(This is a re-posting of an old favorite, but always relevant.)
I’ve discovered
the magic word. It’s not abracadabra and it’s not a secret. It’s
not a mystery wrapped inside a symbol. The long sought magic word – the
utterance of which brings immediate reward to the speaker – has been
found. By me. I’ll tell
you exactly how I found it.
As I was driving to work one morning, one of those idiot
motorists clustered around me, lane-hopped near my rear bumper. The idiot
then challenged other drivers as he (maybe she, it was dark) then darted back
into my lane, inches from my front bumper. My ego first impulse was to
let loose a string of verbal (or at least mental) descriptions of the idiot’s
clearly errant consciousness. But I didn’t.
The driver was an “accident looking for victims.” This was a
time when I was practicing “complaint free” principles in my real-time daily
living. I was creating a habit to say and think what I desired in
every moment, and not what I disliked or disapproved. Did I desire for
the idiot to have an accident? Of course not. Therefore I thought
and spoke to him/her what I genuinely desired - “May you arrive safely at your
destination.”
I thought that pretty good, and, sure enough, felt a bit of
relief. A few more consciousness-challenged motorists wandered into my
path, and I managed to send each along his way with the affirmation “May you
arrive safely at your destination.”
Yet there needed to be a closing, an “amen” conclusion, to the
thought lest I continue my attention on the behavior of the driver I’d rather
not encounter. Hey, I’m a slow learner, but even I understood that attention
given = attraction to.
Then flashed into my mind the magic word – the
conclusion to that moment which would free my thinking and attention, and make
it available for what I desired in my morning drive, rather than attract more
idiots in my experience. I appended the thought: “May you arrive
safely at your destination. Ashalli.” That was
it. End of drama. The lanes cleared and I drove happily on my way.
I repeated the affirmation and magic word every time I drove and
encountered idiots. It was evident, after a couple of days, that there
were less idiots on the road. Ashalli.
The question was, of course, if this magic word produce the same
effect off road? A few days later I picked up a couple of items at the
neighborhood grocery store when a patron with a cart full of stuff beat me to
the “10 Items or Less” express checkout.
What? You’ve never had such an experience? Ego
impulse was to scowl at the offending person (I had a flashback to the road
idiots). But, determined to practice complaint free, the thought was
offered “may you move quickly with your tasks to your desired end.
Ashalli.”
The remarkably efficient clerk scanned the entire cart in record
time – and with a quick payment from the person. I liked this magic
word. Then the same clerk struggled with the bar code on one of my
items. I sensed the glare from the burly fellow in line behind me.
The laser scanner finally behaved and I was quickly beyond reach of what I
imagine were less-than-complaint-free invectives from the fellow.
Well, why not? I thought for him “may you have a pleasant day,
Ashalli.” I went on about my business.
I’ve used the magic word frequently and it works. However,
it works only as the conclusion to a thought desiring a
positive outcome for the person or situation. I say that because I desire
to give my conscious attention, as best I’m able, to what I would like.
I’ve heard that before – did someone say The Golden Rule?
Do I want others to complain and condemn my erroneous
moments? Or, do I desire that they treat me as I desire to treat
them? That’s Ashalli.
There is a difference between “Do unto others as you would have
them do unto you” and a variant that goes like “Do unto others as
they would have you do unto them.” These two approaches are
180 degrees apart.
“Do unto others as they would have you do unto
them.” It sounds okay on the surface. It smacks of consideration
and kindness. Yet it requires that you adjust your behavior and interactions
to please what others want from you. To do unto others as they wish
accepts the obligation to act according to their rules, which may or may not
coincide with your values and feelings. In effect, you focus on what
others want you to do (or be.) If they are satisfied, they may respond
kindly. If they are not satisfied, well, they’ll let you know, so you can
try harder.
If you’ve ever spent time on that merry-go-round you know that
it can’t be done. You can never achieve joy this way. But you can
attempt to do so and work really hard to please others for five, ten, fifteen,
thirty, fifty years or more. It’ll never happen because you can
only treat others as you wish to be treated. Would your life be more
joyful and less entangled if you focused on treating everyone as you wished
to be treated?
That approach places creative power in your hands and you’re no
longer dependent on the good graces from pleasing others. It’s nice to be
loved and appreciated – but there’s a huge difference between Love and
Appreciation and conditional “love” and “appreciation.”
How do you reconcile demands to treat another in a way that
makes you feel badly? The bad feeling is your indication that you’ve got
the equation skewed. The best guide is to always treat others the way you
want to be treated and you are more likely to feel good. It’s not about
what other people do or don’t do. It’s what you truly desire for them –
as what you would desire for yourself.
The more I practiced the magic word the more relaxed many daily
tasks became. Then, one morning driving to work, another idiot zipped
around. At once I thought “May you arrive safely at your
destination. As Shall I.
”As Shall I. It’s not magic. It’s what you want
for yourself. May you have a wonderful day. Ashalli.
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