How
To Begin (Changing Your Life)
—Thoughts
for a Summer Day
Let
me share with you 10 simple hints on beginning—on
how to re-boot your spiritual life, if it has become
automatic or stale. Getting your soul in shape
may lead to awe-inspiring mystical encounters some
day. Yet how to begin (or begin anew) isn’t
the least bit mystifying. Here are 10 simple thoughts
to launch you on your way.
1)
Begin here. How deeply you would long for all the
things you take for granted, if suddenly you lost
them. So much of what we want we have already,
so want what you have. Begin here.
2)
Begin now. You have everything you need. Everything.
Plus the bonus of today, one day more than you
will have if you wait until tomorrow. Begin now.
3)
Begin as you are. At your fingertips is a treasure
trove of memories and dreams. Put one good memory
together with one good dream and you are ready
to begin. (Good memories are memories that make
you feel good about yourself. Good dreams are the
stuff of which tomorrow’s good memories are
made.) Begin as you are.
4)
Begin by doing what you can. No more, but also
no less. Don’t throw yourself against the
wall. Walk around it. You can’t do the impossible,
but so much is possible. So many of the things
you haven’t tried you still can do. To get
around the wall, you can set out in either direction—the
wall has two ends. The important thing is to start
walking. Begin by doing what you can.
5)
Begin with those who are closest to you. They can
cheer you on only if you let them. Invite them
to give you a hand—bow. And to lend you a
hand—ask. And to take your hand—no
one can take your hand, if you bury it in your
pocket. You say they won’t cheer you on,
help you out, or take your hand? Maybe not, but
how will you know without asking? Begin by asking.
6)
Begin by turning the page. Today you can open a
new chapter of your life. If you are trapped in
your story (stuck in place, botching the same old
lines), revise the script. Practice a new line
or two. When reading a book, we sometimes reach
the bottom of a page only to realize we have been
glossing its words without registering their meaning.
We haven’t been paying attention. We don’t
have the faintest idea what we’ve just read.
So we go back to the top of the page and try to
concentrate. It happens again. Sentences dissolve
into words. Words into sounds. The books of our
lives are no different. Resist the temptation to
wallow over some dark passage until you know exactly
what went wrong. You never will. Besides, perfection
is not life’s goal. Neither is unnecessary
pain. If you are stuck, open a new chapter. Turn
the page.
7)
Begin by cleaning up your slate. Don’t erase
the past. File it by experience, to keep it handy
should you need it. But don’t obsess over
it. Ticking off a growing list of grievances gets
you nothing from life’s store. As for the
things on your "To Do" list that you’ll
probably never do, place them under a statute of
limitations. When they serve no longer to inspire
but only to haunt you, x them off. Not only is
there no reason to carry over unnecessary indictments
from one day to the next, but you’ll also
never reform the things you can about yourself,
until you stop trying to reform the things you
can’t. Begin by cleaning up your slate.
8)
Begin by looking for new questions, not old answers.
Answers close doors. Questions open them. Answers
lock us in place. Questions lead us on adventures.
Socrates boasted himself the most ignorant man
in Athens. Each new insight raised a dozen questions,
extending the compass of his ignorance. Yet beyond
every ridge he climbed there lay a wider vista.
The more questions we have, the farther we can
see.
9)
Begin with little regard for where your path may
lead. Destinations are overrated. And never what
we imagine. Even should we somehow manage to get
where we are heading, we won’t end up there.
Until life ends, no destination is final. In fact,
the best destinations are those we look back upon
as new beginnings. Good journeys always continue.
So don’t be driven by desire (that empty
place within you), never to rest until you reach
your goal. Invest your joy in the journey.
10)
Begin in the middle. Our lives will end mid-story,
so why not begin there? Don’t wait around
for the perfect starting pistol. Or until you are
ready. You may never be ready. No reason to wait
in the grandstand for some official to guide you
to the gate. Jump the fence. Enter the race in
the middle. Here. Now. As you are. By doing what
you can. With those who are closest to you. By
turning the page. Cleaning up your slate. Looking
for new questions, not old answers. And with little
regard for where your path will lead.
Finally,
before you begin, a bonus suggestion—Begin
small. Dream possible dreams. Set out to climb
a single hill, not every mountain. Soul work needn’t
be strenuous to be high impact. You can begin transforming
your life with a single phone call. Or by writing
a kind letter. Or by opening your blinds to let
the sun flood in. Don’t say it’s nothing.
It’s everything. For you have now begun.
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