From the beginning, our elders want us to work towards success and fulfillment. Our parents and teachers promise that if we work hard, we will achieve our goals.
This is all well and good, but what they don’t tell us is that achieving your goals does not mean resting on your laurels.
That’s the hard fact I’m talking about. As human beings, we are not really capable of being satisfied. The fact is that as soon as you get what you wish for, you start wishing for something else. No one is ever rich enough, or loved enough, or powerful enough.
Oh, you may think you’re content. You may live in relative peace, enjoy your work, love the people around you. You may feel self-confident, proud of your accomplishments, secure in your everyday existence.
But every time, as soon as you relax, as soon as you think you no longer need to strive or hope or change, you will be hit upside the head with some new challenge to your peace of mind. It’s a law of nature, and no one is immune.
Contrary to all those well-meaning but incomplete teachings from people who raised us, the most important thing for us to learn and know in the bottom of our souls is that change is constant, inevitable, and not to be feared.
This is especially hard to take when the need for change suddenly materializes even though you thought everything was going along just fine. The moment you think you have things figured out is the moment to sharpen your awareness, because the jolt is coming.
Journaling can help with this difficult life lesson in a couple of ways.
First, spend some journaling sessions on your typical response to the reality of change.
And you can, of course, lean on your journal to help you navigate any current changes that are happening in your life.
#
Are you done with fear and failure? Are you ready to become all you can be? Use the 53 Weekly Writing Retreats Therapeutic Journaling Book and discover your own special awesomeness.