PRACTICE MAKES IT REAL
Dec 20, 2023Throughout all my work, I advocate that you begin to practice new ideas. Take any idea that you want to be true, say it enough times, and it has a way of becoming true for you. I do this all the time now as I seek to create new ideas of who I am and what my future looks like.
Yet one idea kept coming back to me as I practiced. One idea kept popping up to say hello. One idea dogged me until I finally sat down to ask it why it was perseverating in my experience. That one idea? I want more from life.
One idea dogged me until I finally sat down to ask it why it was perseverating in my experience. That one idea? I want more from life.
Wanting more is not my typical way to approach life. I have a decade’s long gratitude practice and a way of taking life as it is, and thriving. In fact, I pride myself on my frugality with life. Whatever scraps are tossed at me, I can cook up something delicious.
Yet I found, as I hit middle age, that I was happy, I was content, and still I wanted more. What exactly that was, I wasn’t sure. But I knew it to be something more than the fun I was already having.
Wanting more gets a bad rap. We see it as something that is shameful or greedy. Yet if one believes in the eternalness of their soul, isn’t there always more? Isn’t there always a time ahead of where you are today? And isn’t there always a calling forward into a better tomorrow?
If I am eternal (which I personally believe), then wouldn’t it be boring if we stayed the same? These are the questions that a mid-lifer proposes when she delves into spirituality as a hobby.
Here is where I landed. I found that my life was at its absolute best when I was enjoying and appreciating what I had in life and, at the same time, wanting more. The appreciation brought me peace. The wanting more brought me hope. And I needed both of them to bring me to equilibrium.
Equilibrium is my term for the peace we find, inside, when we see life as perfectly unfolding. That’s the spot I wanted to be, but it only came to fruition once I owned my desire for more.
Some might see a desire for more as a criticism of your present circumstance. I don’t. Not anymore. I see my desire for more as causing me to celebrate my current life situation, as I know I am always moving forward toward more. More joy. More fun. More people to love.
If you want to find the sweet spot between now and more, practice this new idea: I am happy with life, and still I want more. I am content where I am, and still I seek to grow. I love and appreciate the blessings of a good life, and still I would love to experience more.
Get my Sunday Newsletter sent right to your inbox!
A newsletter focused on the tools you need to live your best life.
This isn't a newsletter about morality, goodness or even rightness. I make no claim to those ideals. My only claim is that spirituality is more fun, more productive, and more enlightening than you likely realize.
We hate SPAM. We will never sell your information, for any reason.