinquish. I let go of the struggle of trying to rewrite the outcome. I think of the Carrie Underwood song, âJesus, Take the Wheel.â Let what happens happen, let go of the rope and relinquish control.
Patience
I have always admired my fatherâs ability to be patient. I frankly try to channel his energy when I want something (out of my control) to change. I want an answer from the attorney, I want this fight behind me, I want the project to be done, I want everyone to turn in their work on time. I want. I want. I want. When I channel my fatherâs patience, I get calm. I slow down. I step out of the whirlwind of desire and wants. Itâs uncomfortable but peaceful. Time will unfold and what is supposed to happen will happen. Perhaps someone else will pick up the rope when itâs time to pull instead.
Provide support
If Iâve learned anything from being sober, itâs to share my experience and let it lie. The teacher in me wanted to preach and dictate. âThis is how you should do it.â Iâve learned that itâs better to start off by asking for permission: âDo you want some advice?â or âDo you want to know my experience?â If you just give out advice, neuroscience shows that it shuts your listenerâs brain down. Think about that when you are trying to educate your child on the dangers of drugs or who they should be dating. By giving advice or dictating what they should or should not being doing, you are shutting down their brain. They wonât hear you. If your advice is asked for or permitted, start off with: âMy experience with drugs, alcohol, dating, overdue projects, parenting, graduate school, cooking, marathons, dog ownership, divorce, home repairs, debt, finding a job, a difficult boss, waiting tables, owning a restaurant, riding a bike, driving a car, etc. isâŚâ Provide support but ask for permission and tell your story. Try not and tell someone what will happen if they start drinking again or donât pay off their credit cards or donât take a job in plastics. We arenât clairvoyant. Speak from your experience the last time you pushed a rope.
I have found in coaching that reflection on your own thoughts is one of the most powerful tools of coaching. Knowing that someone isnât trying to sway, influence or manipulate you helps you feel safe and reflect on what you really want. This happens through active listening. If Iâm trying to push a rope, Iâm wrapped up in my own agenda. When I am actively listening, I am making a safe space for someone to reflect. Iâm also not tied to the outcome or the agenda (see Relinquish Control). Perhaps your child, parent or coworker will ask you to pull the rope with them. Itâs up to them. Listen to what they need and then decide what to do with the rope.
I think about the months and years that led up to my marriage falling apart. As I look back, I was pushing that rope so hard, I was tripping over it. I had no control over my husband and never did. What I realized in just a few weeks after the collapse was that I could control my own path, one step at a time. I let go of the rope and, after anguish, time and self-reflection, itâs never been better. Leave the rope behind.