Wise Choosing. Intuition.
Clarity. Gratitude. Ease. Understanding. Direction. Connection. Happiness. Love.
All pretty important eh? All areas that we could grow into stronger, experience more naturally… expending less precious energy on the fight to figure it out, and more on developing and accelerating in our unique and important missions.
So what is it
exactly? What is that thing, that magical little droplet
of a thing that links all of these magnificent acts of being together and to us?
Ready for it?
In my mind, it all boils down to Paying Attention.
Well duh right? I know it sounds so… trivial, bordering
on condescension, associated with disempowering voices of authority.
But if we can disentangle
this notion from our, say, repressive educational experiences, and apply it to
our adult living experiences, paying
attention quite simply means activating our senses. Being awake in our moment – seeing,
tasting, smelling, hearing, and feeling what’s happening inside and around us.
Zeroing in on the
details. Looking closely. Making connections between phenomena -
because there’s nothing more real than the fact that everything, and I mean
EVERYTHING is connected.
It’s about paying
attention to our bodies, and the reality that they are always sending us
signals. A rash is not just a
rash. Neither is constipation,
lethargy, a lump, or chronic allergies.
All of these are signs, cries for help, that something is out of balance
and needs to be paid attention to.
When we choose to ignore, numb or suppress our body’s signals, we are
sending ourselves the message that we are not worthy of health, that our fear or
apathy is more valuable than our life.
For my mom, it was an ultrasound her doctor ordered that could have
caught the cancer 6 months before it took her. The signs were all there – pain, discomfort, yellowing eyes,
months and months of an on again off again flu. But her fear of the truth swallowed her life in one ruthless
fell swoop.
We must shift our
understanding to viewing things WHOLLY, rather than in parts, slices, and fragments.
Thinking in a circle (how it all connects) rather than in a line (how it all
ends). It’s about remembering as
often as possible that everything small represents something much larger – that
a cell is the universe and the universe a cell.
It’s remembering that our
actions and thoughts feed back into one big ol’ collective pot of energy soup, and
we all receive nourishment from the same dang pot. It’s taking responsibility for the ingredients that we
contribute. Are they healthy?
Wholesome? Spicy? Fresh? Or are they toxic? Empty calories? Processed bullshit
filled with carcinogens? Are they easy or are they right? Did you prepare them with love or with carelessness? Every thought, every choice, every act counts. Because if we like it or not, we are all
feeding each other, our earth, and our sweet selves with the energy we
cultivate and maintain.
My sister-in-law, Lindsay
(although we usually omit the in-law part) once told me that it’s about reading
your life like a novel. There are
signs, symbols, and connections all over, everywhere. And it’s true.
The closer we pay attention to the details, the more meaningful and
clear our missions in this life become.
My mom sends me ladybugs.
That’s when I know that she’s with me, validating my moves, letting me
know that she’s got my back. And with
out fail, it’s always in times I need her most that a little lady finds its way
to me.
And it’s as brilliant and
simple as Paying Attention. Although
the reality is that it’s much more simple in theory. We have to consciously re-train our mental patterns… choosing
to not waste our lives trapped inside our heads, perpetually trippin’ on the
past, and trying to control the future. Paying Attention is a life-long
dedication. It’s a meditation
through life. It’s the way the
monks do.
It’s also the way to
genuine happiness, real fulfillment, and true love. This shit saves lives.
Which means to me that it’s
definitely worth some honest ongoing practice.
What does it mean to you?
3 comments:
as always, beautifully written. thanks for sharing.
To me, being awake means noticing the patterns that happen around me in nature as well as in my life events!
Remembering that you have a body is so important. And it goes so much farther than just what you put in your body and how much sleep you're getting and all that crap.
How long do you allow your body to adversely react to psychological ill health? how long do you allow the chemicals that cause that anxious tightness in your throat to stick around? what about the chemicals of depression that glue you to bed? Do you let tears chap your face? I mean, these are all signs that indicate that we're subjecting ourselves to something not good for us. To uphold western ideas of patiently enduring is heracy to our overall mental and physical health. If it's bad, leave!!
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