Ice Dec. 23 by the front door. Lethal driveway.
Pink, our pink flamingo in the arbor. Pink was last year's Christmas present from Daughter number 2 to me.The pink flamingo is our mascot for our Real Estate Brokerage which is called Vibrance Real Estate LLC. Oh, his little leg is drooping, but then, he's tired after holding it up for a year.
Resistance is the block that comes when you avoid
something or bump into a wall. Steven Pressfield uses the word Resistance. I
thought he was talking about Procrastination, but that’s not quite it.
Pressfield said that for years he had been avoiding his
true calling. That was writing. However, finally, he sat down at his typewriter
and wrote for an hour. “It was crap,” he said, but he got up and immediately
washed the dishes that had been accumulating in the sink for a week. He had
broken his resistance.
Let’s say you dream of starting a business. It’s a
beautiful dream. You focus and plan, and it’s a fun adventure—the dreaming
part. And then your business manifests. You have a business to set up, but now
there is much to do. You have fees and dues and worry about how much it will
cost. You have people to speak with and to hire. You need to market and get
together materials. You become a doer. And you push and struggle, and it isn’t
fun anymore. You say, “Well, it isn’t all fun, and it is necessary to work. And
so, you push, you stay up nights, and that business occupies most of your
waking hours.
Abraham, a teacher I listen to, says, “You have turned
upstream.”
The dream, the planning, was downstream. You were going
with the flow, and then you got into a struggle and turned upstream where the
water was tumultuous, and rowing was tough.
But that’s the way it is, you say. It’s not all fun and
games. It is necessary to do the work. Yep, that’s what schools, parents, and
society teach us.
And Boy, Howdy, that belief in hard work is hard to give
up. There are monuments for people who have struggled, which tells us those
people were important.
I’m not saying that overcoming a challenge isn’t
satisfying. However, I agree with Abraham, who said, “Nothing you want is upstream.”
(I think that College degree was. I wanted it. I did it. It was upstream.” I
wonder, though, if there is a way to go with the flow while entangled in a
system set up to make it hard?)
That business analogy isn’t exactly my situation, but
there is a ring of truth to it. I have struggled for the past month and got a
simple website for our Real Estate Brokerage —that was the easy part. However,
I’m still dealing with transferring domains, and with two people’s emails
involved, and codes and all that. I think I got caught in a whirlpool.
It happens.
A few days ago, I picked up Aldous Huxley’s book, The Art of Seeing. Perhaps you remember I blogged about Vision Training
in the blog post, Hello
Beautiful, Check Your Eyeballs. Huxley
commented that the eyes and the brain both like relaxation.
The harder you scrunch down your brain, you try to
remember something that has slipped away or find a lost object.
But eventually, you surrender. You let the severe
concentration go—especially the anger at yourself for having lost or forgotten
something. And, you sort of forget about it. You’ve turned downstream, and
Viola’, it appears.
The eyes, like the brain, operate better when relaxed.
You can feel it when you finally let go and allow the eyes to see and the brain to
think.
There is much to learn in this life. I need to live
another 1,000 years.
Wait, another 1,000? I haven’t lived the first 1,000 yet.