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Most
of us who have worked with creative manifestation principles are
familiar with the admonition to Surrender Control. We've been
taught that this is a necessary last step in order to create what
we want, and yet this is the hardest step in the creation process
for my clients. We have a much easier time with the
beginning steps of focus, imagining, removing blocks, and taking
inspired actions. Is there a secret to surrendering control?
First, remember
that each of us has a controlling nature. It's part of being
human and has been essential for the survival of the species.
We are either trying to get what we want, or we are trying to protect
ourselves from outcomes we don't like. Surrendering control
feels frightening because we no longer take action to get what we
want. It can feel like we're leaving our fate to fate. In
fact, we are going against our natural instincts, so it is completely
normal to have trouble with the surrender aspect of manifestation.
Surrendering
control happens after all the doing, action steps have been taken.
It is not a passive state; it requires active faith in all the actions
you have taken before you surrender control. It is this
paradox of taking actions, and then taking the action of non action
that trips up most of us in our busy, action oriented society.
One
aspect of the controlling nature that might not seem controlling
but leads to great suffering is denying and or fighting against
the way life really is. Each of us has our own version of
reality, our own way of thinking of how life works. Sometimes
these versions match reality, but sometimes they do not. What
do you do when something occurs in your life that you think shouldn't
be true, especially if this involves other people? Do you
accept that that is the way things are and adjust your view of reality,
or do you ignore the evidence and keep behaving like you have always
behaved?
We know
we're unaccepting if we used the word, should. We may say,
"If he were a good husband he should want to spend time with
my family, even if he doesn't like it. That's what being a
couple is about," or devastating to the self, "I shouldn't
feel like wringing her neck because spiritual people aren't violent,"
or more mundane, "Why can't my son (he should) clean his room?"
Notice that the thoughts are causing us to suffer, not reality.
When we can instead say, "Wow, he really doesn't like spending
time with my family," or, "Wow, I want to physically hurt
her," or, "He's not cleaning his room," we take the
first step in being able to surrender control by accepting the way
life is in this moment.
Notice that the
judgment of right or wrong is removed from the thought process and
we are no longer at war with reality. The facts are, the husband
wants to forego the family gatherings and he's still a husband,
feelings of hatred and violence arise in spiritual people, and the
son for unknown reasons prefers a messy room. We're certainly
free to put the judgment back in later, but before we do that, why
not examine the hidden belief system underneath first? Maybe
these are beliefs that you don't need any longer. Maybe husbands
can be good partners and not spend time with extended family.
Maybe being spiritual (or good) doesn't exclude bad feelings.
And maybe being a slob is another way to live.
Accepting
the way Life is does not mean not taking action to support yourself
or to maintain healthy boundaries with others. It means taking
action from a place of full acceptance of the way people and circumstances
in your life really are. And by at least momentarily stepping
away from our beliefs and assumptions about the way life should
work we have the chance to see that these beliefs are controlling
us, but also they can make us control others around us in an attempt
to make their version of reality match ours. Instead try letting
Life come as it comes without immediately going to war with it or
denying it. More peace and harmony within the Self and with
others is a sure result, and the last step in the creative manifestation
process of surrendering control will flow much more easily.
Would
you like to know more? See Byron Katie's book, Loving What Is
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