A dear young woman named Abby recently attended
my Mastery Training in Hawaii, and reported that her parents had sent her as a
birthday present. At the age of 17, Abby had been hospitalized for an eating
disorder and force-fed daily by loving attendants. She did not expect she would
live long let alone ever feed herself again. Now, just four years later, she was
taking charge of her life and opening to receive love and support from people,
life, and God. While Abby’s illness had been painful, she had grown immensely
through facing it. She was bright, beautiful and mature far beyond her years.
At the end of the seminar I noticed that Abby had
a tattoo of a forward-pointing arrow on each of her feet. "What made you
get those tattoos?" I asked her. Abby smiled and answered, "They
remind me that I am always headed in the right direction."
Painful experiences are stepping-stones to right
direction. Rather than considering them curses or crosses to bear, regard them
as wake-up calls or course corrections. While you may have gone through a
difficult ordeal you wish had never happened, the only thing worse may have been
to go on as you were.
A fellow came to my teacher Hilda Charlton and
complained that he had been ripped off by an auto mechanic. "The guy
charged me $500 for poor work and then refused to remedy it," he explained.
"I had a bad feeling about this mechanic before he started the work. Now I
wish I had listened to it."
Hilda responded, "If I were offering you a
week-long course on following your intuition, and I guaranteed you that after
this course you would be better able to hear your inner guidance and more
willing to follow it, would you take the class?"
"Why, sure!" answered the fellow
without hesitation.
"And if the tuition for the course was $500,
would you pay it?"
"That would be a bargain."
"Then consider yourself lucky," Hilda
told him. "You got the entire course from your mechanic in one day."
Which direction is the right one for you? The one
you are headed in now. Wherever you are, whatever you are doing, you are in the
perfect position to discover your right next step. No matter what you do, you
will receive feedback from the universe about how what you are doing matches
your true intentions. If it feels good, you have learned, and if it feels bad,
you have learned. What you do is far less important than what you learn.
Everything you experience leads to waking up.
Trust is the key. A Course in Miracles tells us
that trust is the bedrock of the spiritual journey. The Course goes on to
explain that "it takes great learning to understand that all things,
events, encounters and circum-stances are helpful." Everything serves. If
you believe that an experience is outside of the plan for your awakening, it is
only because you have yet to see how this piece fits into the puzzle. When the
time is right, you will recognize the Big Picture.
A Zen master noted, "Wherever I go, I keep
finding myself." Ultimately, there is nothing else to do. The world you see
is a stage you have constructed with your thoughts and everyone you meet is an
actor you have hired to play out the script you have written. And you scribed it
in brilliance. Every person and experience mirrors your beliefs about yourself
and life. Rather than trying to get rid of them, thank them for the reflection,
and move on to rewrite the script in a way that honors you.
Now before you go out and seek pain to learn,
hear this Pain happens, but suffering is optional. When pain comes, make use of
the experience, but do not wallow in it. When you accidentally place your finger
in a flame, it is supposed to hurt just long enough for you to pull it out. If
you think there is value in keeping it there, you will be a crispy critter. Pain
is a minor element of life, unless you are indulging it. Then it becomes
suffering. Get the message and then get on with your life, which is far more
about joy than sorrow.
All experiences in life can be sorted into two
categories (1) Experiences to be enjoyed; and (2) Experiences to be learned
from. There is no slot in between. Nothing random. Figure out which experiences
fall into which category, and you are well on your way home.
A character in the film Joe Versus the Volcano
uttered this profound truth "Almost the whole world is asleep. Everybody
you know, everyone you see, everyone you talk to. Only a few people are awake
and they live in constant total amazement." If an experience, painful
though it may have been, leaves you closer to living in constant, total
amazement, would it not be a blessing? If you’re not sure, just ask Abby. She
has walked through hell and come out on the other side. She knows she is headed
in the right direction.