Wednesday 12 August 2015

Life Is One Big Frying Pan. What?!

By Evan Sanders


Changing your life is tough. It's really hard. I mean, incredibly hard.

For anyone who has tried to make some major changes in their life because they couldn't handle living in a similar way anymore, you've probably experienced the growing pains that come together with deciding to live in an other way. You are consistently tested, you fail time and again, and it's very difficult to see the world in the light of cheerfulness.

Nonetheless it doesn't necessarily demand to be that way.

You see, folks battle with deep change because they really do not know the skilled way to act when the counterproductive emotions start bubbling up. They believe that because negativism is occuring that they have got to be doing something wrong. No! Not remotely. In fact, if you're fighting and it hurts a little, you are doing things right. You are growing. You're moving past your zone of comfort.

When you're going through large changes, you're going to come across some important difficulties. Agony is going to come out to play, your internal critic is going to run wild and free, and you are going to have some struggles. In truth, that is perfectly ok! That really means you are heading in the right direction. Don't give up now when you're suffering discomfort. Keep going and see it all the way through and you will cross the finish line a transformed woman or man.

The "Frying Pan Of Life" is all about the best way to get close enough to the agony to work with it without being consumed by it. When you are creating a new life, old things really tend to trickle out and you've got to spend a good amount of time working with them. This is a standard part of the growing process. But you have to work with them because if you don't, you run the chance of allowing the past to sabotage your dreams.

So how do you do this?

You have got to get sufficiently close to the pain and experience it without getting completely consumed by it. You have to be pleased to bring yourself to the agonizing places and let the thoughts and feelings and emotions swirl around you without taking you totally out of the game. When you can do that, you give yourself access to the lessons and light that are held within that dark place.

This takes some ability and lots of practice, but if you can really spend a while working in these dark areas with some compassion and love, you can defrost even the coldest of hearts.




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