Huffington Post article on 8 subconscious behaviors that keep people from living their lives they want to live:
Every generation has a "monoculture" of sorts, a governing pattern or
system of beliefs that people unconsciously accept as "truth." It's
easy to identify the monoculture of Germany in the 1930s, or America in
1776. It's clear what people at those times, in those places, accepted
to be "good" and "true" even when in reality, that was certainly not
always the case.
The objectivity required to see the effects of
present monoculture is very difficult to maintain (once you have so
deeply accepted an idea as 'truth' it doesn't register as 'cultural' or
'subjective' anymore) ... but it's crucial. So much of our inner turmoil
is simply the result of conducting a life we don't inherently agree
with, because we have accepted an inner narrative of "normal" and
"ideal" without ever realizing.
The fundamentals of any given
monoculture tend to surround how to live your best life, how to live a
better life, and what's most worth living for (nation, religion, self,
etc.) and there are a number of ways in which our current system has us
shooting ourselves in the feet as we try to step forward. Simply, there
are a few fundamentals on happiness, decision making, instinct following
and peace finding that we don't seem to understand.
So here, eight of the daily behaviors and unconscious habits that are keeping you from the life you really want.
1.
You believe that creating your best possible life is a matter of
deciding what you want and then going after it, but in reality, you are
psychologically incapable of being able to predict what will make you
happy.
Your brain can only perceive what it has known, so when you choose what you want for the future, you're actually just
re-creating a solution or an ideal of the past. Ironically, when said
ideas don't come to fruition (things never look the way we think they
will) you suffer, because you think you've failed, when really, you're
most likely experiencing something better than you could have chosen for
yourself at the time. (Moral of the story: Living in the moment isn't a
lofty ideal reserved for the zen and enlightened, it's the only way to
live a life that isn't infiltrated with illusions... it's the only thing
your brain can actually comprehend.)
2. You extrapolate
the present moment because you believe that success is somewhere you
"arrive," so you are constantly trying to take a snapshot of your life
and see if you can be happy yet.
You accidentally
convince yourself that any given moment is your life, when in reality,
it is a moment in your life. Because we're wired to believe that success
is somewhere we get to - when goals are accomplished and things are
completed - we're constantly measuring our present moments by how
"finished" they are, how good the story sounds, how someone else would
judge the summary. (If at any point you find yourself thinking: "is this
all there is?" you're forgetting that everything is transitory. There
is nowhere to "arrive" at. The only thing you're rushing toward is
death. Accomplishing goals is not success. How much you learn and enjoy
and expand in the process of doing them is.)
3. You assume that when it comes to following your "gut instincts," happiness is "good," and fear and pain is "bad."
When
you consider doing something that you truly love and are invested in,
you are going to feel an influx of fear and pain, mostly because it will
involve being vulnerable. When it comes to making decisions, you have
to know that bad feelings are not deterrents. They are indicators that
you want to do something, but it scares you (which are the things most
worth doing, if you ask me). Not wanting to do something would make you
feel indifferent about it. Fear = interest.
4. You needlessly create problems and crises in your life because you're afraid of actually living it.
The
pattern of unnecessarily creating crisis in your life is actually an
avoidance technique. It distracts you from actually having to be
vulnerable or held accountable or whatever it is you're afraid of.
You're never upset for the reason you think you are: at the core of your
desire to create a problem is simply the fear of being who you are, and
living the life you want.
5. You think that to change
your beliefs, you have to adopt a new line of thinking, rather than seek
experiences that make that thinking self-evident.
A
belief is what you know to be true because experience has made it
evident to you. If you want to change your life, change your beliefs. If
you want to change your beliefs, go out and have experiences that make
them real to you. Not the opposite way around.
6. You think "problems" are road blocks to achieving what you want, when in reality, they are pathways.
If
you haven't heard it before, Marcus Aurelius sums this up well: "The
impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the
way." Ryan Holiday explains it even more gracefully: "The obstacle is the way."Simply, running into a "problem" forces you to take action to resolve
it. That action leads you down the path you had ultimately intended to
go anyway, as the only "problems" in your life ultimately come down to
how you resist who you are and how your life naturally unfolds.
7.
You think your past defines you, and worse, you think that it is an
unchangeable reality, when really, your perception of it changes as you
do.
Because experience is always multi-dimensional,
there are a variety of memories, experiences, feelings, "gists" you can
choose to recall... and what you choose is indicative of your present
state of mind. So many people get caught up in allowing the past to
define them, or haunt them, simply because they have not evolved to the
place of seeing how the past did not prevent them from achieving the
life they want... it facilitated it (see: the obstacle is the way). This
doesn't mean to disregard or gloss over painful or traumatic events,
but simply to be able to recall them with acceptance and to be able to
place them in the storyline of your personal evolution.
8.
You try to change other people, situations and things (or you just
complain/get upset about them) when anger = self-recognition.
Most
negative emotional reactions are you identifying a disassociated aspect
of yourself. Your "shadow selves" are the parts of you that, at some
point, you were conditioned to believe were "not okay," so you
suppressed them and have done everything in your power not to
acknowledge them. You don't actually dislike these parts of yourself,
though, you absolutely love them. So when you see somebody else
displaying one of these traits, it absolutely infuriates you, not
because you inherently dislike it, but because you have to fight your
desire to fully integrate it into your whole consciousness. The things
you love about others are the things you love about yourself. The things
you hate about others are the things you cannot see in yourself.
Sunday, August 16, 2015
MONOCULTURE AND LIVING YOUR LIFE
Labels:
behavior,
culture,
future,
mental,
monoculture,
past,
subconscious,
truth