Monday, 15 December 2014

Intent & Reality, How it defines our world

Do we really make a difference?

  


The Dalai Lama once said, “There are 6 billion people in this world and 6 billion versions of reality.” I cannot argue with his holiness on such a wise and insightful comment for it hits home at what makes our presence in this world so unique and special. The driver of this uniqueness is perception, which allows us to have our “world view” and it heavily influences how we interact with it. We may seem seamlessly in lockstep with our peers but in reality, ours is a different shade of the same position taken by our peers should we agree it so.

From contrarians to compliant minds, we never leave the same imprint on the world as we progress through time, yet we often feel like we don’t make a difference. The reality is that we do make a difference by our presence alone, so why do we not see this and what can we do about it?

We often are too focused, conditioned or just plain busy to see how we affect those around us, which can be tragic when one suffers set backs in life and questions why one should “…even try”. So thinking solutions, what can we do?

Intent – They say intent defines our reality, which is arguable, but we can all agree it drives our decisions which does define our actions and thus contributes heavily to our reality as we progress through life. If we intend to be inherently good, when we will make decisions on what lines we will cross and what ones we will not; with the final set of lines where we will take action to ensure nobody crosses them. Indeed, if our intent were inherently evil, we would have similar lines of inaction and action but contextualised in a different paradigm of being.

Awareness – If we are to assert ourselves and make a difference in our lives and the world around us, we need to look outwards as much as inwards in balancing our awareness. The balance between the inner world and the outer world is very important to feel, see, touch and hear what goes on so we contextualise our thoughts, decisions and actions to achieve outcomes consistent with our base intent.

Decisions – Making no decision is a decision in itself, so being careful about the big decisions in context to the moment. It’s always good to think current situation to direct outcome. However, it’s even better to append indirect outcomes (i.e. scenarios) and the long-term impact of our decisions to see if they are consistent with our base intent and who we are as people.

Actions – We never care to admit that our short-term interests can stifle our intent, our values and quite possibly our long-term future. When we make mistakes such as staying silent when a powerful person’s actions trash on all of the above characteristics, we import their actions, which disrupts our inner peace. Courage even when it seems like pain is the short-term requirement for doing the right thing. A sister requirement is strategy, especially when dealing with complex situations that have multiple actors, issues and outcomes that are laden with traps one can fall into. It’s important to remember what one is protecting (e.g. one’s core intent/being) and thus can act in a manner that maximises one’s chances of success with minimal disruption. It’s noteworthy that even when the outcomes don’t go your way, walking away with nothing but your inner peace is a victory in itself!

Reflection – Nobody likes an egotistical bragger ergo we become averse to thinking about our successes, what we did right, how we made someone’s day, etc. There is nothing wrong with reflection on what went right as it lessons our chances of obsessing about what went wrong. We need to remember that our time on this earth is linear and finite by design, so draw from the past in a manner that allows you to keep pace with the arrow of time thus keeping your reality set to its clock. If it means dumping the outlandish pace of one’s peers whom all want to be richest men in the cemetery, when so be it! 



It is nice to think about our intent, our awareness, our decisions and actions. We can reflect in balance on our position and state in life feeling satisfied as we make a personal connection with its content. We note the drama, the sadness, the joy and the moments of happiness that in our eyes alone show us how our intent has defined our reality and our small contribution to a world that without it, would be a lessor place.



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