Thoughts on Thinking

"When somebody persuades me that I am wrong, I change my mind. What do you do?" John Maynard Keynes

"If you're unhappy with your life, change your thinking." Charles Fillmore

"The primary cause of unhappiness is never the situation but your thoughts about it." Eckhart Tolle

"People are not disturbed by things, but by the view they take of them." Epictetus

"The unexamined life is not worth living." Socrates

"Consciousness is a terrible thing to waste." PunditGeorge

Friday, January 29, 2010

The Magic Word!

I’ve discovered the magic word. It’s not abracadabra, it’s not a secret. It’s not a mystery wrapped inside a symbol. The long sought magic word - the utterance of which brought immediate reward to the speaker - has been found. By me.

I’ll tell you exactly how I found it.

Driving to work one morning, one of those idiot motorists clustered around me, lane-hopped near my rear bumper. The idiot then challenged other drivers as he (maybe she, it was dark) then darted back into my lane, inches from my front bumper. My ego first impulse was to let loose a string of verbal (or at least mental) descriptions of the idiot’s clearly errant consciousness.
But I didn’t.

Although suspecting the driver was an “accident looking for victims” I didn’t go there, so to speak. This was a time when I was practicing Unity principles in my real-time daily living:

• That there is One active Presence in the Universe and my Life - God;

• Everyone and everything is the essence of God, and that’s Good;

• I co-create my Life with God with my thinking;

• Affirmation is a way to do this;

• Through thoughts, words and deeds, I live the Truth I know.

I was encouraging a habit to say and think what I desired in every moment, despite appearances. Did I desire for the idiot to cause an accident? Of course not. Therefore I thought and spoke to him/her “May you arrive safely at your destination.”

I thought that pretty good, and felt a bit of relief. A few more consciousness-challenged motorists wandered into my path, and I managed to send each along his way with the affirmation “May you arrive safely at your destination.”

Yet there needed to be a closing, an “amen” conclusion, to the thought lest I continue my attention on the behavior of the driver I’d rather not encounter. Hey, I’m a slow learner, but even I understandd that attention given = attraction to. I certainly didn’t want more distracted drivers on my drive.

Then flashed into my mind the magic word – the conclusion to that moment which would free my thinking and attention, and make it available for what I desired in my morning drive, rather than attract more idiots in my experience. I appended the thought: “May you arrive safely at your destination. Ashalli.” That was it. End of drama. The lanes cleared and I drove happily on my way.

I repeated the affirmation and magic word every time I drove and encountered idiots. It was evident, after a couple of days, that there were less idiots on the road.

Ashalli.

The question, naturally, would this magic word produce the same effect off road? One morning some staff were complaining about various ailments and such. Not wanting to add my attention to their discomfort, I affirmed for them “may you enjoy good health and comfort. Ashalli.” That might not have assisted them at that moment, but I did tell them how I appreciated their doing their work for the benefit of the clients.

A few days later I picked up a couple of items at the neighborhood grocery store when a patron with a basket cart full of stuff beat me to the “10 Items or Less” express checkout. What? You’ve never had such an experience? (Liar!) Ego impulse was to scowl at the offending person (I had a flashback to the road idiots). But, determined to practice what I preach, as it were, the thought was offered “may you move quickly with your tasks to your desired end. Ashalli.”

The super clerk managed to scan the entire cart in record time – and with a quick payment from the person. I liked this magic word. Then the same super clerk struggled with the bar code on one of my items. I could sense the glare from the fellow in line behind me. The laser scanner finally behaved and I was quickly beyond reach of what I imagine were less-than-Unity invectives from the fellow. Well, why not? I thought for him “may you have a pleasant day. Ashalli.” I went on about my business.

I’ve used the magic word frequently and I like the results. There is a caveat, however. It works only as the conclusion to a thought desiring a positive outcome for a person or situation. I say that because I desire to give my conscious attention, as best I’m able, to what I would like. Nothing new about that – did someone say The Golden Rule?

Do I want others to condemn my goofy moments to hell? Or, do I desire that they treat me as I desire to treat them? That’s Ashalli.

Now, there is a difference between “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you” and a variant that goes like “Do unto others as they would have you do unto them.” Let’s examine these two approaches, which are 180 degrees apart. “Do unto others as they would have you do unto them.” It sounds okay on the surface. It smacks of consideration and kindness. Yet it requires that you adjust your behavior and interactions to please what others want from you.

Of course in Unity we respect everyone and especially desire to interact with friends and loved ones to create harmony and joy. Hmmmm...isn’t that how you would want to be treated? To do unto others as they wish accepts the obligation to act according to their rules, which may or may not coincide with your values and feelings. In effect, you focus on what others want you to do. If they are satisfied, they may respond kindly. If they are not satisfied, well, they’ll let you know, so you can try harder.

If you’ve ever spent time on that merry-go-round you know that it can’t be done. You can never achieve joy this way. But you can attempt to do so and work really hard to please others for five, ten, fifteen, thirty, fifty years or more. It’ll never happen because you can only treat others as you wish to be treated. Would your life be more joyful and less entangled if you focused on treating everyone as you wished to be treated?

That approach places creative power in your hands and you’re no longer dependent on the good graces from pleasing others. It’s nice to be loved and appreciated - but there’s a huge difference between Love and Appreciation and conditional “love” and “appreciation.” Checkpoint: How do you reconcile demands to treat another in a way that makes you feel badly? The bad feeling is your indication that you’ve got the equation skewed. The best guide is to always treat others the way you want to be treated and in this you are more likely to feel good. It’s not about what other people do or don’t do. It’s what you truly desire for them - as what you would desire for yourself.
The more I practiced the magic word the more relaxed many daily tasks became. Then, one morning driving to work, another idiot zipped around. At once I thought “May you arrive safely at your destination. As Shall I.”

The Golden Rule...there’s a reason we continue to pay attention to it, even when we don’t quite “get it.”

As Shall I. Ashalli.

It’s not magic. It’s what you want for yourself. That’s probably what everyone else wants also. Even if they don’t know it. May you have a wonderful day. Ashalli.

(Presented Unity Church of Shreveport January 31, 2010)
-30-

Friday, January 22, 2010

Companion Book to the Blog!


No, really! The handle for this series of musing, “Habits, Patterns, and Thoughts That Go Bump in the Night” is the title of little book first published in 2002 (first edition) that summarized thirty years of observation and practices for managing change in personal life. It’s still alive as the basis for a monthly class I do at the Pines Treatment Center, other venues, and coincides nicely with the “Complaint Free” initiative that I’ve noted several times. The new second edition contains fresh material and a more correct title (Thoughts That Go Bump in the Night rather than Things) and, most importantly, available through Lulu.com at a low cost for the book and a free download. So, please download and enjoy.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Then and Now

Whenever something historical is in the area I want to check it out. So, yesterday Jo-El and I took a day trip to Little Rock to visit the Arkansas Arts Center presentation of “World of Pharaohs.” The exhibition, in cooperation with the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, presents a broad array of artifacts through some five thousand years of Egyptian history. Nicely displayed for close up and personal viewing. This isn’t a brooding exhibit but rather more spirited and how the ancients lived. Yes, there are the mummies and such, but “death” isn’t the theme then or now. A continuum of life, albeit with preparation. I enjoyed it. The only jarring moment came when examining a damaged wooden coffin lid and learning that it was being restored after suffering damage by “student protests in 1968.” Ancient looters did their work thousand of years ago, and I guess their descendants continue to break things in the present.


Monday, January 11, 2010

AVATAR


When I first learned that James Cameron was working on a cutting-edge technology epic involving human interaction with a sapient species on another planet, I imagined a 21st century “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” genre masterpiece. Avatar is a cinematic and experiential triumph. I had no problems with the 3-D glasses and my wife, concerned at first, fared well wearing them over her regular glasses.

Avatar delivers the expected cinematic spectacle. The driving plot behind the epic is, well, less than epic. The story line is a politically correct, clichéd, mix of stale plot elements from numerous films such “Dances With Wolves” and the “Terminators.” In a nut-shell, a nefarious mining firm from Earth is drooling to uproot and pillage the land beneath the indigenous sapient population on planet Pandora. Mining security forces are Marines on the prowl for more targets. Evil, greedy, mining boss begins a countdown for the Na’vi (as the indigenous are referred when not called “hostiles”) to vacate or perish. Somehow Eighteenth century early industrial age vigor survived four centuries to resume it’s lug-head energy on pristine Pandora. Sorry, that’s a hard sell for this viewer.

To the potential rescue is a paralyzed Marine, Sam Worthington, who is drafted into the Avatar program guided by Sigourney Weaver. The Avatar program merges human consciousness with cloned human/Na’vi forms. The Avatars hope to mingle with the natives as diplomats. Spinal cord inured Worthington relishes his time in/as Avatar and becomes more Na’vi than human. That’s a good scenario looking for a stellar story.


Sadly, it's not this one. Our protocol for extra-terrestrial explorations include sending sterile craft. We don't wish to contaminate another body, whether moon, Mars, asteroid, etc. That kind of consideration, given two hundred years to evolve, would not result in the handling of Pandora as depicted. And what's with the mining? What we’re learning regarding universal energy will make today’s power sources as primitive as enslaved muscles were to the steam engine two hundred years ago.  In Avatar, the humans aren't believable two hundred years hence.

Avatar excels in creating the experience of Pandora, an earth-like planet orbiting a Jovian type planet in the Alpha Centauri system. It is truly awesome - other worldly yet recognizable. ET went home and it’s gorgeous. A few insects, of course, but floating mountains (when you orbit a Jupiter like body, there’s got to be some curious forces at play) and glowing plants and the Eywa presence (the Force be with you.) It’s dream like. The Na’vi are ten foot tall feline favored sapiens and totally believable. Cameron has produced genuine alien talent. If only the story were as fresh and daring as the technology and created world.


The wonder of Avatar gets an A+. The driving story line doesn’t equal the characters and location and gets a C-.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

The Universe Will Expand Forever

According to NASA. 

Click here to read about the experiment confirming the Casimir effect which indicates the presence of "dark energy" causing the universe to expand forever.  Money quote:  “This vast and mysterious dark energy appears to gravitationally repel all matter and hence will likely cause the universe to expand forever.”

I find that very good news. The Universe is not a zero sum game afterall. If the universe is expanding then there is no fixed amount of energy or other "stuff" that must be divided/shared/hoarded, etc.   As above, so below, it is said.  This is very good news.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

2081

Just learned about this DVD. I viewed the trailer and it seems a direct film tackling the age-old contention between a land of equal opportunity and a land of equal outcomes. I’ve never found the two concepts compatible. Might just be a good start for 2010. Here’s the summary from the website:



A short film adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's Harrison Bergeron, 2081 depicts a dystopian future in which, thanks to the 212th Amendment to the Constitution and the unceasing vigilance of the United States Handicapper General, everyone is "finally equal...." The strong wear weights, the beautiful wear masks and the intelligent wear earpieces that fire off loud noises to keep them from taking unfair advantage of their brains. It is a poetic tale of triumph and tragedy about a broken family, a brutal government, and an act of defiance that changes everything.


Featuring an original score performed by the world-renowned Kronos Quartet (Requiem for a Dream) and narration by Academy Award Nominee Patricia Clarkson (Far From Heaven, Goodnight and Good Luck), 2081 stars James Cosmo (Braveheart, Trainspotting), Julie Hagerty (Airplane!, What About Bob?) and Armie Hammer (The Social Network).