How to Thrive on What Is?
Metaphysical Mind #77
Hello Friend,
In this issue of the Metaphysical Mind Ezine I will be sharing with you an excellent article titled "Thriving on What Is" by Alice Gardner. May you take the information in this article straight to your heart...
Before we get to the article I would like to share with you some wise words on accepting reality and truly thriving on what is:
"I'm a lover of reality. When I argue with What Is, I lose, but only 100% of the time." -- Byron Katie
"We live the perfect process created by the Universe, and we do that perfectly whether we realize it or not." -- Osho
“Everything is perfect in the universe, even your desire to improve it." -- Wayne Dyer
Thriving on What Is by Alice Gardner
It is so easy to look around at life and assume that life needs fixing to make it right. We
don't have to go much farther than the evening news to notice what's wrong with the
world: the violence, hunger, corruption, environmental issues and so on. We want to do
something to be a part of the solution, rather than a part of the problem, whether it is
through outer social action, through financial support good organizations or through
working on ourselves. We notice so little change from our actions and wonder what else
can be done. We pray, we meditate, we wonder...
The orientation of seeing a world that needs fixing to be the "right" world can actually be
deconstructed if we are willing to explore that. The beginning point is in the realization
that we are thinking that we know what a "right" world would look like. We think that
rape and murder and awful things like that can obviously be known to be "wrong" and a
"right" world would not contain things like that. But look again at the way that we know
this... what is it based on? Do we really have the big picture, or are we making judgments
about right and wrong based on our own personal tendency to want to avoid pain and
move towards pleasure? Of course we want to avoid pain and wishing that others avoid
pain too is just an extension of our own preferences to include the world. In a way, if my
neighbor is hurting, I am hurting with him or her. We are all in this together.
But if we look at our own lives with honesty and open-mindedness, is it clear that
avoidance of pain is the "right" thing for us personally? Have pain and suffering played a
role in our lives that in hindsight we respect? Most often the answer is yes. If we look
deeply into the painful points in our history, these are the growing points, the places
where new energy and new life has had an opportunity to enter our lives because the old
patterns have been destroyed or disrupted by some loss, accident, crime or sickness.
These things make us move on, even if it is through touching into the depths of despair.
Meanwhile life just is what it is. Without our having decided that it is supposed to look a
certain way, or end up a certain way, it just is what it is. Not only that but also, it just
ends up the way it ends up. Far from being the invitation to idleness that this may initially
seem (but really is not at all) the above are just plain statements of what is so, at least
before our judging/thinking minds get started.
When I look into this it seems clear that we really don't know what should or shouldn't be
happening in ourselves or in the world. Just because we may feel a dark emotion and start
behaving badly towards our loved ones, do we know that this is "wrong"? Do we actually
know that we are a bad person because this has occurred? Could the experience instead
be looked at as developmentally necessary, helpful and illuminating? Could this alternate
perspective actually be a way out of the endless repetition of our patterns?
Do we know for sure that the car accident or the crime in today's news should not have
happened? The latest war casualties? Although mind will claim to be sure that these
things are wrong, are we certain that they really are? Are we certain that something
critical won't be changed by this "bad" happening that will make all the difference in
some significant "good" happening later that we care even more about? Do we know for
sure that the critical world situation (being a threat to our survival as a species) is not
exactly the circumstance that will motivate a positive response that otherwise would not
have been dreamed of?
Accepting our own not-knowing gives us entry into a new relationship with the world and
with our own selves. If we don't spend all of our energies resisting what is, we can open
up a deeper relationship to it. Our own dark feelings become pointers into whatever in us
is still needing to be awakened. The negative situations in the world become as important
a part of things as the positives, maybe more, as we accept them as having a part to play.
Without resisting what is, we are able to connect more fully with ourselves and our
world, and through this deeper contact we are nourished. While mind was busy resisting
the "wrongness" in ourselves and our world, our heart connection was jammed-up with
judgment. Through acceptance of what is, we can begin to feel more deeply and be
nourished not only by the positive happenings in ourselves and in life, but also by the
negatives. They are also being welcomed in our open-heartedness, and through this
welcoming we are able to thrive in the world as it is, rather than starve in a mentally
constructed world of lack and disconnection.
What could be a more perfect example of thriving on what is, than the summer flowers.
What better example of us each doing our own part and tending to our own blossoming
without judgment about whether it is "right" or "wrong" or if its going to end well or not.
The flowers all just end up on the compost heap and back into the soil!
Sure, ok, they don't have these minds to contend with, it's true, so maybe its totally easy
for them. But they show up in our gardens and homes as an example of the extraordinary
yet fleeting beauty that we experience in this thing called life, and how little we need to
refer to our ideas about right and wrong or good or bad to come to blossom in a totally
unique, natural and easeful way. We draw nourishment from the ground of all that has
come and gone before us into our own expression of who we are, and then let that go
back again to the ground. Just the way it is.
© 2007 Alice Gardner
Alice Gardner is author of the new title: Life Beyond Belief, Everyday Living as Spiritual
Practice, available at www.awakepublishing.com, Amazon.com and through Ingram. You are
invited to also visit www.wideawakeliving.com, a sister website written by Alice as a support and
inspiration for spiritual awakening no matter what your tradition. Alice also offers mentoring
services by telephone. More information is available at www.wideawakeliving.com.
Your reality is a perfect one, so go out and enjoy it!
Jason

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