Definition of amor fati : love of fate : the welcoming of all lifeās experiences as good
German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche describes Amor Fati: āThat one wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backwards, not in all eternity. Not merely bear what is necessary, still less conceal itā¦. but love it.ā Appalachian Trail thru-hikers (an epic, several-month-long trek over 2,000 miles) would express this as āEmbrace the Suck.ā Bryon Katie wrote a whole book on the topic called Loving What Is. Iāve spent decades trying to recreate history and control the path of my future, my kidās future and my familyās future. I imagine I have a giant eraser to take back a failed marriage and wallow in regret, or project forward that my father would miraculously cheat death as he slowly succumbed to congestive heart failure. I have learned over the last few years that I am powerless to rewrite history and to meaningfully alter the future. Amor Fati.

Here are the 4 ways to embrace Amor Fati:
Quit Complaining
As Will Bowen says, āComplaining is like bad breath ā you notice it when it comes out of someone elseās mouth, but not when it comes out of your own.ā Bowen is the creator of A Complaint Free World and challenges folks to go complaint free for 21 days. I remember taking this challenge some 7 years ago and I have to say, itās pretty tough. I mean there is the weather, the traffic, my son still hasnāt responded to my text, the soup is cold, the package is late, my assistant hasnāt respondedā¦but I digress into complaining. Itās so easy to deny what is. Itās like the negativity bias that saved your ancestors from saber-toothed tigers. It is constantly scanning the environment to track everything that is wrong. Try it for today. Just today. Be focused on whatās right with the world. With your world. I have a roof, my son is safely home from the Republic of Georgia, a warm house and potable water. Welcome the rain, the red light, the screaming infant. Amor Fati.
Jump Forward
When I was going through my Brain Based Coaching training some twelve years ago, I remember a tool we used called 10:10:10. This is a concept developed by Suzy Welch for decision making. āHereās how it works. Every time I find myself in a situation where there appears to be no solution that will make everyone happy, I ask myself three questions: What are the consequences of my decision in 10 minutes? In 10 months? And in 10 years?ā So, if staying late to complete a project for your boss means missing your childās play at school using the 10:10:10 process there may be a happy boss and perhaps a more resilient child. As Ryan Holiday wrote, āThe loss of a loved one, a breakup, some public embarrassment⦠In five years, are you still going to be mortified, or are you still going to be wracked with grief? Probably not. Thatās not saying that you wonāt feel bad, but youāre not going to feel as terrible as you do now. So, why are you punishing yourself?ā I remember selling my beautiful house by a lake in North Carolina and some 22 years ago in California a house by a creek. I thought, each time, I will never live like this again. It was true, not because my current situation is worse, itās just different and I never would have imagined how terrific things are right now. Maybe the future is so much better than you think. Amor Fati.
Embrace the Challenge
When my ex-husband left me hanging after my home was flooded by Hurricane Matthew, I was devastated. And then? I decided that this was a challenge. I was going to get the home repaired, fix my devastated finances and create a space of tranquility and comfort. I had an endless punch list and day-by-day, week-by-week, month-by-month, I took it on and conquered it all. I would not succumb regardless of my lack of knowledge of plumbing, HVAC or foreclosure. In retrospect, the challenge of overcoming all the obstacles was the best part. I didnāt want to go through it, but now that I have, I am so glad I did. As Holiday wrote, āItās like in a game, right? Letās say I throw you into a football game. If you stop and spend all your time arguing over the rules, youāre never going play. Maybe it doesnāt make sense that the overtime rules are this way or that quarterbacks get special protection, or this or that, right? There are all these different rules that make no sense that are arbitrarily how the game has developed since its inception. The Stoics are asking you in some ways to accept the arbitrary rules. Then theyāre saying you play the game with everything youāve got.ā Play the game and embrace the challenge. Amor Fati.
Grateful
Amor means love. Itās not just about accepting the suffering or fate; itās about loving it. I think about this a lot as I sort through the aftermath of my divorce. I am grateful for the process, for each and every decision, good or bad, for the pain and the release, for the deception and the triumph. I would not be where I am now without the journey, without the emotional bruises, without the struggle. I am so grateful to be the woman I have become. Sober, independent, present and courageous. I do a loving kindness meditation every morning. I wish happiness, peace, health and living with ease to everyone in my family, my friends, my clients, my enemies and, lastly, my ex-husband. I imagine embracing each one. I love them all for what they have brought to my life and love the hand I have been dealt. I am most grateful for my ex-husband leaving me to live my life to the fullest. Amor Fati.
Itās all about reframing the journey. Instead of dreading the court date or the root canal, looking forward to and loving what fate has in store for me. I think a lot about, āHmm, I wonder what exciting twist will occur?ā or āWhat does the universe have planned for me now?ā Iām not sure where I will be in 5 or 10 years but I know the journey will be exciting. Amor Fati.