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Great article Rob.
As humans we have to accept the reality that life comes with challenges.
And we become stronger when we faced the storms in our lives with boldness and courage.
Remembering always to give thanks in every situation, whether they be good or bad.
— Maxine May 12, 2012
Again, another great read from Rob!
I agree with so much and am challenged by other ideas, of course – the beauty! — Tammy May 12, 2012
Wise words, and more than that, because it really works! (has practical benefits).
In the past, “forgive” had the negative connotation for me that you mention, but I read an article, by Rajneesh/Osho I think, in which he said something to this effect:
To forgive is not something that you can “do”; Forgiveness happens when you realize there is nothing to “forgive”.
— John May 12, 2012
I would like to mention about the recent blogs that you put online which always inspire me so much that I would fall into it as a way to dissolve my unhappiness.
Those blogs are magnificent.
I like them because they really touched my soul.
Thank you sincerely for doing that for us. — Lily May 12, 2012
I’ve only listened to the first 12 minutes (no time till the weekend for the full 90 mins.), and already I have an insight that explains something I’ve been missing.
Part of my struggle has been doing something with the insights that should be game changers, but often don’t move me ahead in a way I would expect. In other words; knowing what’s wrong and still staying stuck with it.
Just a comment from Rob about 10 mins. into the recording cleared up why that cycle exists for me. Listen yourself, but in summary he noted that ‘if you have nothing more important to strive for in your life, than to understand and remove the negatives, the mere desire to change won’t be strong enough to outweigh that motivation’. I took that to mean that you have a better chance of “moving on”, when you are careful to make what’s ahead more important than what’s behind.
I’ve spent far more time looking back. It’s no wonder it’s become far greater than the life I want. I just have never put any meaningful and persistent action into chasing it in concrete ways. In thinking I needed to figure out and rectify first, I was never developing the foundation to build the life I wished for on.
It seems logical that if ones primary focus is where you want to go and who you want to become, that the past which often seems to have so much power, would play a lesser role in the perception of self.
I’ve got to chew on this.
— Brian May 12, 2012
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