5 Ways to Get Ahead By Letting Go
Surrender, especially in American culture, is rarely seen as something positive. It’s seen as giving up or losing. But keeping faith in mind, what does it mean to surrender to your situation?
Surrender means accepting that the battle has been won not on your terms, and you are willingly giving your life over to a higher power; the authority of God’s wisdom. It means taking a humble position and embracing that the control is not yours. Letting go of the attachment you have in the result.
Pretty much all of our struggles, from frustrations to anxiety, from anger to sadness, from grief to worry, all stem from the same thing …
The struggles come from being too tightly attached to something.
When we’re worried, we are tightly attached to how we want things to be, rather than relaxing into accepting whatever might happen when we put forth our best effort. When we’re frustrated with someone, it’s because we’re attached to how we want them to be, rather than accepting them as the wonderful, flawed human they are. When we procrastinate, we are attached to things being easy and comfortable (like distractions) rather than accepting that to do something important, we have to push into discomfort. And so on.
Well, if you’re ready to accept that being too attached, clinging too tightly, is the cause of our struggles … then the answer is simple, right? Just loosen the attachments. Just let go.
Easier said than done. Any of us who have tried to let go of attachments knows that it’s not so easy in practice. When our minds are clinging tightly, we don’t want to let go. We really, really want things our way.
So what’s the answer, then? In this short newsletter, I share a few practices I use to help dissolve attachments to things that don’t serve me.
1. Meditation
Meditation is simply sitting still and trying to pay attention to the present moment — whether that’s your breath, your body, or what’s around you right now. What you’ll find is that your mind runs away from the present moment, attaching to worries about the future, planning, remembering things in the past. In meditation, you practice letting go of these mini attachments, by noticing what your mind is doing and letting go, returning to the present moment. This happens again and again, and so you get good at it. It’s like muscle memory after doing it hundreds, thousands of times. You learn that whatever you were attached to is simply a story, a narrative, a dream. It’s not so heavy, just a bit of cloud that can be blown away by a breeze.
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2. Compassion
Taking this thought into mind, you may ask God for an end to your suffering, or an end to the suffering of others. What happens is that this prayer transforms you from being stuck in your attachment, to plugged into God’s power. This approach can melt the attachment and find a way to ease it. You become bigger than your story, when you pray for your own suffering to end. And when you pray for others’ suffering to end, you connect yourself to them, see that your suffering is the same as theirs, and understand that we’re in this together. This causes your attachments and story to become less important, not such a big deal, as you connect with others in this way.
3. Interdependence
Try recalling what you are grateful for and pray for others to be happy as well. All others, whether you like them or not. Let go of the hurt. We all know that hurt people, hurt people. When we do this, we start to see that we’re all connected in our suffering, and in our desire to be happy. You are not so separate from them. We're not separate, but interdependent. You want happiness, bring more happy.
4. Accepting
At the heart of things, attachment is about not wanting things to be the way they are. You want something different. That’s because there’s something about the present moment, about the person in front of you, about the space you are in , or about yourself, that you don’t like. By praying, meditating, practicing compassion and interdependence, you can start to trust that things are OK just as they are. They might not be “ideal,” but they are as they need to be in this moment. God is getting things ready or prepping you for challenges. Things are beautiful even. And you start to become more aware of your continual rejection of the present moment, and open up to the actuality of this moment instead. Over and over, this becomes the practice, opening and investigating the moment with curiosity, accepting it as it is.
5. Expanding
All of these practices result in a more expansive mind, that is not so narrowly focused on its limiting beliefs of how things should be, not so focused on its small desires and aversions, but expanding to see the bigger picture. The mind can hold these little stories. It’s a wide open space, like a deep blue ocean or dreamy blue sky, and the little attachments are just a part of it. Our minds can also see and feel other people's energy, it allows us to see and feel the present moment in all its flawed glorious beauty and be present with all of this at once. We should all practice expanding our minds.
This newsletter isn’t the space to address traumas and I’m not suggestion you can just let them go. What I am sharing are my thoughts on avoiding the daily annoyances of woulda, shoulda, couldas. I’m talking about accepting what you can’t change and changing what you can and having the wisdom to know the difference.
Since I have moved to Nigeria in these last seven months, I have had many "I surrender all, let it go" moments. From temperamental electricity to never ending cues at banks and hospitality staff that struggle to be hospitable. There was the client I had been working with for months whose husband lost his tech job unexpectedly. The loss of business was going to affect my remote income. But, I encouraged her to suspend her coaching so she could cut expenses, and I volunteered a couple free sessions with her and one for her husband. I took a deep breath and surrendered my grand plans. I made peace with it and moved on.
It was less than a week and two potential clients hit me up on LinkedIn. I am working with one of them now and scheduled to start with the other during my visit home in March. This situation has reinforced my ability to let it go, open the door for other spaces to enter and bring a higher consciousness instead of worrisome thoughts. I invite you to do let go and increase your vibe this week. Whatever is bothering you, worrying you, open the space for something higher than you to enter. And be able to say deep in your spirit, “I surrender all. I surrender...all.” Let it go and let it flow.
International Consultant at The African Promise
1 年This seems to be a necessary message for many today. Sharing so others can renew their minds in this way toward freedom.
Doer, Implementer, Integrator, for NP Programs and Services.
1 年Thanks for the reminders of trusting in God and all will figure a way. It may not be our way but it will be his. Stay well my friend
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1 年Thanks Kay. Very real for both dad and I. He read it as well.
Founder and Executive Advisor
1 年I couldn't love this more, and it arrived right on time! Thank you Kay Wilson <3