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Defying Gravity

August 28, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

defying gravity

Why is gravity necessary?

Why does all matter have to be under the glaring rule of this brutal taskmaster?

Could gravity be the impetus that ignites the cycle of life?

Up, or out, we go, until that certain point, where gravity overtakes us and back down we fall, until we’re pushing up again…daisies, that is.

Gravity can be a real “fun thief.”

Perhaps if I were the one to have authored the masterpiece that’s our universe, I might have left gravity off the canvas.

Wouldn’t that be cool?

Things would be so much easier.

We would never have to fear looking down.

Yet, thankfully to us all, I didn’t have that privilege, so I guess we’ll just have to be satisfied living under the rules of the one that did…

He, she or it thought gravity was a good idea, so who am I to argue?

I guess when you step back and look at the big picture, it’s a necessary component of a matter-full life.

Defying gravity becomes our life-ly chore.

Because of gravity we have to remind ourselves, while ascending to higher levels of human experience, not to look down.

If you do, you might just find yourself hurling wildly and uncontrollably back to the place from whence you began…and the impact can be devastating!

We vow not to allow gravity to detain or derail us.

We strain and strive for that illusive summit, even if it’s only a foggy illusion on the present rocky crag of our mediocre life.

Watch out because from up there things fall!

Is there someone or thing up there that doesn’t want me to reach my goal?

Is this all a big joke to the one hurling rocks down upon my dreary head?

Or are they reminders that I need to be cautious as I climb?

And isn’t it generally true that the more difficult the climb, the sweeter the finish?

Yet the end looks so much like the beginning…

So goes the cycle of life…

Forever ready to greet the next climber.

image credit: noomrise via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: gravity, impact over interest

The Impact Mindfulness Worldview

August 27, 2014 by costaricaguy 3 Comments

peole planet universe

When you first hear or read the phrase impact mindfulness, what comes to mind?

Probably some sort of save the world kinda of a thing, no?

And it is that, but much more.

In this post I want to explain in more detail what the impact mindfulness worldview really means.

You see, the normal way of thinking about personal impact is to put the cart before the horse…

That the best way for me to have an impact on the world is to first focus in a self-interested way on my economic success…and from that firmly established and comfortable platform, I can have my greater impact.

Sounds perfectly legitimate…doesn’t it?

Here’s the problem with it.

If you’re Donald Trump and you make sure that a certain percentage of your success is funnelled towards some type of image-driven impact, a certain very small percentage…

It doesn’t detract from the fact that the other 90+% of your daily energy and focus is purely self-interested, group interested, consumption oriented and certainly not People and Planet interested.

The impact mindfulness worldview suggests that a larger percentage of your interest be impact focused. In fact, all of it…

Yea, you heard that right, 100%!

It must permeate every aspect of your life.

It must become who you are and what you’re about.

Because only when enough people do that will we begin to solve the problems we have in this world…

Problems that have been exponentially growing to uncontrollable proportions…

right before our very eyes in just the last generation.

Problems like religious fanatics that unleash genocidal rage on unbelievers, global warming that’s already wreaking havoc on the planet’s weather systems, a growing income gap that threatens social unrest around the globe, developed nations that are literally consuming the world out of existence, etc., etc…

We have a killer virus on the loose in Africa and it seems the worldwide response is to seal borders and leave those inside them to their fate…rather than find a real (but non-marketable) solution.

To solve these problems impact can’t be sequestered in that small slice of our lives we label as charitable.

It must pervade every waking moment of your conscious existence.

That’s the “mindset” of impact mindfulness.

It’s not simply donating time or money to this or that worthy cause…even though doing so is a very good and impact worthy activity.

It’s adopting a mindset that sees the world and our place in it in terms of the three foundational pillars of Impact Mindfulness…

Prioritizing Impact Over Interest – that is, making sure our daily choices or activities, especially those consumptive and economically focused ones, are impact mindful…

Embracing the Concept of The Big US – that is, seeing the entire world and its inhabitants as fellow crew members on a planetary ship…the only ship we have…so that it becomes of utmost priority that we take care of it and each other…

Removing Impact Blinders – that is, being mindful of status quo ways of thinking that serve to trap us into doing “it” (life) in the same old destructive ways…you might even call that “wilful blindness.”

The world, our world, needs people who are thinking and acting according to the impact mindfulness worldview.

These are the people that can save us…

and they are YOU and ME.

Please join us at Revolutionary Misfit and be a part of the change!

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: impact mindfulness, world view

On Painting Masterpieces

August 26, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

on painting masterpieces

This morning I reach way back into the CRG archives once again…

Bob Dylan once sang that…

Someday, everything is gonna be smooth like a rhapsody…when I paint my masterpiece.

I believe Dylan was being facetious with that line, maybe with the entire song.

And then I also remember Big Tony (Robbins) once proclaiming that…

The road to someday leads to the town called nowhere.

I tend to draw inspiration from eclectic sources, don’t I?

I think Tony’s right because in my experience that mythical “someday” just doesn’t exist at all.

Waiting for some “day” to arrive at your doorstep in all its glorious perfection is like “waiting for Godot.”

But, as in the play, Godot just never seems to show.

I have often said that someday I will, or someday I won’t anymore.

Aspirations built upon the shoddy foundations of forlorn hope and recalcitrant expectation.

But life never gets smooth enough, the rough edges never hewn enough, the fog never lifts to be clear enough, and life just…goes on…

and my masterpiece in waiting…

waits.

Hold on…here’s a novel idea…

Maybe joy can be found in the painting, whatever form my metaphorical brush might take on.

In splashing on the colors like Jackson Pollock on an acid trip.

Chaotic? At best.

But one can find joy in chaos, no?

I often like to describe the music of the Grateful Dead, my favorite band of bands, as “organized chaos.”

I guess a painting that would be a truthful representation of my life, all 53 years into it, would indeed be rather…chaotic.

A “Masterpiece?”

Now that’s really not for me to say and, in all truthfulness, I won’t be around to judge, will I?

The point of this post on painting masterpieces?

Try to enjoy the damn painting for god’s sake!

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Anthony Robbins, Bob Dylan, removing impact blinders

We Think We Know Until We Know

August 22, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

we think we know, until we know

Here are 10 things I could’ve sworn I knew…

until reality up and bit me.

1. I could’ve sworn I was a perfect specimen of physical health, until one night when my heart took off like Mario Andretti in the Indy 500…

2. I could’ve sworn I was destined for fame and fortune until age 50 found me alone and destitute…

3. I could’ve sworn I’d found the love of my life until I was served with papers seeking a pension alimentaria (a Costa Rican “no-fault” alimony, to which any undeserving woman is entitled…just by leaving and filing)…

4. I could’ve sworn that my country was exceptionally exceptional until I discovered the truth about what went on in Latin America at its behest…

5. I could’ve sworn to my talent for the written word until I spent over 6 years writing with no one giving the slightest shit about anything I had to say…

6. I could’ve sworn that I was a good person whose karma would pay off, eventually, until life (or, better said, my choices) handed me a lemon that almost seems damn near impossible to squeeze (still trying to squeeze that sucker though!)…

7. I could’ve sworn family ties were iron-clad until I realized, as Bob Dylan once said (Grammy acceptance speech 1991), “you know it’s possible to become so defiled in this world that your own father will abandon you and if that happens god will always believe in your own ability to mend your ways.”…

8. I could’ve sworn that my eternal (perhaps stupid) optimism would lead me to a brighter world, or experience of it, until events of late have all but convinced me that man is, for the most part, hell-bent towards self-destruction…

9. I could’ve sworn that my christian concept of god and salvation was the correct one, until it dawned upon me that it was actually only a select one, among many others…none of which could possibly be 100% true…

And after scraping all that “dogma” off my shoes, why in god’s name would I want to step in it again?

10. I could’ve sworn that life was about maximizing my income until one day I woke up to realize it was really about maximizing my impact…I hope for me, it’s not too late…

You know, it’s funny how we think we know until we know…that we were dead wrong.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: removing impact blinders

The Singularity of Alan Watts

August 17, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The Singularity of Alan Watts

I just had my mind blown.

How?

By reading a book by the 60’s era Zen philosopher, Alan Watts. The book is entitled The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are, published in 1966.

I only recently learned of Watts via Maria Popova’s blog, Brain Pickings. In fact, ever since I discovered it, I’ve learned a great deal from her blog…

I highly recommend it!

Why did Watts’ book blow my mind?

I’ll use an example from the book to illustrate…

The Singularity of Alan Watts

If I asked you what was pictured to the right, you would likely say a circle, correct?

But could it not just as well be a hole in a wall?

Could it not be both?

At the same time?

Because, you see according to Watts, what something is, including you and me, is not defined simply by what’s on the inside, but also by what is on the outside.

That is, the surface of my skin is also the edge of the space around it.

Western thought, influenced largely by Christianity, would lead us to believe that we are separate from everything else, including each other.

I am me and you are you and there is a concrete and delineable separation between us…called space, which is also a separate “thing.”

In fact, religion would go even further and say that God has separated us into a group he likes and another he doesn’t.

Watts would say that to fully describe a human, one must not only look to the actions of the man himself, but also to the environment in which those actions take place…and that environment is the entire universe.

That is, you cannot separate the inside from the outside, because both exist interdependent on the other…they are one and the same “thing.”

There is no inside without an outside and vice versa.

Pretty heady stuff, no?

But then I start asking myself, OK Mr. Watts, that might be so, but so what?

What relevance does it have for my present existence, since the entire set up has been devised along the lines of separateness, as delusional and illusional as that might be…

It’s the “world” we have to live in.

Well, Watt’s philosophy kinda dovetails with the whole mindset that I espouse here in The Revolutionary Misfit blog.

That the impetus for impact should stem from our sameness, not our separateness.

That is, not to just throw money at problems because we have compassion for those poor starving “others.”

When we help others, we are actually helping ourselves. Because, as Watts alludes, we’re all really the same thing…we all make up the universe, which makes up…us.

Neither can exist without the other.

When I read about all the division that reins in our world and spawns such venomous hatred that shows up in many of the FaceBook posts circulating through my news feed…

it’s both enlightening and hope inspiring to read the words of Alan Watts.

I want to be inspired with a good reason or motive for practicing impact mindfulness…for being mindful about anyone else’s problems other than my own.

At times, I will admit, I think, hey what’s the use, or what’s the point of it all?

The point is that what might be happening on the other side of the globe to a small child in a tiny African village does affect me…

because that happening is part of the universal flow of which I am a component.

It’s not a separate event that I can just ignore on my way to more western culture-driven ego inflation.

We’re all doing this activity called life together and I believe impact should be about helping ourselves collectively enjoy that mutually experienced process.

image credit: goldberrybombadil via Compfight cc

The Real You…

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: alan watts, maria popova, removing impact blinders, the big us

Spirituality in the Quest for Connection

August 12, 2014 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

the truth of universal connection

I received a comment on that NRSP post I wrote recently. That’s the one where I listed the joys of being a non-Religious Spiritual Person.

The comment basically said, that’s all and well, but how do you know you’re spiritual? What’s your definition of “being spiritual?”

Great question!

I responded like this…

Eduardo, that’s an excellent question! I didn’t really address that in the post, did I? Well, maybe it’s implied in the fact that I do experience a certain joy in being non-religious, which gives me the freedom to explore a deeper and fuller spirituality. I believe life is a continuous search for truth and once you latch on to a particular religion you stop searching, thinking, I believe erroneously, that you have found ultimate truth. I believe true spirituality is a mindset that never stops searching.

Yesterday I watched (for the second or third time) Bill Maher’s documentary Religulous. In it Maher pretty much makes all the major religions seem, well, a bit “religulous.”

But do I agree with him? In part yes and, in part, no.

You see, if Maher was to ask me about my religious persuasions, I would of course tell him that I’m an NRSP. He would then surely say, well, I guess that means you believe in an all-knowing man who lives in the sky and who directs the happenings of humanity, right?

The question accompanied with that trademark Maher snicker to divulge his derision.

No, wrong.

You see, I don’t need to believe in an ego-driven caricature of god to believe in a higher being, or some force that you can call god, or whatever, that is separate and apart from all the rest.

I like to call it the universal force. I know that sounds all new-agey, but, hey, when you’re an NRSP you get to make up your own terms and definitions about these things.

It’s just not enough for Maher to dis-prove, de-validate and devalue religion. It’s natural for humans to question our existence…to ask, “how and why we are here?”

We developed religion to answer those very questions.

And if Maher’s motive is simply to remove religion, it doesn’t remove those questions. It won’t remove the search…it won’t remove our inherent need for spirituality.

Spirituality is a search for answers. Religion proposes to have them all ready made for us, but I don’t believe that any religion has anything close to an answer.

Spirituality does not reside in the knowing, but in the quest.

There’s nothing wrong with the search, with admitting that you just don’t know…that to me is the essence of being spiritual.

I do believe that there is something wrong when we stop searching, thinking that we have found the answers via a particular religion.

So, has my search led me to any answers, you might ask?

Answers…no.

Opinions?

Yes, I do have one or two of those. But we all know that opinions are a lot like assholes…we all have them.

My opinion has a lot to do with the scientific fact of connection. On an unseen molecular level, all matter is connected. Despite all the disconnection that exists in our seen world, the fact of the matter is, we’re connected.

Oh for sure, we can act as if we’re disconnected. We are super efficient at doing that. And generally, that’s what causes so much strife and suffering in our world.

Actions that facilitate connection are consistent with universal truth.

I guess biology would try to explain such actions as simply products of a chemical reaction in the brain that gives rise to emotions that motivate such actions.

Emotions like empathy and compassion.

Yet I believe that something else is going on behind sacrificial acts of service…of impact.

My spiritual search has led me to the opinion that “god” or that universal force I referred to above, is in fact the point of connection.

Think of it as if the curvature of space is in fact that way (curved) because god has his arms wrapped around the universe.

This universal force, or god, is the reason behind our connection and we are designed to have the capacity to act in ways that facilitate this universal truth of connection.

I like to call such actions good.

And specific to this blog, impact.

Impact mindfulness is a spiritual concept because it is a mindset of connection.

Religion is the opposite. Religion, like other actions of disconnection, such as wars and even murder, is mankind’s ego-driven need to controvert connection.

The ego drives us to single ourselves out, either alone or as part of a group, as being above and beyond the collective.

It all sounds good…that we are individuals striving for self-actualization.

For sure there’s great comfort in acting as if disconnected. We can accumulate great wealth for ourselves in the process.

But in my opinion, the best way to strive for “actualization” or fulfillment is within the reality of our connectedness.

That is, the purpose for said striving should be to facilitate the good of the whole.

You see, that’s what I believe we are really here for. I believe it’s consistent and goes with the universal flow of how things really are.

When we don’t do that…when we are solely self-interested, or group-interested, it tends to upset the apple-cart.

We tend to see the emergence of groups like ISIS.

Or, serial killers like Ted Bundy.

Our capacity for actions geared toward the collective good, for impact, implies that we have the flip-side capacity to do the exact opposite.

And we do, all too often.

This blog seeks to be a spiritual encouragement for the realization and actualization of universal connection via impact.

I believe our very existence depends on it.

image credit: Terry Hancock www.downunderobservatory.com via Compfight cc

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Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: NRSP, spirituality, the big us

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