Most people don’t usually approach life as works of art that they create. While we may learn as children that we should have dreams, we are also warned that the outside world (called circumstances, fate, bad luck, etc.) may keep us from realizing them. These warnings, like a knife scraping against a piece of young wood, whittle away our slender sense of empowerment.
My dramatic inspiration for investigating a different approach to living came, appropriately, from seeing the movie Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf (adapted from the play by Edward Albee). For those who aren’t familiar with the film, it portrays the complex and often-vicious marital games played by a couple named George and Martha (Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor). It’s by no means an easy play to watch, for it reminds many of the dramas their parents and/or other close relative played and can give people uncomfortable insights into current relationships.
Who’s Afraid of Us?
The world abounds with Georges and Marthas. Unlike the actors who walked away each click this site night from their roles in the movie, our real-life characters, because they believe that the parts they play are real, are locked into them. When we recognize that the roles we play are no more click this site real than those of the characters we watch or read about, we, too, can step out of them or revise them according to our wishes.
When we view our lives as dramatic productions and ourselves as the authors or playwrights, we begin to live according to the law of attraction. With this approach, we believe that the power of our thought and emotions draws to us matching circumstances. In its simplest expression, if I believe I’m powerless in the face of circumstances, seemingly powerful circumstances will emerge to prevent me from having what I want. In other words, life will edit or tear up my script.
The difference between these approaches relates not only to the kinds of results we achieve but also to how we live our lives. The first approach creates a grim attitude that says, “I will do the best I can, but something is sure to strike http://www.robloxhacktools.com/robloxrobuxgenerator/ me down. Maybe that terrible something will leave me alone if I show how serious I am, how determined, how willing to work hard and suffer and sacrifice.”
The second attitude is far more playful. Those who practice it recognize that when we believe we have the power to create the lives of our dreams, we don’t look over our shoulders, waiting for someone or something to punish www.robloxhacktools.com us. We can relax and be playful, experimenting with our minds and emotions to design a variety of scenarios, choosing that which feels most pleasing to us on all levels of being.
Planning the Story
Sometimes the responsibility of planning one’s live, rather than lightening our steps, makes us worried about taking the wrong ones. Indeed, our lives become tragic or at least problematic when we take our roles too seriously and forget that we’re not only the actors but the writers of our particular plays, that not only can we determine how we play our parts but how the drama will develop, and how it will end.
The author John Irving (who wrote The World According to Garp, The Hotel New Hampshire, The Cider House Rules, and other novels, says that the first thing he write when beginning a novel is the last line. He further claims that he never changes that line.
It may be that in planning our lives, we can benefit from a bit more flexibility. I have always found that the phrase, “This or something better” covers a range of possibilities. Nonetheless, having the ultimate goal clear and firmly in mind draws powerful energy towards its manifestation.
Rewriting the Script
Keeping that intention in the forefront doesn’t mean that we have only one path available for reaching it. We can change settings and stage props without altering our chosen themes.
When we allow this theme to direct our drama, we are clear about the direction we want it to take; we create scenes and supporting characters that further the action. We can regard temporary impasses as comic relief.
Sometimes rewording your theme can make a difference. If you think your subject is “I can never find a job I like,” try changing it to “I’m exploring a variety of work situations in order to find the one I like best.” Look around to see if you’re casting actors from previous plays and rewrite the script in order to resolve these relationships. If your drama seems to resemble a tale told by an idiot, go within to ask what its meaning is.
Most of all, remember that it’s a play, that you are playing your life. When its reality seems all-too encroaching, step off the stage and become a member of the audience. And don’t forget to laugh at yourself.
Tag Archives: Creative
The Key to Creative Flow: Learn the Four C’s To Enhance Your Creativity
Just as learning your ABC’s are visit more information fundamental to a basic education, learning the Four C’s of Creativity are essential to life as a powerful and deliberate creator of your art and your life experience. If you are not living a life abundant with new inspiration and enthusiasm for your creative challenges then it is likely you are missing one of the C’s, a key ingredient to the recipe for boosting your creative flow.
The four C’s of Creative Flow are:
1. Centering
“The tragedy of life is what dies inside a man while he lives.” – Albert Einstein
When you are centered, in alignment with Click here the truth of who you are, life flows effortlessly. Your moments are largely spent “in the zone” of your creative spirit. You are engaged, unaware of the passage of time and firing on all cylinders of your artistic expression and life potential.
When you are un-centered, not in harmony with your authenticity life becomes a tiresome and often anxiety ridden struggle. You work exhaustively trying to fulfill the inauthentic expectations, the ‘shoulds and must do’s” demanded of you by yourself and others. Your heart longs to express and create one thing yet you hold yourself back to pursue another, often perceptively safer, path.
You may get brilliant at creating these false expectations but they will leave you unfulfilled, living a life of desperation.
2. Choice
“How you choose to respond each moment to the movie of life determines how you see the next frame, and the next, and eventually how you feel when the movie ends.” – Don Childre
Once you acknowledge and honor your truth, stand centered in the truth of who you are, it is necessary to base the choices you make and the actions you take upon this truth. If you step off your center, make a choice that is not in alignment with your center then you will struggle. Your creative flow will be blocked leaving you frustrated and unable to fully and effectively express yourself in your work and in your life.
If your choices are not grounded in your center, your core of being, you will not create the outcomes you desire. A choice acted upon and based on your truth will deliver the outcome, and experience, you want to create. A choice to take a different path, limit yourself and your possibilities in any way will create “less than” or even a train-wreck of an experience.
Choices that speak your truth feel good. Choices that belie your truth feel bad. It’s as simple as that.
3. Commitment
“The quality of a person’s life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor.” – Vince Lombardi
If you show up in your life centered in your truth, making choices that honor that truth you must commit http://www.caseclickerhack.com/ yourself to honoring the choices you make. If you quit or hold yourself back in any way then you have made a new choice that is not in alignment with your center. You have strayed from http://www.pianotiles2hackcheats.com/pianotiles2hack/ your path of authenticity and the road to creating the art you wish to express and experiences you desire.
Staying committed to yourself requires trust in and love of yourself. What you long for is your birthright. It is what you are here to create. It is your purpose in life, that is why you feel its calling deep within your soul. Even if the journey is a bit arduous, if you are committed to YOU the experience will be exciting and fulfilling.
4. Challenge
“Life’s challenges are not supposed to paralyze you, they’re supposed to help you discover who you are.” – Bernice Johnson Reagon
It is a challenge to stay committed to your choices and center of truth. You will be called upon time and time again to stretch beyond your current comfort zone. Moving beyond what you know is unknown and, therefore, scary. In your fear you may Find Excuses And Reasons (F.E.A.R.) to step back from your commitment, your choices and your core of being.
You may not like your current comfort zone and say you want to achieve certain goals but if you discover that you are serving up excuses why you, others, or circumstance prevent you from maintaining your commitment then know that you are in a state of fear. Just take a deep breath. Breathe out. Center yourself. Listen to what your inner being wants. Let go of the voice of that incessant Inner Critic who works hard to keep you safe. Keeping you safe to this well-meaning yet woefully misguided egoic part of you is to keep you right where you are. It’s what you know so it’s safe.
There you have it, the four C’s of Creative Flow. As with learning how to ride a bicycle, you may fall on your butt a time or two as you apply these lessons in your life. That’s ok. Just brush yourself off and get back on your bike! Enjoy the ride.
Copyright (c) 2009 Valery Satterwhite