How often do you let other people’s nonsense change your mood?  Do you  let a bad driver, rude waiter, curt boss, or an insensitive employee  ruin your day?  Unless you’re the Terminator, you’re probably set back  on your heels.  However, the mark of your success is how quickly you can  refocus on what’s important in your life. Sixteen years ago I learned  this lesson.  And I learned it in the back of a New York City taxi cab.  Here’s what happened.
I hopped in a taxi, and we took off for Grand Central Station.  We were  driving in the right lane when all of a sudden, a black car jumped out  of a parking space right in front of us.  My taxi driver slammed on his  brakes, the car skidded, the tires squealed, and at the very last moment  our car stopped just one inch from the other car’s back-end.
I couldn’t believe it.  But then I couldn’t believe what happened next.   The driver of the other car, the guy who almost caused a big accident,  whipped his head around and he started yelling bad words at us.  How do I  know?  Ask any New Yorker, some words in New York come with a special  face.  And for emphasis, he threw in a one finger salute, as if his  words were not enough.
But then here’s what really blew me away.  My taxi driver just smiled  and waved at the guy. And I mean, he was friendly.  So, I said, “Why did  you just do that!?  This guy could have killed us!”  And this is when  my taxi driver told me what I now call, “The Law of the Garbage Truck™.”   He said:
Many people are like garbage trucks.  They run around full of garbage,  full of frustration, full of anger, and full of disappointment.  As  their garbage piles up, they look for a place to dump it.  And if you  let them, they’ll dump it on you.
So when someone wants to dump on you, don’t take it personally.  Just  smile, wave, wish them well, and move on.  Believe me.  You’ll be  happier.
So I started thinking, how often do I let Garbage Trucks run right over  me?  And how often do I take their garbage and spread it to other people  at work, at home, or on the street?  It was then that I said, “I don’t  want their garbage and I’m not going to spread it anymore.”
I began to see Garbage Trucks.  Like in the movie “The Sixth Sense,” the  little boy said, “I see Dead People.”  Well now “I see Garbage Trucks.”   I see the load they’re carrying.  I see them coming to dump it.  And  like my taxi driver, I don’t take it personally; I just smile, wave,  wish them well, and I move on.
One of my favourite football players of all time is Walter Payton.   Every day on the football field, after being tackled, he would jump up  as quickly as he hit the ground.  He never dwelled on a hit.  Payton was  ready to make the next play his best.  Over the years the best players  from around the world in every sport have played this way:  Tiger Woods,  Nadia Comaneci, Muhammad Ali, Bjorn Borg, Chris Evert, Michael Jordan,  and Pele are just some of those players.  And the most inspiring leaders  have lived this way:  Nelson Mandela, Mother Theresa, Gandhi, and  Martin Luther King.
See, Roy Baumeister, a psychology researcher from Florida State  University, found in his extensive research that you remember bad things  more often than good things in your life.  You store the bad memories  more easily, and you recall them more frequently.
So the odds are against you when a Garbage Truck comes your way.  But when  you follow The Law of the Garbage Truck™, you take back control of your  life.  You make room for the good by letting go of the bad.
The best leaders know that they have to be ready for their next meeting.   The best sales people know that they have to be ready for their next  client.  And the best parents know that they have to be ready to welcome  their children home from school with hugs and kisses, no matter how  many garbage trucks they might have faced that day.  All of us know that  we have to be fully present, and at our best for the people we care  about.
The bottom line is that successful people do not let Garbage Trucks take over their lives.
What about you?  What would happen in your life, starting today, if you let more garbage trucks pass you by?
Here’s my bet:  You’ll be happier.
You have a choice.  Make it today.
Have a Garbage Free Day! ™