Author: Firoozeh
6 What Makes a Good Life? Lessons from the Longest Study on Happiness | Robert Waldinger | TED Talks
The Music of Your Life
Look back at your vision. It shows you where you want to go. It’s like a map with a path drawn on it, to guide you which direction to take in your life.
But there are many different ways for you to do the same journey. If you drive from London to Rome you can go alone or travel with other people. You can sing and have fun as you go, or you can drive 24 hours a day to get there in the shortest time possible. You can think all day, listen to music, tell stories or cruise along smiling. You get to choose in every second.
Think of this as the resonance of your life – the ripples of energy that emanate from your being throughout your life.
What kind of energy are you resonating right now? Is it light and happy? Heavy, serious or thoughtful? Nervous, self critical or judgemental? Peaceful, serene or joyful? Or something else?
Whether you’re aware of it or not, you emit energy all the time. Since everything is energy and everything is connected, your energy touches and changes every other part of the universe instantaneously. You’re an intrinsic part of the vast mass of energy arising as life in every second. You cannot ever be separated from it and you cannot ever experience yourself in isolation from it. Everything you do is part of everything else that’s happening throughout all time and space.
As humans we can change our resonance at will. We can decide to change our mood, respond in a different way and emit a different energy whenever we want. It’s an extraordinary power.
Picture someone scowling and miserable, caught up in their own dark thoughts. Then smile at them from your heart. In the second they catch your smile, they smile back. A light turns on. It’s a small miracle that touches all of us.
This is the music you’re creating. It’s streaming through you and you can change the mood and style right now if you like.
Sarah McCrum
Coach, Trainer, Speaker
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Paradoxically speaking- The unknowable God
Paradoxically speaking- The unknowable God
The Swiss physician, psychiatrist, and philosopher Carl Gustav Jung observed that:
Oddly enough, the paradox is one of the most valuable spiritual possessions, while uniformity of meaning is a sign of weakness. Hence a religion becomes inwardly impoverished when it loses or reduces its paradoxes; but their multiplication enriches because only the paradox comes anywhere near to comprehending the fullness of life. Non-ambiguity and non-contradiction are one-sided, and thus unsuited to express the incomprehensible. – Psychology and Religion, p. 18.
Paradoxes function to reveal deep meaning and insight through the surface appearance of contradiction. Metaphysical in nature, a paradox challenges us to think in new ways and see new realities.
When a Zen Buddhist teacher presents a puzzling koan to a student, the teacher wishes to elicit a metaphysical response, not an intellectual one. But ambiguity and contradiction present themselves even to the western, scientific mind. For example, tests of hypotheses with exacting scientific methodology, rather than resolving the question under consideration, often bring forth a multitude of new questions. Knowledge actually expands rather than contracts, as if the more we learn, the less we realize that we know. The metaphysical solution to this paradox? Knowledge is infinite.
Paradoxes readily emerge from the teachings of the Baha’i Faith. One refers to the relationship between the individual human being and God:
At all times I am near unto thee, but thou art ever far from Me. – Baha’u’llah, The Hidden Words, p. 29.
How can two entities be simultaneously close to, yet far from, each other? The expression refers to knowledge and awareness, not to physical distance. The knowledge of God, ineffable and sublime, requires expanded consciousness of heavenly qualities and attributes–but precludes knowledge of God’s essential nature. Thus knower and known are “near” and “far” at the same time. In his tablet entitled “City of Radiant Acquiescence,” Baha’u’llah explained the reason and function of contradictory paradoxes:
The contradictions apparent in all things were only ordained to remind you of the impermanence of your selves, so that you might become aware of it and not be obdurate.
We learn from the Baha’i teachings that our ultimate and sole purpose for being is to know God, and that we have the capacity for it:
I bear witness, O my God, that Thou has created me to know Thee and to worship Thee. – Baha’i Prayers, page 4.
He, through the direct operation of His unconstrained and sovereign Will, chose to confer upon man the unique distinction and capacity to know Him and to love Him — a capacity that must needs be regarded as the generating impulse and the primary purpose underlying the whole of creation…. – Gleanings from the Writings of Baha’u’llah, p. 63.
Yet, in a deep and profound paradox, we learn simultaneously from those same writings that God is unknowable:
To every discerning and illuminated heart it is evident that God, the unknowable Essence, the Divine Being, is immensely exalted beyond every human attribute, such as corporeal existence, ascent and descent, egress and regress. – Gleanings from the Writings of Baha’u’llah, p. 46.
From time immemorial He hath been veiled in the ineffable sanctity of His exalted Self, and will everlastingly continue to be wrapt in the impenetrable mystery of His unknowable Essence. – Gleanings from the Writings of Baha’u’llah, p. 62.
These great paradoxes, the essential and eternal mysteries of existence, ask us to continue to search for the ineffable beauty of the unknowable.
Evil is only the absence of good, just as darkness is the absence of light
It is evident, therefore, that man is in need of divine education and inspiration, that the spirit and bounties of God are essential to his development.” Baha’i Faith