Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Question of the Day | 01/15/2009 12:00 am

What adage do you live your life by?

© iStock
Joan Ganz Cooney

Joan Ganz Cooney | 08/05/2008 12:00 am

Why Joan Ganz Cooney Lives in the Moment

I try not to look back because, as Satchel Paige put it, something may be gaining on me. I try to remember what Jack Kennedy said to Jackie during the primaries of 1960, when she asked him what he thought would happen in the election, and he said, "Don’t look ahead; you might foresee failure." In other words, I try to live in the moment. And I especially try to treat other people the way I want to be treated.
Marlo Thomas

Marlo Thomas | 08/05/2008 12:00 am

Marlo Thomas's Father Taught Her How to Forgive

Something that my father once said. I first heard it when I was a teenager. My sister, Terre, and I had taken, well, a disliking to a so-called friend of our father’s. As always, Dad had been very generous with this fellow — giving him a career boost — but when my father needed a favor in return, the guy didn’t deliver. He’d even been petty about it.

My father took it all in stride. He was a man who didn’t carry around a lot of emotional baggage. His outlook on life was “live and let live.” But in this instance, his equanimity didn’t sit well with Terre and me — and we said so.

“How can you be nice to that man. You’ve been so generous to him and he’s not being generous back. Why would you ever want to give him the time of day again?”

My father simply said, “I do not hunch my back with yesterday.”

Over the years, I came to realize that my father’s philosophy made so much sense. Holding a grudge doesn’t change the person you’re angry with, but it changes you. It makes you heavier. It gives you more to lug around.

Not hunching your back with yesterday speaks about forgiveness. It speaks about moving on. And to me, it speaks directly to what a healthy and loving guy my father was.

After he died in 1991, I received calls and letters from countless friends, expressing their sympathy. Everyone knew how deeply I loved my dad, and how much I would miss him. One of those letters came from a man with whom, years before, I’d had a falling out over a business deal in which I felt he had acted in bad faith. We hadn’t spoken since.

“I know I’m probably not the person you want to hear from right now,” his letter began, “but I thought I’d write anyway to tell you how sorry I am about the loss of your father. I know he meant the world to you, and I just wanted to let you know that you are in my thoughts.”

I was touched by the letter, and wrote the man back, thanking him for his kindness. Because he’d mentioned our disagreement in his note, that’s how I began mine:

“I am my father’s daughter,” I wrote. “And like him, I do not hunch my back with yesterday …”

Mary Wells

Mary Wells | 08/05/2008 12:00 am

The One Song That Inspires Mary Wells

“Everything” as sung by Barbra Streisand.
Read more about: Psychology, Spiritual

252 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Lizzie R.
During bad or difficult times I always remind myself that things are going to get better, as they can’t get any worse, and they always do.
By Lizzie R. on 01/15/2009 6:29 pm
Connie Godin
225 comments, awesome. Mine is live and let live then I get pissed at something 3 seconds later. I do keep trying not to be such a cantankerous old baghead.
By Connie Godin on 01/15/2009 9:11 pm
M. Starr
ACCEPTANCE …………….i am trying………and yes, marlo’s post was definitely where i would like to be……….i am trying not to’hunch my back with yesterday’ and start off each day with a free mind……….i am trying!
By M. Starr on 01/15/2009 9:48 pm
Blue Lizard
A friend told me this, and while I was angry about it at the time…the more understanding we have, the more understanding we are.
By Blue Lizard on 01/15/2009 10:02 pm
Ro H
I just found this post, so am adding my bit, yet once again - So many sayings for sure… If the FOO sh*ts wear it! a take on the, “If the shoe fits, wear it” “Do right because it is right, not because you are afraid to do wrong - thus, is character made.” Mine - The mode of modern humanity is to live, love and prosper. Yet, to attain wealth and prosperity through the hurting and abuse of another brings shame, Thus, there is no worth in it.
By Ro H on 01/16/2009 2:57 am
deber B
I live my life by two columns….Column A “Things I can control ” and Column B “Things I cannot control.” I never waste valuable time in column B.
By deber B on 01/16/2009 6:34 am
Belinda Joy
Someone’s opinion of you does not have to become your reality” I spent so many years obsessed with how I was perceived by others. What did other women think of my clothes, hair, body, etc? What did men think of me? Was I being a good friend, sister, aunt, co-worker in the eyes of those in my life? When I stopped living based on what everyone around me wanted me to be and started living for myself first, life opened up for me and I was happier. I learned I can’t make everyone happy. Everyone is not going to love or like me. And in the final analysis that’s okay, because at least I know I was true to myself.
By Belinda Joy on 01/16/2009 6:38 am
deber B
Belinda, it is wonderful when one wakes up one day and realizes they no longer need anyone’s approval. Happens to most women around age 40.
By deber B on 01/16/2009 11:35 am
Connie Godin
This one also is very good
By Connie Godin on 01/20/2009 3:39 pm
Jeff Wolcott
When the going gets tough, the tought changes his phone number.
By Jeff Wolcott on 01/16/2009 7:03 am
Laura Hightower
A friend of mine who is a therapist once said to me ” Respect your denial or resistance to realizing something negative about yourself. Let it be recognized when you most trust your yourself and love yourself. by Laura Hightower on 1/16/09
By Laura Hightower on 01/17/2009 12:47 am
Sharon Red Deer
This is pretty much what I operate on: “Other evils there are that may come;…Yet it is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succor of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those who live after may have clean earth to till. What weather they shall have is not ours to rule.” J.R.R. Tolkien
By Sharon Red Deer on 01/17/2009 11:09 am
Meg Umans
Do the next right thing.
By Meg Umans on 01/17/2009 11:41 am
Eve Fulton
attend to the small things..that is so true and lately a mantra is getting me through some tough times…Be Kind…chocolate also helps!
By Eve Fulton on 01/17/2009 4:42 pm
AJ Tonarely
As a six-time cancer survivor over the last 23 years, the best adage I choose to live by is, “Live Your Life Like You’re Going To Die Tomorrow.” Before each and every surgery, I have ever had (more than 25—I’ve stopped counting), I apologize or make peace with anyone I have a grudge with and ask for forgiveness or grant forgiveness to the best of my ability at the time and frankly where I’m at in my own spiritual/mental development in the event I don’t make it out of surgery. But I want to note, I wasn’t able to fully forgive my clergyman father for sexually and emotionally abusing me until 24 yrs. later before my tracheostomy surgery in 2002. I just did the best I could until then. Eventually, I came to a place of grace during which I gradually changed. The anger was killing me and forgiving him just didn’t feel honest until that time… I always say, I love you, thank you, please and find something nice to say to everyone I meet or compliment them every day. I also dress up whenever I leave the house w/ lipstick and blush (or bronzer) otherwise people start rumors that I’m “sick again.” The dressing up is not just for me, it’s for those who have to look at me. I wear Hot Pink and Green to the oncologist’s, actually, I wear it almost everyday so that people I have contact with have a mental picture of me looking happy and healthy.
By AJ Tonarely on 01/18/2009 4:53 am