save Yourself for Love
Of course, things can happen almost
exactly like they did last time, but each year or each time you experience
something, be it for the first time or the 10th time, it is different.
Loss of Relationships
Relationships end. That is just part
of life. Each person comes into our lives to teach us something.
Everyone we meet in life is a
teacher of something. Loss of Jobs
I had a well-paying job that I loved
and they loved me. Loss of Loved Ones
Death happens every day. People come
into our lives and then they leave. The death of a loved one is surely one of
the hardest experiences in life to endure. With each loss, death was different.
When my parents died, nobody talked about their deaths with me. I lived in an
ashram and was studying scriptures that talk about the cycle of life and death,
reincarnation, our purpose in life, where we were going after life on earth,
and how we got there. I was tapped into the Bigger Picture; the Bigger Picture
being that life around us is not all there is to life. Life was also was about
developing my Inner Self.
Many of us view loss in a very
limited way. We see it as the end of something, period. Seeing things in such a
black and white way, i.e., a beginning and end, right and wrong, shadow and
light, is at times helpful. But it can also be limiting and may bring
unnecessary pain.
The limiting perspective that may
come about from seeing life in this way also brings about a certain amount of
expectation. We assume that because it happened a specific way last time it
will happen that way again. And when it is different, we might experience
disappointment or confusion. Of course, things can happen almost exactly like
they did last time, but each year or each time you experience something, be it
for the first time or the 10th time, it is different.
Allowing ourselves to know that each
experience in life is different than the one before helps keep some of those
expectations at bay, thus enabling us to see (or at least be aware) that it can
be different this time.
Of course, there are certain
circumstances in life that dictate when we take certain actions, we can expect
certain results, such as: we buy something, bring it home and we expect it to
work; or we ask someone to do something and they do it. And what if that
merchandise doesn't work or that person doesn't do what we have asked? Did we
have expectations? Yes. Is it all right to have expectations? Of course! So, I
want you to use your discretion.
Challenging ourselves to step
outside the box and see things from a different perspective will, over time,
allow us to have more peace in our lives.
Loss of Relationships
Relationships end. That is just part
of life. However, how we receive it and perceive the end of relationships is up
to us.
I'm famous for telling my friends
and family that "People come into our lives exactly when they are supposed
to, and they leave exactly when they're supposed to." When we try to
change that scenario, we cause some of the pain we experience in life.
It's hard to let friends come and
go, but we must remember that they are growing in different ways than we are.
Their journeys sometime take a different turn than our own and, at times, their
roads come back to the same road we are on.
Everyone is on their own journey and
at times we journey together; some longer than others. Each person comes into
our lives to teach us something.
Relationships end in different way.
Sometimes we have a choice, and sometimes we don't. Whether we do or don't
isn't the question. The question is: what did that relationship teach us?
Everyone we meet in life is a
teacher of something. Look past those bodily identifications we blind ourselves
with and see the teaching of that person.
Is it humility, compassion,
boundaries, faith, love, pride, friendship, respect? What did you learn from
your teachers today?
Loss of Jobs
I've lost several jobs, but the one
that rocked my boat more than any other was when I left a job that I dearly
loved and worked the hardest I ever worked in my life for. I left the job
because the company was bought out by another company, and people and things
were changing faster than I liked.
But when I left that job, I left
behind that identity. I had built that company from zero sales to over 20
million dollars a year in sales in only three years. I was a very successful
sales manager. It was a product that I loved and was very passionate about. I
basically made it my life for those three years and when I left, all I had was
a void, a big hole.
It doesn't really matter that I'm
the one who made the decision to leave the job. The point is that the job I
identified myself with was gone.
Fortunately, I had others in my life
that helped remind me that "when one door closes, another opens" and
that there would be other jobs for me.
What I noticed was how quickly I let
my passion drive me so deep into the job and how I lost sight of what was my
most important part of my life, my spiritual welfare.
Luckily, during that period of my
life, almost everything else was going well... at least on the outside. I had a
well-paying job that I loved and they loved me. I had purchased my first home.
I was able to afford private schooling for my kids. I had a brand new car (the
newest Volvo on the market). I was beginning to put together a retirement plan
and more. My marriage was showing signs of deterioration, but that had been
happening for a while, even before this new job.
What I had put on the back burner
was what helped me get where I was: my spiritual life. It was alarming how
quickly that was pushed aside and forgotten. But I did forget and, because of
that, when I left that job I was lost for a while.
What that looked like was a loss of
my confidence at my new job. My honesty wasn't at the standard I was used too
(I wasn't putting in the time I said I was putting into my job), I didn't care
as much as I did with the other job. This was all understandable, but I also
began to get a sense of resentment concerning my old job.
The resentment was what brought me
back to my spiritual practice. I wasn't comfortable with having things rattle
around my head for long periods of time or having displaced anger come out
because of the resentment.
Today, I know the most important
aspect of my day is my prayer, meditation and reading. I won't allow anything
to get in the way of one or all of those things. That is what anchors me.
Everything else is secondary. Now I know that might not work for others, but,
believe me, we can all take a few minutes each morning to say "Good
Morning" to God or we'll eventually being saying "Good God, it's
morning." The choice is ours.
Loss of Loved Ones
Death happens every day. People come
into our lives and then they leave. The death of a loved one is surely one of
the hardest experiences in life to endure. And we are powerless over it.
We each have our own way and time
frame for mourning. So I am not going to speak much on those topics, I will
assume you are doing everything you need to do to take care of yourself.
I'd like to share with you some of how
death came to me and how my perception evolved into a Bigger Picture.
I happen to have experienced more
death than some and not as much as others in my time here, so far.
With each loss, death was different.
My first couple of experiences with death included my cousin who died in Viet
Nam and, around the same time, my Grandmother, who was the only grandparent I
knew. I was about 12 years old.
I didn't know what death was. I was
saddened by everyone else's sorrow. I didn't know my cousin well, and my grandmother
was an old Irish immigrant who didn't talk much, at least not to me. I believed
that they went to heaven and didn't think much more about it.
When my parents died a few years
later (I was 15 when Dad died, and six months later when Mom died I was 16), I
was somewhat aware they were dying. Both were in the hospital when they died
and had been sick for some time before that. So on some level, I knew it was
coming. But just the same, I couldn't quite grasp what was happening.
My feelings were numb, except for
anger. That is all I felt for a long time. When my parents died, nobody talked
about their deaths with me. Even the priest at the funeral was vague...
something about how they were good people and that they went to heaven. I was
angry and confused because I knew at the end of their lives they were not good
people and questioned how God could take them.
Let me back up a little. My parents
were good people, but they had the disease of alcoholism that ate away at them
in every way. What I had experienced for several years prior to their death was
the devastation of their alcoholism. So I was not only angry, but very
confused.
A couple of years after that, my
best friend died. Once again, anger and numbness were the feelings that
emerged. A few years after that, my younger brother passed on and I was able to
feel more, and understand more.
At the time of my younger brother's
passing, I was a monk. I lived in an ashram and was studying scriptures that
talk about the cycle of life and death, reincarnation, our purpose in life,
where we were going after life on earth, and how we got there. I was tapped
into the Bigger Picture; the Bigger Picture being that life around us is not
all there is to life. That Life is much more than going to school, finding a job/career,
settling down and having a family, buying the house and summer home, being the
best you can, etc. While those things are important, they are not what life is
all about. Life was also was about developing my Inner Self. In fact, the outer
world was important, but more important was my Inner World... the Kingdom of
Heaven within. All the religions teach it: be in this world, but not of it.
By now, my knowledge of death had
grown. I had a belief and faith in what life here on earth was for and where we
were going to after it.
What a difference that made going
forward.
I had several more deaths of close
friends and even had a few near death experiences, myself, and then there was
the death of my fiancée.
Having knowledge about life and
death, and that you just don't die and then nothing else happens or that you go
into a big void was very helpful in the process of grieving for me.
After lots of reading and research I
have found that the major religions basically say the same thing about life and
death.
That we are here to live life by
following the Laws of God (basically, love God, live a moral life and not hurt
others, but there is more) and, most importantly, to develop and continually
improve our relationship with the God of our understanding.
Each of us deals with loss in a
different way. You'll know you're on course when things like death knock on
your door. When you know the Bigger Picture of Who you really are, Why you are
here, and Where you are going afterward, you'll have that anchor in life. You won't
be tossed around when the "storms of life" hit you. They will rock
you, but you won't be lost at sea.
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