Interesting Observations

blogging, social media and self-improvement!

Being Aware of Now

Do you ever find yourself thinking and reviewing the events that happened in the past? Things that happened just recently or sometimes even in the distant past? I used to spend way too much time thinking what happened, what could have been or even what will happen. This state of mind is not constant so to speak, but it stays in the subconscious. We all do it. We are constantly either thinking about something that didn’t turn out the way we expected it to or did turn out the way we wanted it… or how things are going to be in immediate or distant future. As a result we are constantly living a reactionary life.

This concept has been on my mind for a few days now because two years ago around the same time, I lost two relatives. Two uncles who were brothers, passed away within one month. That was the first time in my life I had experienced death from so close. I attended both funerals and was depressed for months after that! What I could not come to terms with was the time I could have spent with them and didn’t because of everything that was going on in my life. I have avoided things that I felt I could live without. And meeting uncles was something I definitely could live without. I loved both of these men dearly but we had strong differences of opinions. So having to go to meet them and spend an hour or two seemed like too much trouble at the time! But with their sudden passing, I was left with a hole in my heart. A huge resentment. I was haunted for weeks and months because of all things that now remain unsaid. The missed opportunities.

I believe we are all missing opportunities to some extent on a daily basis. We need to stop constant judging, speculating, criticizing, worrying about the future and getting angry about the past or even the people around us, and start living in the moment. We need to stop living a reactionary life, the life that is a result of something else and start living just in what is now. I came to this realization when after those two tragedies back to back I was killing myself with the guilt I felt, a friend presented me with the book called Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle.

I have started reading this book again because our minds play tricks on us and needs re-direction from time to time.
The book’s title says it all and some excerpts go like this

–“To be identified with your mind is to be trapped in time: the compulsion to live almost exclusively through memory and anticipation. This creates an endless preoccupation with past and future and an unwillingness to honor and acknowledge the present moment and allow it to be.”

and

–“Whatever the present moment contains, accept it as if you had chosen it. Always work with it, not against it. Make it your friend and ally, not your enemy. This will miraculously transform your whole life.”

So this change in our thinking should not have to wait for a tragedy to happen. We need to do whatever it is we need to do to start living in the now moment, believe in our abilities and go after our dreams without worrying too much about the outcomes. This is the only way to ultimate happiness. Be aware that what has happened will not change and what has to come, we do not know, there is only NOW, this very moment. Live it, enjoy it and make the most of it.

What’s your view on life at this very moment?

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today
18 comments
laketrees

the simplest of things make me happy at the moment….Pearl….
like knowng that I don’t have to go to the dentist for a while…haha :}
my life changed in 2002 when my dear Dad passed away…I am trying very hard to do what my Father always loved to do…and that is spending time with my family and “doing” things that I am passionate about..

pearl

nice to have you back Kim… I am glad your dental appointments are out of the way now :) and you are right, we get bogged down in messy life sometimes and forget to have fun and take things lightly…. Im also trying to do things I love, being myself and just let go …… SO, spent the entire day at the shore today :)

NakedBiff

I agree. I do a lot, but think a lot more. I’m trying to find a way to shift the balance more over to the ‘do’ side of the equation. It is very easy to get lost in one’s thoughts.

The Daily OM has some very interesting articles on state of mind that I think you might like: http://www.dailyom.com/

laketrees

sounds great Pearl….there’s nothing like the seashore…hearing the waves gently lapping……we call it the beach over here where the waves literally roar :}

Colin

Hi Pearl,
Thanks for the redirect to here, it’s a wonderful article.
I learnt a long time ago that yesterday is consigned to history, today is here and now and tomorrow is the future.
I spend many hours talking with my teenage daughter when she stays with me, and we cover my past in whatever she needs to know….although some things are best left unsaid ie: serving in the armed forces as a teenager in N.Ireland…..but that was my job at the time.
Life changes, my father died at 52 and mother at 55. My fathers death really shook me up and I then started to look at life in a different way, and it works for me :o)
You can leave quite a void with ‘if only’ so you have to turn it ‘I did’ and have no regrets.
Take care my friend :o)

SEO Company

The best policy is to live life to the max.

SEO

Yes you should i would agree with the above

Natalie

I find it an interesting layer of understanding of what Tolle has to say. It might also be an interesting question to look at the “guilt” as itself being a form of non-presence. I wonder that in living in the now, in presence, that the grief you experienced for not having spent time with your uncles before they died was a reaction to your thoughts of “what should have happened” or “who you thought you should have been”. You did not spend time with them and now (then) they were gone. You made yourself wrong for that, when that is just what happened. It is good insight to have that you avoided them because of a strong difference of opinions, something to observe in other areas of life (if you choose). How many relationships or things do you want that you avoid because of a mind-identified difficulty? Take the awarenes that comes with that and let it unfold in the present as needed. Your resistance to them did not matter to you then, but only as an experience to be dealt with now and utilized for insight. What I am saying is that it is not necessarily important NOW of what you didn’t do in the past. You can’t go back and redo it. No need for grief over what you should have done, only awareness of what presents itself now as an option for relationships (non-avoidance or transcendance).