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Get
Up and Leave
By
Alan Cohen
I recently spoke at a church service held in a hotel ballroom.
After the service, a fellow told me, On my way here, I mistakenly
went to another hotel where another church was holding a service.
As I sat down, the preacher was blasting the audience with a hellfire
and damnation
sermon. He kept ranting about how sinful we all are and how we
are all going to hell unless we toe the line. The more I listened,
the more awful I felt. It didn't take me long to figure out
I was in the wrong service; his speech was definitely not the
one I came to hear. So I politely left and found my way here,
where I felt a lot better listening to your talk on the power
of love.
You cannot afford to hang out in a place that keeps you smaller
than you are. How many uninspiring church services, circular-reasoning
board meetings, dates from hell, and soul-numbing conversations
have you painfully endured because you believed you had to stay,
while your inner being was screaming at you to move on? If something
is right for you, it feels rewarding. If it is a mismatch to your
spirit, it feels stifling. Trying to convince yourself otherwise
will only prolong your agony and delay your joy. Yet joy is the
only thing you cannot afford to postpone.
If you are currently watching a bad movie in the form of a relationship,
job, or bodily condition, leave before it gets worse. I am not
suggesting that you run away. I am suggesting that you do whatever
you need to do to make it better. Ideally you can create shifts
that take you to a new level within the relationship or job. Your
pain may be calling for an attitudinal upgrade rather than a departure.
Whether your situation is asking for an advance or an exit, you
cannot afford to settle for less than what you really want. Werner
Erhard suggested, Live as if your life depends upon it.
It does.
Behind every no you utter lives a greater yes.
Saying no to working overtime is saying yes to quality time with
yourself or your family. Letting go of a relationship that deadens
you, opens the door to one that enlivens you (maybe with the same
person!). Turning down an invitation to break your integrity is
to affirm that your values will work for you if you trust them.
The universe is trying to give you what you want, but you have
to make space for it. To put this principle to work on your behalf,
recognize that there is no private good. What is truly good for
you will serve and support others. If something is not working
for you, it cannot be working for others. When you give yourself
permission to succeed, you give others permission to fulfill their
destiny, too.
The night before a Hawaiian seminar, I dreamed that I was swimming
with dolphins. The next morning I sat in a perfunctory meeting,
bored. At the first opportunity, I excused myself and headed for
the ocean. As I arrived, spinner dolphins swam into the bay. I
dashed into the surf and joined them. I am so glad I followed
my intuition to step away from a limiting situation to taste a
higher dimension.
On the eve of my being ordained as a minister in a Hawaiian spiritual
church, I invited my eight-year-old goddaughter to the ceremony.
What's an ordination? she asked. When I explained,
she answered, I don't think I'll be there. I'll
be bored.
I had to laugh; her honesty was disarming. How many weddings,
bar mitzvahs, and luncheons have I attended which, if I were honest,
I might have declined, confessing, I don't think I'll
be there. I'll be bored. Now I'm not suggesting
you utter those words or be rude or unkind. I am suggesting that
you have a right place in life, and when you are in it, you are
being extremely kind. Your friends' gatherings are important,
but if they are not meaningful to you, why go and be a downer
to people who are there to have fun? Either go with a whole heart,
or don't go at all. Paramahansa Yogananda taught, Manners
without sincerity are like a beautiful but dead woman.
The only thing more important than being good is being real. Authenticity
is kinder than resignation without conviction. Truth leads to
good faster than good leads to truth. Ultimately truth is good,
but you have to live it from the inside out.
The Book of Genesis tells us that God instructed Abraham, Leave
the land you know and go forth! At key times in our life,
each of us must let go of the familiar to claim the possible.
If you find yourself in a situation that is sapping your life
force, the only thing more impolite than leaving, is staying.
Honoring your inner guidance will set forth a chain motion of
healing that will stun you in its wisdom and magnificence. There
is a place inside you that knows where you belong. Respect it,
and your life will be a testimony to joy and service.
Alan
Cohen is the author of Why Your Life Sucks and What You Can Do
About It. For information phone 1.800.568.3079, email admin@alancohen.com,
or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708.
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