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Stop Worrying by Peter Cajander Many
times it looks like we live for our worries. They surround us and
follow us everywhere we go. There might be a lot to worry about or just
many tiny issues that pile up and make us uncomfortable. Worries
are always subjective and they also evolve over time. We learn to cope
in life and do not stress about the same things over and over again.
Our subjects of worrying change, but the basic concept remains
intact—we keep constantly stressing about our future and survival. Some
of these worries may turn into obsessions and even disturb our sleep
and daily activities. Often,
we are going around with our thoughts that are dependent on factors
that are beyond our control. We desperately would like to know what
happens before the actual reality materializes. We cannot stand
uncertainty. Actually,
we are only afraid of the uncertainty. Even knowing what is going to
happen, no matter how bad, is more bearable than the great uncertainty. This
is not necessary, however. We do not need to stress about life—it’s
totally unnecessary. The paradox just is that we have to realize this
first and then we are liberated from the catch-22. It is
the same with most of the important facts of life—we have to live them
true, gain an insight first. We have to see the pattern that our mind
repeats every time. It
identifies some unknown issues and starts to process them. This way,
our mind keeps us busy—after all, our mind exists only when we think. When
we start to realize that things do get sorted out and worrying really
is unnecessary, we will finally stop worrying altogether. Worrying has
a lot to do with self-confidence and acceptance. We
have to know and trust ourselves. When we are confident that we can
handle and manage in life no matter what comes our way, this inner
confidence will guide us and provide us with inner peace. We
stop worrying about other people and their responses and thoughts about
us. Our greatest concern will then be to act according to our own
intuitions and feeling about what are the right choices and actions in
the situations at hand. As
well, we realize that things that are beyond our control should not be
worried about at all—we simply have to accept them, as they are and
without any denial or resistance. Facing
the facts is often the most difficult part. We do not want to admit the
reality, even though we might somehow realize it. It is just something
too painful to accept. Instead
of finding solutions or positive outcomes, we are trapped in a loop of
thoughts that lead nowhere. The time we use wondering about our
possible future we cannot then use to find and identify new
opportunities that may bypass us in the meanwhile. Often,
the very answers we look for are offered to us but we simply cannot see
them—we are fixed in our thinking patterns and projected outcomes. In
other words, we are too busy worrying and life, and many good moments
and opportunities as well, passes us by. Therefore,
we constantly try to avoid any imaginable disturbance or negative
incident. Still, these incidents come when we least expect them—we
cannot avoid them. We even die one day—no matter how much we worry or
think about it. Worrying
does not help us to live. Actually, it does not allow us to experience
and enjoy life as it comes, and it keeps us obsessed about some future
incident that potentially can happen or may not happen at all. The
only one who loses in this game is us. Worrying is time wasted without
any positive outcomes expected—one of the great lessons to learn in
life. ~
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is one of many articles you can read at
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