I once lived in a place
where power outages were constantly expected. Every time it happened, a sweet
silence befell the single roomed apartment that was my abode. But this silence
was short-lived as people attempted to drive away the silence and restore the
noise. First, it came from Ras Kienjos house. He had a huge speaker connected
to a mobile phone lookalike held together by a rubber band, the speaker was
then placed facing downwards on the mouth of a clay pot. ‘Born to suffer’ the song went first, and in a short time, there was
some kind of sound coming from dark rooms. It was if everyone was scared of
sitting still in a quiet room. I was no exception, but for me, the sound was
coming from me, as I croaked the silence away in utterly uninspiring religious tunes;
story for another day. The point it, we couldn’t live with our own thoughts
about ourselves, our situations. By not appreciating the wonder that is
silence, we could not hear the still small voice that is wisdom. It is true
what Walter Bagehot said;
“Inability
to stay quiet is one of the most conspicuous failings of mankind.”
Indeed, we may have come
from the Stone Age, a good move, but here we are now in the Noise age. How do
we move? Ours is a time when silence is an endangered species. The human
species makes every attempt to cover up the voice (and sometimes the void) of
their inner world with the noise of their outer world. But that can only last for
so long, then we are thrown into situations such as a hospital bed, a broken
relationship, and such as force us to look back, look within, and reflect. Fast
forward to 2020, in my wildest guesses, I wouldn’t have guessed that almost half of the world would be forced to STAY AT HOME, and in the name of
quarantine, confront their personal situations (and well, their spouses). So, what do we
do when we are forced into a reflection mode? Here, I share one idea.
The
art of observing without judging
It is okay while you stay
at home to once in a while explore the thoughts in your head, and look through
the clatter in your mind. It is healthy to explore where you have been, things
you have done, and felt you shouldn’t have, or things you failed to do and felt
you should have. It is okay to see where life has brought you, BUT, the trick
is simple; EXPLORE, BUT TRY NOT TO EVALUATE. OBSERVE, AND TRY NOT TO JUDGE the
various situations AS GOOD OR BAD. LIFE JUST IS. THINGS ARE JUST THE WAY THEY
ARE. And ALL THINGS have a way of WORKING TOGETHER FOR GOOD. Just KNOW YOUR
ANCHOR, that is, your MAIN MISSION in life. And every time you are forced to
reflect and find yourself in an evaluative or judgment mode, refuse to pass any
judgement to how life has been so far (she is…, he is…, it is…, life is…., my
career is…,) but rather go back you your anchor, and let every experience you
have had in life count, as you go on with you MAIN MISSION. Because everything that has happened in life is
what brought you HERE, exactly where the universe needed you to be TODAY, and for
the best expression of your next phase in life.
However, your next level
requires that you do away with labels. Yielding to the habitual flow of judgmental
thoughts makes it difficult to find any peace within ourselves.