Hi everyone.
In the iodine thread, ennio posted:
These two paragraphs really resonate with me at the moment (in fact, if you haven't read the whole post, check it out - it's REALLY helpful. Thanks ennio!)
And it's timely, because the other night, I made this journal entry and I thought I'd share it because it was just a really helpful affirmation of why I'm doing what I'm doing. The last few weeks have been tough for me, too, and going through the process of getting it down on paper has really helped me redouble my efforts.
The entry starts to go round and round a bit towards the end, but I was just chipping away at the idea to refine it as best I could.
It was a nice realisation to come to: that The Work works! That through gaining knowledge and applying it, we can change our lives for the better and pass that knowledge onto others who are looking to change their lives for the better, too.
We can acquire an aim, and then live our lives by it for a period of time, but after a while, that way of life can become automatic and if it reaches that point, we can start to become disillusioned and wonder what the point is. I changed my life based on a simple and self-referencing reason: I had to work away with a band all year and 1) I couldn't afford to get ill and have to miss any gigs and 2) if I couldn't gig, then the other band members couldn't either, and I didn't want that to happen.
Now, it seems like I've melted down that specific, starting aim and reforged it into a more general, wider-encompassing one: that looking after myself makes my life easier and that might be beneficial to others, too.
In the iodine thread, ennio posted:
ennio said:So just another way to understand it maybe. But when we're going though it, it can be awful tough I know. Something that has helped me is just friendly interactions with people I feel close to. Friendly, funny, caring communication about anything at all. It sustains me when I'm going through something in general, and I think that just being that way with others helps them too. Thank god for humor too! And that we don't have to suffer alone.
At the same time though, I try to remember why I'm doing this: Its being proactive for the future. And no matter how unpleasant it may be at points, the doing of it adds immeasurably to the chances of being less sick and incapacitated later on – when we want, and will need to be, strong and functional.
These two paragraphs really resonate with me at the moment (in fact, if you haven't read the whole post, check it out - it's REALLY helpful. Thanks ennio!)
And it's timely, because the other night, I made this journal entry and I thought I'd share it because it was just a really helpful affirmation of why I'm doing what I'm doing. The last few weeks have been tough for me, too, and going through the process of getting it down on paper has really helped me redouble my efforts.
The entry starts to go round and round a bit towards the end, but I was just chipping away at the idea to refine it as best I could.
Journal: 3/1/16 said:What the hell can I do?
Am I doing enough?
Am I doing the right things?
Q: I have my little daily routines, try to save (money), try to stock up (preparation), try to keep up with what's going on, try to keep disciplined and healthy, try to network with the forum, try not to violate people's free will, try to stay sane and emotionally healthy/see friends and family, etc., and what am I actually achieving? What difference am I making?
A: I am a living embodiment of love and effort and empathy and sanity and concern and objective reality. I am the white dot in the black half of the yin-yang. (this reply was a reference to and inspired by Joe's post here)
I'm not SUPPOSED to have power and influence over the world and the people in it - neither would I want such power. I'm supposed to have power over myself. I am the only thing I can control; I am the only thing I can change and I am the only thing I have any power over.
Q: To what end? What's the point? Why do you do what you do? Why aren't you still just wasting your life and your time, eating crap and drinking beer every night?
Why do you live as you do? What's the point? Why did you change your life? Why not just go back to sleep if you can't make any difference?
Why continue to strive and struggle?
A: Because I don't want to be ill, I don't want to be homeless, I don't want to suffer in the way that I suffered before.
If I have a choice between health and illness, I choose health because that's what a sane person would choose.
Q: Why?
A: Illness brings suffering, pain, misery and death.
If I could choose between uncomfortable truths and dreamy lies, I choose the truth because lies lead to chaos which leads to suffering - and especially causes suffering in others, too.
I choose life over death because while I'm alive I have the chance to help people and make the world a better place: I can't do this if I'm dead. (This last statement was inspired by Chu's post, here)
Stability
In Strength will I Establish this mine house that it may stand firm (This is a masonic maxim that seemed totally fitting to what I was thinking about)
I choose order over chaos because chaos brings suffering.
I choose knowledge over lies because lies cause suffering.
I choose work over laziness because laziness leads to suffering.
I choose life over death because in life I have the chance to alleviate suffering.
Q: But you're suffering from what you're doing. Suffering being alone.
A: Yes, but what I'm learning brings with it the opportunity to inform others and make choices which lead to less suffering. And however much I may suffer in loneliness pales in comparison to the suffering I would cause a sleeping person and in turn cause myself.
I know - I've tried it.
Q: So your entire way of life is based on not suffering and the possibility of helping others alleviate their suffering?
A: Yes, I suppose so. (Note: this isn't coming from a place of "not wanting to suffer/avoidance of suffering". It was part of a crystallisation for me that 'the good life' is about the pursuit and application of knowledge to make it easier to live and to then have the opportunity to pass that on to others so that they might find it easier to live, too)
Q: Well, aren't you just Mr. Noble!
A: That's the sort of response I'd expect from a psychopath who doesn't care about other people.
I have suffered greatly and it was all due to selfishness, laziness, indulgence, the desire for an easy life.
If I could help someone else not to suffer the way I have, just one person in one instance, then that would make my life have been worth something - to help someone with the knowledge I've aquired.
Q: Why do you care?
A: Because I know what it is to suffer and have learned many causes of it and many preventions. And if I wouldn't wish suffering on someone else, then that's no different to being able - through the knowledge I've gained - to help or alleviate the suffering of another.
(Conclusion)
So really, the only reason I stay alive is to learn how to live a good life and to pass that knowledge on to others, to help them to live a good life too, because I have suffered from living a bad life and wouldn't wish that on anyone else and if I have information on how to prevent such suffering and change such a life, then I want to share it and help someone else to change their life so that they can improve their health, their work and increase their knowledge and maybe, in turn, help others themselves.
It was a nice realisation to come to: that The Work works! That through gaining knowledge and applying it, we can change our lives for the better and pass that knowledge onto others who are looking to change their lives for the better, too.
We can acquire an aim, and then live our lives by it for a period of time, but after a while, that way of life can become automatic and if it reaches that point, we can start to become disillusioned and wonder what the point is. I changed my life based on a simple and self-referencing reason: I had to work away with a band all year and 1) I couldn't afford to get ill and have to miss any gigs and 2) if I couldn't gig, then the other band members couldn't either, and I didn't want that to happen.
Now, it seems like I've melted down that specific, starting aim and reforged it into a more general, wider-encompassing one: that looking after myself makes my life easier and that might be beneficial to others, too.