Coaching
Tip - 21st August 2011
The
Only Place You Need to Get to
"Don't
let a mad world tell you that success is anything other than a successful
present moment." - Eckhart Tolle
When
I moved to London several years ago I didn’t really know the
place at all. I’d visited a few times with my family for the
odd touristy day out but still didn’t know my way around.
So when it came to living and working here I knew I had quite a
bit of learning to do.
I remember one day arriving at Waterloo Station wondering how to
get to Aldermanbury, where I was due to start a new job. I had a
vague idea but wasn’t sure about the quickest or most effective
means of getting there. So I did what I thought was quite a sensible
thing to do (particularly for a man). I asked someone! I approached
a smart-suited, professional looking chap in the belief that he
was probably a city worker and therefore bound to be able to help.
“Excuse me,” I said, “I’m not from around
here. Please can you tell me the best or quickest way to get to
Aldermanbury?”
He looked thoughtfully up into the air and pondered for what seemed
like an age, and then replied, “Well to be honest with you,
I wouldn’t start from here”.
“Thanks,” I thought, “what a rubbish piece of
advice!”
The reason that little encounter has always stuck with me is because
I think it’s a perfect metaphor for how many people go about
trying to achieve a better life for themselves. They may have an
idea of where it is they want to get to, but find it hard to take
a step in the right direction because they resist the notion of
having to start from where they are.
I’ve come to realise over the years that people can only experience
dissatisfaction with their life when they believe that their situation
should be different to how it actually is. I’ve noticed it
with just about every client I’ve ever work with and I’ve
certainly experienced it multiple times in my own life. Whilst I’ve
helped a ton people work through an array of diverse and unique
issues, the conversation that takes place time and time again is
the one that invites us to accept reality just the way it is right
now, before figuring out what to do next.
What we call ‘the stress of life’ rarely has anything
to do with what’s actually going on, and has everything do
with our thoughts and interpretations of what’s going on.
As Human Beings we don’t ever get to experience the ‘real
world’, we only get to experience our own thinking.
If we are unhappy with where we are right now, the cause of the
feeling will be rooted in the thought that there is some other place
we’d rather be. Or, if we are feeling stuck, that can only
be due to the thought that there is a direction we are supposed
to be heading in, otherwise there would be no reason to be unstuck.
When we contrast this with the way human experience really works,
the only place we can ever get to is right here, right now. Thinking
that we are supposed to be anywhere other than right here, right
now can literally drive us bonkers.
The most stressful strategy we can adopt for motivating ourselves
to change our situation (and don’t worry if you’ve been
doing this, most of us have at one time or another) is to direct
our emotional energy toward hating the way things are. We convince
ourselves that if we can just muster up a strong enough loathing
for our current landscape then we will be compelled to take massive
action and finally break free from everything that has been holding
us back.
There are a few reasons why this is a crappy way of doing things.
Not least that it seldom works!
How many times have you heard people complain about how bad some
aspect of their life is and yet months, if not years, later absolutely
nothing has changed? Over time they just got used to feeling bad;
they habituated into their negativity, which not only set them on
a path of blaming and complaining, it also shut them off to the
kind of inspired thinking they would have needed to turn their ‘right
here, right now’ into something better.
In my experience there are three kinds of thought that can cause
us to feel dissatisfied with where we are at:
1 – Thoughts about expectation
2 – Thoughts about purpose
3 – Thoughts along the lines of, “Anything would
be better than this”
Thoughts about expectation are where we cast judgement
on ourselves for how we are currently doing compared to a story
we’ve been sold. All of our lives we’ve had the bar
set for us by our parents, teachers, friends, colleagues, advertisers,
glossy mags, even OURSELVES, with regards to the standards and accomplishments
we should have reached by this point in our lives. It is where we
measure the distance between who we think we are versus who think
we should be and then allow the size of the gap (or chasm in some
cases) to proportionately dictate how anxious we should be feeling.
Thoughts about purpose are when we get the idea
into our heads that we are wasting our lives by not doing the things
we would rather be doing to make a positive difference in the world
and to make our lives count. It is where we feel that our circumstances
and outside influences are preventing us from living our ‘true
north’, leaving us stewing in frustration and resentment.
The most common reason why this becomes a lingering issue for people
is that they make ‘living their purpose’ dependant on
a specific set of criteria having to be met.
If you ever wanted to feel really frustrated with your life then
I absolutely recommend setting it up in such a way that you cannot
be truly happy until you have enough money, energy, creativity,
opportunity, support or freedom to do live it out in the specific
way you’ve always imagined.
Thoughts that resemble “Anything would be better than
this” are what crop up we are not connected to a
purpose or direction and have no idea what it is that we want. What
we do know, though, is that we’re not having fun right now
and attribute that to whatever is happening on the outside. “I’m
not happy and, although I’m not entirely sure why that is,
it must have something to do with my job, or my boss, or my partner,
or my location, so I want to change it all. I don’t know exactly
what I’m going to change it to; I just know I’ll be
happier when it’s different”. The phrase that springs
to mind here is – It doesn’t matter where you go, there
you’ll be.
Whenever we think these kinds of thoughts we feel stress. But the
only stressful element to it is the thought itself. If nothing changed
in our situation other than we were suddenly unable to think those
kinds of thoughts, we would simply be people living the lives we’ve
got. No comparison, no judgement, no stress.
What I know won’t work is to ask to you not to think
those thoughts. As far as I can tell you don’t control that
(at least not without years of meditative training); it’s
just what the mind does. The smartest and kindest thing you can
do to move towards the life you want, is to start by accepting and
valuing your currently reality exactly the way it is. Right here,
right now is the only place you’ll ever need to get to.
The starting point for any journey will never not be where
you already are. As we travel through life we learn that no matter
how far we get, we never leave the present. We never leave and yet
we are constantly arriving.
To live with the thought that your life is not supposed to be exactly
the way it is right now is to be disconnected from the most integral
part of the route map of your journey; the beginning.
How do I know you are exactly where you are supposed to be? Because
you’re not anywhere else.
So what is the stress-free formula for turning ‘right
here, right now’ into a place you would love to hang out?
Let’s take a look as I explain your homework for this session.
HOMEWORK
There
is a big difference between how you show up in the world when you
are trying to prove the circumstances of your life are holding you
back and how you show up when you are coming from a place of inspired
service. Service in this context simply means giving your best self
to the world in this very moment.
There
are three ingredients that help things along nicely:
1- Knowledge of how you would like to
feel if ‘right here, right now’ were already the
happy place you want it to be.
2- An understanding of how you would think and behave differently
with that feeling as your guide. How would you treat yourself
and how would you interact with others.
3- Patience.
I
invite you to take each of these ingredients and add them into the
mix of your life straight away.
The
instant you “assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled”
and operate from that space, the present moment has a habit of transforming
in the most wonderful ways.
Initially
you’ll notice that nothing has changed and yet everything
is different. Over time, with patience, you’ll realise that
not only can you peacefully go after whatever it is you want to
create in your life, but you can also stay happy, regardless of
how the scenery changes along the way.
Take great care. Namaste.
I
hope you enjoy the coaching tips from Life Happens. I would love
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