Life Happens For Me
Decisions. We all
make them – lots of them- every day.
Some are minor and appear to be inconsequential. Coffee?
No Coffee? What to wear? Can I do one more thing before I leave? Is it okey to be late for this
appointment? Should I return that
call?
Other decisions seem more important. Ask her to marry me? Lie or tell the truth? Should I take that job? Should I quit? Sell the house? Go to college? Start a business?
Consider that many of these decisions, maybe even most of
them are made automatically. What
determines the difference between the decision I make in a situation and the
decision you would make in the same situation has a lot to do with how we each
view life.
While this is a complex concept, let’s keep it really simple. Life’s experience has shown me that there are
three lenses through which we might view life.
We all have a dominant default lens but we periodically switch and temporarily
view life through either of the other two perspectives.
I label these lenses or paradigms,
1.
Life happens BECAUSE of me.
2.
Life happens TO me.
3.
Life happens FOR me.
Life Happens BECAUSE
of Me
Life viewed through this lens looks like something to
control. If I view life through this
paradigm, I work hard, I use strategies and tactics and try to dominate others
and situations. People are pawns to be
moved around on the game board and tools to leverage for power and results. I am the center of the universe. I am manipulative, domineering and
driven. The cost of living from this
view is friendship, connection, closeness and intimacy. I may often enjoy material success and
financial gain, but have inner turmoil and rarely experience real contentment
or satisfaction. Believing that life
happens because of me limits the possibilities in life to whatever I can force
to happen.
Life Happens To Me
This view is that of a victim. Through this lens I live life
powerlessly. Life appears to be a game
of chance subject to superstition and luck.
When things go wrong as I expect them to, I blame others. When things go right, I feel lucky and brace
myself for the let down to avoid feeling disappointed. I feel out of control and believe I have no
say in what happens. I am scared and
paranoid and organize my life in such a way as to be safe. I am cautious and careful. I don’t trust anyone. I limit my risks but life cannot get small
enough to feel safe from this perspective.
The price I pay for this paradigm is peace, comfort, a sense of power or
well-being. I feel hopeless, resentful
and afraid. Believing life happens to me
eliminates any possibility for a fulfilled and happy life.
Life Happens For Me
From this perspective life looks like a series of
opportunities and fun mysteries.
Everything that happens is welcomed and embraced. If I believe that life happens for me I’m like
a kid in a candy store, enjoying life as it presents one big adventure after
another. There is only benefit to this perspective. Others either find me attractive, seeing me
as charismatic and vivacious, or they see me as naive and unaware of reality
and the dangers that lurk in life. What
is possible from this perspective is anything.
Even my wildest dreams.
So what prevents us
from the view, Life Happens For Me?
We live with fears that we made up along the way at some point. These fears are the natural result of
believing thoughts that simply are not true.
Most of our programming is complete by the time we are 7 or 8 years
old. By then most of us have decided
that there must be something wrong with us because we just don’t match up to
the perfect ideal that the world calls normal.
We think that what we fear is real; that our fears are the truth.
We live life as if these and other fears are real: “I’m not
good enough, smart enough, tall enough, short enough, cute enough, funny
enough, tough enough, something is wrong with me, I am alone, it’s all up to
me, I can’t trust anyone, I’m a fraud, I’m going to fail, I will be rejected…” The list is endless.
How do you transform
these fears so that you can live life from the perspective, Life Happens For
Me?
Here are Seven
disciplines to live by which will help you realize that Life actually does Happen For You.
1.
Heal the
past when the past shows up as unhealed. You may have to develop the ability to spot
the unhealed past which shows up as emotional upset, repeated patterns of
struggle and disappointment, stuckness, co-dependent stickiness, physical
illness, exhaustion, irritation, periods of depression, uncontrolled periods of
anger or sadness. And you will
certainly have to be humble enough and committed enough to your transformation
to seek help when the unhealed past shows up.
The unhealed mind identifies with itself and is confused. It has no interest in healing the past. It is too busy trying to survive.
2.
Expose
the false fears. Most of your fears
are false. You will find these fears at
the bottom of practically every problem you experience. Look for them there and when you find them,
expose them to reality and they will shrink and die.
3.
Recognize
who you really are. Our fears have
us believing that we are broken and unlovable.
Realize (make it real) that you are one of God’s kids, or a child of the Universe if you prefer. You landed on
this planet as whole, perfect, complete and amazing!
4.
Create a
compelling and inspired vision for the life that you would be living if you
knew you were whole, perfect, complete and amazing. Commit that vision to paper and review it
often.
5.
Live life
now powerfully into that vision.
What actions would someone who will be living that vision take now? Take those actions, make a plan, set goals
and be flexible. Life might just show
you a new vision and a new plan along the way.
6.
Trust
Life. Start looking for evidence
that life is serving you. Keep a
miracles journal. Look for at least one
example every day that Life Happens For You.
7.
Serve
Others. If Life Happens For You,
that means that life is serving you. To
get into the flow of life, serve others.
Build a powerful current of service and enjoy the ride!
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