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A Sabedoria De Esquecer Tudo O Que Você Sabe

“Neste exato momento, e em cada instante presente, você está se fechando ou se abrindo. Ou você está esperando ansiosamente por algo – mais dinheiro, segurança, afeto – ou está vivendo a partir do seu coração mais profundo, se abrindo para o momento presente e dando aquilo que você mais deseja dar, sem esperar.”
~David Deida

Por um minuto, podemos parar de tentar freneticamente controlar, planejar e nos iludir pensando que sabemos o que não sabemos? Você passa seu tempo se preparando para todos os resultados possíveis e se preocupando com todas as consequências negativas que podem lhe acontecer?

Temos tanto medo de nos entregar, de simplesmente ser, de permitir que o desenrolar desta vida maravilhosa aconteça sem interferir. Esse medo nos paralisa e nos mantém presos. E ansiamos pela paz que é possível – se ao menos deixássemos de lado todos os esforços que fazemos para conhecer.

Não há presente maior que você possa se dar do que o convite para entrar no mundo do desconhecido.

Por quê? Se você sempre souber o que sabe agora, as coisas sempre permanecerão as mesmas. Como poderiam mudar? E ao pensar que sabe o que vai acontecer, você se fecha para o inimaginável – paz infinita, alegria indizível, admiração e encantamento.

Se você se apegar ao que é familiar e confortável, é aí que você vai morar. Até que decida dar o mergulho e se permitir descobrir o desconhecido.

E pense nisto: o familiar e o confortável estão funcionando para você? Se você está feliz, não há nada a fazer. Ótimo! Mas se você tem dificuldades com pessoas e emoções, se fica frustrado quando o mundo não segue o seu plano, esqueça o que você sabe e dê um passo ousado e destemido rumo ao desconhecido.

Como sair do atoleiro

Eis o que significa não saber:

Você acorda numa manhã de fim de semana sem planos e deixa o dia seguir seu curso.

Você para de repetir a mesma frase improdutiva para seu parceiro e se permite não saber o que acontecerá em seguida.

Você se senta e respira fundo, em vez de se lançar de cabeça na próxima atividade.

Você interrompe um hábito sem saber o que fará ou dirá em seguida.

Você deixa sua rotina de lado para poder se deixar guiar pelo fluxo natural das coisas.

Você deixa de lado o "Eu tenho que..." e se permite descansar por um momento.

Você diz a si mesmo a verdade sobre a motivação por trás das suas ações e se entrega à incerteza.

Você esquece quem pensa que é. Em vez de ser sempre a mesma coisa, você se apresenta renovado, diferente e sem amarras.

Só de pensar em qualquer um dos exemplos desta lista, você já pode ficar sem fôlego. Como é possível não ter planos para um dia inteiro ou parar de seguir rotinas habituais?

Como esquecer o que você sabe

Centralize-se na sabedoria de não saber:

Você está em sintonia com a verdade das coisas como elas são.

Você se abre para a possibilidade de se libertar de hábitos limitantes e dolorosos.

Você vive na realidade e não na versão de realidade falsa que sua mente construiu.

Você está aqui, vivo, encarnado, disponível.

Então, a partir desse espaço do seu desejo mais genuíno, simplesmente pare. Tenha a coragem de deixar a vida se desenrolar. Deixe a mente de lado e esteja receptivo ao que acontecer em seguida. Essa é a transição sagrada do fazer para o ser.

Talvez você tenha medo de não conseguir sair da cama o dia todo ou de acabar como uma lesma no sofá. Talvez tema não conseguir conter a alegria ou o amor. Talvez se pergunte se as circunstâncias da sua vida mudarão drasticamente.

É natural ter medo de abrir mão do conhecido. Lembre-se de que a vida quer que você a viva plenamente e se expresse de maneiras belas e surpreendentes. Mas você não pode saber quais são essas maneiras.

Esteja disposto a esquecer tudo o que você sabe – sobre si mesmo, sobre os outros e sobre como você acha que o mundo funciona. Pare, fique em silêncio e não saiba. Você pode descobrir exatamente o que tem procurado a vida toda.

Qual é a sua experiência com o desconhecido? O medo te paralisa? Gostaria muito de saber…

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COMMUNITY REFLECTIONS

13 PAST RESPONSES

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Charity Wessel Jun 8, 2021

appreciate this read and see her perspective but largely disagree . Yes, there are moments, and a day here when one needs to take these considerations. Yet, isn’t this our natural state? I feel we’re natural inactive, and need goals, to-do lists, etc. when I assess a day s work at bedtime, I don’t feel good about doing nothing . I find value in looking for it and in trying to be valuable. I feel this advice is for those who enjoy examining / inspecting because it’s quite easy to live in the now, but I feel we should keep in mind the greater reality that ‘now’ creates memories and now weighs heavy because it’ll be remembered.

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Patrick Watters Jun 7, 2021

While an older article re-posted, it remains essential to our lives, especially in light of global pandemic and unrest. I love the banner quote from Feynman too, a commentary on fundamentalist religion? Perennial Truth and Wisdom instructs us to “surrender” to Divine LOVE rather than strive to know everything (impossible).
}:- a.m.

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Kristin Pedemonti Jun 7, 2021
Wondering how this post lands for others given current context as we continue to navigate the global pandemic & layers of unknowns unlike many of us have ever experienced? Contrast:Pre-pandemic, as a Freelance Professional Storyteller who in 2005 had sold her home & possessions to create and facilitate a voluntary Literacy, I welcomed unknowns and lived and embraced them every single day.Whether that was, upon invitations, traveling village to village on the back of pick-up trucks so I could share a workshop, or it was choosing to couchsurf in Ghana in 2013 or it was saying yes to an invitation from a woman I'd just met on a train to attend a food festival in a village in Italy... or it was simply not knowing when or where my next paid gig would be or where I would live (I've been mostly nomadic for 12 of the last 16 years).Current:Now we've had a global pandemic filled with unknowns like many of us have never experienced. It's a different world and not so simple. We've been th... [View Full Comment]
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Rebecca Gliserman Sep 30, 2015

Great stuff. I have been experiencing this process recently. Especially with boredom and fear. In a myriad of ways, I have opportunities to practice this, but I have to pay attention.

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Elizabeth Feb 2, 2013

Hi Gail. Thanks for this article. I have felt a lot of boredom this last year. I never felt boredom to this extent before. I am finding that when I drop any agenda or sense of knowing that the boredom dissappears. I am not judging as much whatever it is that I want to do or experience at any given moment even if it is something as mundane as cleaning the fridge. If that is truly what brings me alive in the moment, then that is what I do. This listening and following brings me more energy and flow. Sometimes I hear the internal and even external judgements about all the "exciting things" I should be doing at this moment or the "good things for me" I should be doing everyday. I am letting those voices just pass through me more and more. I long for more freedom, aliveness and authenticity. Thank you Gail!

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Ross Crockett Jan 31, 2013
Thanks for this wonderful article, Gail. I have recently reached a crossroads in my own life concerning my job, and a few matters of the heart concerning someone I'm deeply attracted to. Some of it I have been able to deal with, but it has been a process as opposed to being an instantaneous "there, I'm done" kind of thing. I have aspirations to further my education and move my life in a new direction, but I'm not sure how I'm going to make it all happen. I admit, when I look at the price tag, I wonder how I'm going to finance this new direction. I'm also really beginning to wonder if love has truly passed me by. I've realized I don't know any of these things for sure or what's going to happen, and I'm starting to become more and more okay with not knowing. The best I can do is keep my intentions front and centre and know they will happen somehow, and move forward with love and hope in my heart. I feel good about this new direction I've chosen, and maybe that's all I need for right now.... [View Full Comment]
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G. Jan 30, 2013
It is quite funny, this summer I was walking from my mountain cabin to the valley for my grocery shopping. On the path I was thinking too much, not enjoying the nice sunshine. So, I decided to 'drop everything i know, pretend I do not know anything!', then 'see what happens.' Well, I 'did', and it was nice, I felt like trying to eat some bark of a tree, which was not very edible.. but nonethless I found that out myself. The next was I walked and saw a spot with a view over the valley, that I never saw before. So I took off from my familiar road, and went out there, it felt so nice to just do some break from the routine.Then, I looked down on the ground, and what do I see, but a plethora of strawberries, all around medozens and dozens of wild strawberries. I got excited and started to enjoy them, got down on my haunches to eat, feeling the warm sun and hearing a whisper like the wind through the trees.It felt so wonderful, tasting fresh strawberries from the wild! Then I wondered, wheth... [View Full Comment]
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ju chee Jan 30, 2013

If your writing this article then you too must be desiring change in the world or the people around you, rather than going with the flow and being with how it and they are now ? And what is my desire when writing this comment ? To question the question just creates more and more questions , two mirrors opposite each other.

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Lisa Jan 30, 2013

Embracing uncertainty has given me a sense of freedom in some areas of my life. But, in others, such as life purpose I find it hard to let go of the habit of trying to figure it all out before I take action. We have been taught to plan and prepare for the future. But, when I started comparing what I had planned with what actually happened; I realized most of the time things did not occur as I had planned or imagined. So, I decided to release myself, because the reality is no amount of planning is going change what happens next. I just have to live in a state of acceptance and move on from there.

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Meg Jan 30, 2013

Thank you this was a wonderful article. Accepting the "not-knowing" is something that I struggle with a lot. I've always been a control freak. And the slightest hint of not-knowing sends me into panic attacks. I find that I live in a constant state of distress and fear most of the time, and it's something that I'm working hard to overcome.

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idBeiYin Jan 29, 2013
Quote: Right now, and in every now-moment, you are either closing or opening. You are either stressfully waiting for something – more money, security, affection – or you are living from your deep heart, opening as the entire moment, and giving what you most deeply desire to give, without waiting. (David Deida)Gail: Just for a minute, can we please stop frantically trying to control, plan, and delude ourselves into thinking we know what we don’t know? Do you spend your time preparing for every possible outcome and worrying about all the negative consequences that could befall you?BeiYin: I must be an advanced being, because I don't wait for something and I'm not frantically trying to control and I'm not trying to pretend to know what I don't know. I do not spend my time in worrying about what might happen, etc.Gail: We are so afraid to let go, to just be, to allow the unfolding of this marvelous life without getting in the way. This fear keeps us paralyzed and stuck. And longing f... [View Full Comment]
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Stuart Young Jan 29, 2013

Excellent advice. The first step in cognition is 'Unconscious Incompetence' - not knowing what we don't know. In order to get to step 2, 'Conscious Incompetence' - knowing what we don't know, we must give ourselves the time and space to learn to become aware. Only then can we progress to steps 3 & 4. :)

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Barb Jan 29, 2013

There is much truth to that, but there is also the reality that when you enter the unknown, it's unimaginably worse. I have had enough of the unknown for 5 yrs...I'd like less chaos, more calm.