It’s easy to know
what you want. What we all want. Happiness, ease, financial abundance, material
security, enjoying healthy, caring relationships, family, belonging,
recognition, joy, peace, love. There’s no question what we want, regardless of
the specifics.
A better question is, “What are you
willing to struggle for?”
If you want an
amazing body you must suffer the gym visits, deny yourself foods that don’t
promote a healthy body, diligently and persistently devote time and attention
to building and nurturing the body. We all want the results, but how many of us
will suffer the process?
You must love the
process of what you want as much as you love the end result. All of us want the
mountain top experience, but do we really understand what it will take to get
there? Are we really willing to endure the physical, emotional and
psychological pain? Are we ready to struggle with ourselves and outside forces
to endure long enough to realize progress?
We love to want what we want - to
fantasize. But, the reality of what we want is found in the process of it. The
manifestation of the ideal is not guaranteed, so we prefer to keep the dream
and discard the risk. We fear that if we
commit to the dream and embrace the process, that our goal will not be
realized, or only realized in part, and perhaps in a way that doesn’t measure
up to the fantasy.
So the questions
then become, “Why do I want what I want?” and “I am prepared to suffer for it?”
Now suffering and
sacrifice have gotten a bad rap in our age of instant gratification. Patience
is only as long as our five second attention spans, but in ages gone by, it was
a virtue. No longer. Those before us understood how important suffering and
sacrifice were to the greater good. Now, we live in a culture of instant fame
and self-promotion. Are we even able to endure long enough for the dreams that
we hold dear?
Here’s are some
facts about a well-known author J.R.R. Tolkien. He began writing what would
become known as The Lord of the Rings at
the age of 45 and finished 12 years later at the age of 57. How many of us
would have suffered that process to produce that work?
Not only did it take 12
years to finish the story, Tolkien had to wait until he was 63 years old before
it was published. That’s waiting six
years from finishing a book to seeing it published. Did he know it would take
him 12 years to finish what he started? Was he only thinking of the goal when
he was writing it, or was he in love with the process of writing it? I’m
inclined to believe the later.
So if you have a
dream, if there is something that you are wanting, consider the road you will
walk to get there. Knowing that there are no guarantees of the end result, will
you do it anyway? Will you do it because you love the journey towards the
dream?
Your life is what
you do every day. Choose the dream that is worth living.
2 comments:
This is really good Sonja. I agree, many want things but want it now!! I used to see people when I was young and say I wanted to be them when I grew up. Little did I know that most the people I admired were probably in their 70's at the time and it took them a lifetime of learning to become the person I admired.
Good job. Great food for thought
Wendy
Thanks Wendy! Life is learning and we all grow into ourselves. Cheers!
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