If gifts and responsibilities are one, then asking “What is our responsibility?” is the same as asking “What is our gift?” It is said that only humans have the capacity for gratitude. This is among our gifts.* Robin Wall Kimmerer
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us…You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world.** Marianne Williamson
Taking up the responsibility of your gift is to find your greatest freedom: If you are stuck, It is your lifesaver.
Gratitude notices what this is, Responsibility lives it for the world.
(If you were to name your gift, your responsibility, what would it be?)
This is what pilgrimage into the heart of the natural world does to us. It invites us to be.* Philip Newell
For so many of our destinations, no straight road takes us there.** Rebecca Solnit
I look forward and believe I need to find the most direct route.
I look backward and see this has rarely been so.
If I am prepared to turn this knowledge into wisdom then I may slow down, Take a break from an idea, Allow Earth to renew me, Play a little, Enjoy the company of others, Allow the road to lead me where it will.
We don’t have to arrive breathless or hurried or broken or hurting or disagreeable or jaded or alone.
The need for adventure is a blue moment. We embark on the adventure of life with hope and optimism, believing that something indescribably beautiful awaits discovery. And we’re willing to risk the ultimate disappointment.* AleXander McManus
Many of the important things in life are endless. Do not approach an endless game with a finite mindset. The objective is not to be done, but to settle into a daily lifestyle you can sustain and that allows you to make daily progress on the areas that matter.** James Clear
I read somewhere that we don’t so much go on an adventure as we are metby adventure.
If so, then to live with openness, hope, and optimism readies us for when it arrives.
We do not know whether it will unfold or not, but there is a daily possibility for surprise and new birth.
Perhaps our continuing openness is the ultimate adventure.
By focusing on our experiences from the perspective of a narrator who has to create a story, journaling creates distance from our experience. We feel less tied to it.* Ethan Kross
By learning compassion, we learn how to activate a particular state of mind and brain pattern in us associated with caring and nurturing that have soothing qualities.** Paul Gilbert
I found direction and purpose when I began to journal.
I guess this included compassion, Although I didn’t name it as such back then.
It felt like I was giving myself time to reflect and to start over.
To be able to face my errors, To learn from them and to grow.
What I found was an emerging purpose– Getting things so wrong hadn’t lost this.
Obversely, it appeared to clarify and distil purpose when I took the time to notice.
I still hope that the best days are ahead for you me, not because of being able to buy things or go places, but because of what I can bring into the life of another.
There’s never any closure in an awe-inspired life. We’re never allowed to know when this fantastic voyage might end … but that’s part of the life-disorientating chaos that makes this choice so thrillingly difficult.* Paul Pearsall
The traveller does not fixate on arriving, Everything and everyone between where we begin and where we end, holds the possibility of discovery.
How difficult could it be not to focus on “getting there” or completing the task, But remaining open to wonder all around us?
Both meaning and purpose are acts of self-transcendence. They are both about supplying a reason for being and action.* AleXander McManus
To what can I compare this generation? They are like children sitting in the marketplaces and calling out to others: ‘We played the flute for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not mourn.’** Jesus of Nazerath
You are the problem and you are the solution.
It’s okay for children to want others to join their games.
As we advance in years we discover it’s about serving others.^
We get over ourselves and discover another “me.”
A transcendent “me”– We each have one.
Meaning and purpose^^ will lead us there.
*AleXander McManus’ FutureU; **Matthew 11:16-17; ^Check out the elemental truths: life is hard, you’re not as special as you think, it’s not about you, you’re not in control, you’re going to die (Richard Rohr’s Adam’s Return); ^^How might you write out your meaning and purpose? Where are they leading you?
The comforting fantasy will kill us dead for certain. You know how lethal fantasies go: “Some day …” and “If I only had …” and “He will change …” and “If I just learn to control myself … when I get really ready, when I have enough xyz, when the kids are grown, when I am more secure, when I find someone else, and as soon as I …” and so on.* Clarissa Pinkola Estés
There will always be something we haven’t got.
If that means we don’t begin or take the next step, Then this can be comforting.
We can let ourselves off the hook for another day.
There’s always what we have got.
Who we are and what we have right now is likely more than enough to move forward.
Here’s an idea for journalers: I’ve begun to seed the pages of my journal– Anything from my reading that captures my attention, I sow them into the waiting pages.
An idea, a question, some explanation– Cross-pollinating with other words I bring, And I wonder each day what new varieties of imagination and possibility might grow.
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