Why chaos is good
Take action despite not knowing how things will turn out. To stop overthinking, stop over analyzing, stop trying to predict. To go ahead, take action, move forward in life, move forward in a new career, take new action, start a new business, get into a new relationship and stop overthinking whether or not it will work.
But self-doubt arises in all of us. No matter how strong we might be, the question of WHY always comes up:. Life has always been unpredictable and full of uncertainty. Accept it. Accepting the reality of our world today is the most important way to learn to live in it. Let go of your ego. Let go of trying to force order and perfection to an imperfect life full of ups and downs and uncertainty.
Often, stress, anxiety and tension occurs when you fight hard to change something you cannot change. You can only change you…your thoughts and your actions. Uncertainty about how things will turn out tomorrow holds a lot of us back from pursuing our life ambitions, relationships or business ideas.
You and I have just as good a shot as anyone at success and happiness. This moment right now is the only one you can be certain of. Taking a step forward in any direction makes you feel like you have some level of control of your life. When you take action, you stop overthinking and get less anxious because in some sense, you are creating your own future in the here and now.
The positive energy generated by movement of hands and body in forward motion towards the pursuit of a higher purpose, a life long trip, a business goal or to raise a child, is often what keeps us energetic, youthful and feeling alive.
Like a stone thrown into a pond of water, somehow one tiny little step forward puts in motion other pieces, rippling away, leading you to places, people and opportunities that you can never have imagined. So many of us arrived where we are through the zig zag motion of life, through stepping stones that were laid out all over the place.
Some of the greatest things in your life right now, came to you by chance, randomness and luck. The mind is a muscle and like any muscle sometimes the mind needs resistance and tension to grow and develop as much as it needs nourishment and positive energy. Use the chaos of life to learn and develop. Learn to let go of control, and surf the ever-changing wave. Let unpredictability rule, let randomness be the force of our life, let spontaneity be the rule.
Next post: Empty-Handed, Full-Hearted. Embracing Chaos for Good Some random thoughts based on my experiments with letting go: Work is better with chaos.
Work based on fun, play, and spontaneity is more interesting. Imagine a project that is started with a spontaneous idea, and then changes course as you do it, embraces the ideas of strangers, ends up in a fantastic new place you could not have possibly foreseen when you started. When I started Zen Habits in , I had my year planned out in detail, with goals, actions and weekly plans.
That, of course, was tossed out the door as soon as I started writing Zen Habits and meeting my first readers, who changed my life with their feedback and kind attention. My life was turned upside down, my plans became meaningless, and I learned that while life is unpredictable, that unpredictability can bring some amazing things. Be open to new possibilities.
I learned, that first year of Zen Habits, to be open to new opportunities. I saw the new door opening, considered it, and went in. Be open to strangers. You are a productivity machine! So it stands to reason, I would think, that if you choose to take different routes, cut corners or cross streams along your creative path, your brain will become stronger in the midst of chaos.
Later in the podcast, I found the substance I needed to fall head over heels into chaos. New studies have apparently found that the most constant component of the human body, the heart, actually grows stronger through dealing with minor deviations in its rhythm. So vital is our ability to cut new paths, to learn and grow that you could say our lives depend on it. By: Clare Howdle, 1 minute. For anyone who missed it, or is looking to relive the magic — here's a taste of At First Light as it happened Read More.
By: Paul Dicken, 3 minutes. Firelight returned to The Boatyard Cafe in Gweek earlier this month, and boy, was it worth the wait. Chaos and why our lives depend on it. We are terribly confused by the mere fact of our existence, and a danger to ourselves and to the rest of life. In these confused and restless zones in which present blends with future in a world of upheaval, we stand face to face with all the grandeur, the unprecedented grandeur, of The Phenomenon of Man What has made us so different from our forebears, so ambitious too, and so worried, is not merely that we have discovered and mastered other forces of nature.
It is that we have become conscious of the movement which is carrying us along. Awakened to life out of the night of unconsciousness, the will finds itself as an individual in an endless and boundless world, among innumerable individuals, all striving, suffering, and erring; and, as if through a troubled dream, it hurries back to the old unconsciousness.
I accept the chaos. I am not sure whether it accepts me. But certainty is an absurd one. Email This BlogThis!
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