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« Share a meaningful lesson | Main | Bo Yin Ra and 5 Tips to reconnect with core happiness »
Monday
Dec012008

Why are you where you are?

Many people focus on where they are headed, the future, those things that have yet to happen. You may have a test coming up and you prepare. You mind may be on your next vacation, your goal of getting a promotion, of getting somewhere you want to go.

Human beings gain more knowledge during difficult experiences. Why you are where you are is not always obvious to your conscious mind, but you figure it out. You may assume you got to a meeting to take in what has been planned on an agenda, but the real reason if not what you assume.  You may assume you stopped at a gas station to fill your tank, but you actually had to see an article in a paper.  There you discovered an unforseen opportunity.

When you take a particular bus, you may actually do this because of a person you meet. That person may become your business partner, your spouse or, assumesome other meaningful role. Youa re not going to know exactly whay you are somewhere until later.  Share a story of events that have unfolded for you.

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Reader Comments (6)

Dear Liara,

You always make me think. You know, when I first was in recovery, I used to live in either the pain of the past--or in the fear of the future. One of the hardest things for me to learn to do was to live in the present--and not worry too much about what the future would hold (other than trying to do the right thing in the present, which makes it more likely that we will have a positive future experience). I learned a great deal from a job I had, working as a taxi driver--and one of the contracts we had were to drive developmentally disabled people from their group homes to work (or from the REACH center that helped them to live more independently). I learned so much from these people because they truly did live in the present. I would see them have an argument in the morning but in the afternoon, everything was fine--they didn't let their past disagreement harm their basic friendship.

People were surprised when I told them how much I learned from my REACH clients--but I really did learn such a valuable lesson.

Take care, friend--

Melinda
December 2, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMelinda
Melinda, thank you for your candid sharing of this experience. Personal chapters of your life are not only valuable for what you choose to gain and apply, but also for whatever other people choose to learn from you. You verbalize things and set it out into the universe. The energy is free form. People choose to listen, ignore it, use it or not.
December 2, 2008 | Registered CommenterLiara Covert
"You may assume you got to a meeting to take in what has been planned on an agenda, but the real reason if not what you assume. You may assume you stopped at a gas station to fill your tank, but you actually had to see an article in a paper. There you discovered an unforseen opportunity."

Oh dear Liara! This is such a fun way to live one's life. I can't really relate a specific incident here as there are so many they just merge into my whole life; it's the way I look at and live life.

I find this whole reality very exciting and freeing. It gives purpose to everything we do, everywhere we go, and everyone we meet. It's like the magical journey of Life. I picture all the souls moving toward me and all the soul I am moving toward, each to meet the other, all the events culminating to bring about learning and change and it is just wonderous and so profoundly magical that I feel like a happy kid.

The profoundity and ramifications of livng life this way are just staggering....and so reassuring. Timeless and infinite. Always held in safety and love.

Oh thank you for sharing this one.
Hugs,
Robin
December 3, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRobin Easton
Robin, this post reminds people that many motivations exist for their own behaviour. You can get on a bus with a ticket to a particular destination, and feel compelled to change the destination part of the way there. This has happened to me more than once. Yet, if I had not embarked on the initial journey, on aplane, train or bus, I never would have discovered opportunities to take different forks in the road, or chosen to do so.
December 7, 2008 | Registered CommenterLiara Covert
When I really decided that I wanted to be an actor, I enrolled for a drama course at the technical college I was in (I was 16yrs) The course leader was really good, but he didn't seem to notice me.

On the Easter break, I noticed that there was a drama weekend course nearby and so I enrolled and attended..hoping that I would improve and that he would then notice me when I returned after the break.

When I got to the course, I found that he was conducting it :)

A month or so later, he rang a drama college and drove me down to London to attend an interview...I was successful. It was a major step in becoming a professional performer.

henry
December 27, 2008 | Unregistered CommentersoulMerlin
Henry, that is a down-to-earth play-by-play of a series of life-transforming decisions. How did it make you feel? Do you feel differently now than you did when you made the decisions themselves? I wonder if you have ever read the story of Patrick Stewart and how he got into his theatre career. I find it fascinating that his father was an admiral in the British navy and had other plans for his son who chose to follow creative interests. Patrick really did not feel he "made it" until his 40s. You may be familliar with his Shakespearean roles on stage as well as his screen and tv roles as Jean-Luc Piccard.
December 27, 2008 | Registered CommenterLiara Covert

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