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Let Go of Loneliness and Discontentment By Guy Finley Nothing is more discontented than
our lower nature, the false self. It is always unhappy with one thing
or another. If there is one weed in a field
of roses, you can bet that is what it will see. Since it has no real life of its
own, it must endlessly create stimulating thoughts and feelings of one
kind or another in order to give it the sensations of being alive. Like Sisyphus, the king of
ancient Carthage who was condemned in Hades to a life of endlessly
pushing a giant rock up a hill, only to have it roll back down again,
the false self must create and re-create its life over and over and
over again. It is desperately afraid of not
having the next thing to do, even if it's only to suffer over not yet
having the next thing to do. Since this false nature can't
really be anything in reality, it must endlessly inwardly and outwardly
do things in order to provide it with the sensations of being. What this means is that sooner or
later, these self-stimulating sensations, whether pleasurable or
painful, are going to come to an end. All things physical must pass;
this is a universal law. All sensations must fade, because
sensations are merely echoes of a sort, separate and apart from their
cause. Echoes, wherever they temporarily exist, are a kind of phantom.
They have an appearance but no real substance. An echo is a shadow; it
only seems to be there. But where is the terror once we
wake up? It doesn't exist anymore because it was only real as long as
we were participating in the bad dream. Try to see this important idea. A
painful event, whether it's twenty-four hours or twenty-four years old,
echoes within us as a memory of some kind. The emotional "sound" of it when
it is recalled makes us feel uncomfortable and discontented. So we set
out to isolate this disturbance, identify and resolve it, in order to
regain the contentment we say we will feel once this ache goes away. Let's try to understand this
amazing new idea by imagining a man lost in a series of deep and dark
caverns. He anxiously shouts out "hello!" and then strains to listen
for a response. A heartbeat passes, and in the distance he hears
"hello, hello." His spirits surge, and off he
races in the direction of the caller. He doesn't understand it is only
an echo. He doesn't know he is following the sound of his own voice --
a voice that is taking him deeper and deeper into the caves and further
away from any real help that could deliver him back into the sunlight. His mistake was assuming that the
voice he was hearing belonged to someone else who wasn't lost like he
was. Like the man lost in the caves,
we are living with and acting from an equally false assumption. We
believe that those voices within us, which so readily point out the
discontentment in our lives, are doing this pointing from some safe
harbor of contentment that we can reach only by following their
directions. These persistent and often highly
pitched thoughts and feelings project a future well-being for us, a
safe harbor -- but a harbor that wouldn't be necessary if these same
thoughts and feelings hadn't whipped up a storm in the first place. See this! The false self is
trying endlessly to get your attention in order to point out to you
that there is something missing in your life. Who needs a friend who
wakes you up every night to ask if you are asleep? I want to make this very clear.
You are not discontented. You have never been unhappy, not now or ever
before. No self-described condition of what you have or don't have is
at the root of your aching. Your feelings of discontentment
and unhappiness, all of these hollow echoes, are the very nature of the
false self with which you have unknowingly identified. Where feelings invariably fail,
being always triumphs. Who you really are is not separate from the very
cause of life itself. We can use other words to name this absolute
Source, but again, what we call it is not of any importance. What is important to remember is
when something from within you starts telling you that you are all
alone, you are not hearing your nature but the voice of separateness
itself. This is why you must never do anything about your
discontentment -- because it is not your discontentment. Choose being over doing, and one
day there will be no more pain in what you do or don't do, because you
won't be doing anything anymore to prove to yourself that you are real.
You are, and you will know it. ~ ~ ~
Guy Finley is
Founder and
Director of the Life of Learning Foundation, devoted to helping people
realize their True Relationship with Life. His works have sold over a
million copies worldwide and have been translated into twelve
languages. Guy’s program “Wisdom’s Way with Guy Finley” airs Sundays
worldwide on Wisdom Television.
For more information about
Guy Finley, his books and programs, ~ ~ ~ Personal Development & Achievement Resources Spirituality Spirituality resources : sites articles books change / personal growth change / coaching / self-help articles ~ ~ ~ |
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