Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Each day is a one-time offer.

There are times we hear voices. Not the kind that comes from an unbalanced mind — just the opposite, because these voices come with clarity, and that disturbs us the most.

Truth never seems to be an issue for us. It’s just that we become curious, and often criticized by our own conscience for trying to make sense of the senseless.


Is it the stress from the uncertainties which forces some sort of break with reality?

Yet it appears possible. On the outside, our world at times seems in turmoil. It has always been easy to fall apart, but instead, we do tend to try to do the opposite yes, pulling everything together.

Facing our own mortality forces us to prioritize reasons, reasons which can give us all the energies to stand steadfast bound with the bricks of concrete trust and hope.

We do hear vibes, nothing audible, but it is always very clear and very powerful, and there are never any mistakes in the message: Life isn’t just about us; it actually involves everyone else.

And our world begins to shift towards a more universal consciousness. We tend to learn that in life, there are no bad experiences, only lessons. It’s easy to get caught up in a crisis, but we’re only watching the ball, and missing the game.

Shifting our focus beyond the obvious is the real game and it is somehow all about learning how to play.

The tougher question lies beneath the surface: if we didn’t survive and endure from the battles which are first won or lost in our minds, would our lives have everything we’ve always wanted in it to be?

Would there be apologies left unsaid? Forgiveness denied? Had we done everything we could to leave the world a little better than it was before we got here?

Living each day like it’s our last is like climbing the tallest mountain in the world. It doesn’t matter how long it takes to look down from the top, just being able to see it differently everyday makes every second priceless and every step well worth the trip…..

We didn’t really give this a thought but our pronominal experiences and prenominal uncertainties change everything.Its not the answer. its the question.

1 comment:

toothpaste4dinnr said...

The second law of thermodynamics states that in any process the entropy of the system increases. In simpler terms, any of our actions takes the world to a higher energy level. It would be apt to enforce the law with what you have written. The chaos of the universe is monotonically increasing. Even if we are at our best behaviour, we are enhancing the randomness and chaos of the system. So a viable approach to the question of what is right and wrong would be to forget about the consequences and continue doing what we feel is right.