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Honolulu

December 31, 2007

My Favorite Resolution

Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.12.31, 4:15 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

June 22, 2007

UNCOMPLICATE MY LIFE, part 2

—for M. A.—

The power to make choices that reflect your true priorities and concerns is perhaps the most amazing gift any human can possess.

    --me, from part 1,  HERE.

There are many things in life that will catch your eye, but only a few will catch your heart ... pursue those.
     --Michael Nolan

(NOTE: I don't know which Michael Nolan he is, but his thought popped up on my homepage while I was writing this article. If you like quotes, you can check out this ThinkExist homepage, too.

Also,
this article is part 2 in an ongoing series. If you want more ideas about how to manage your life, CLICK HERE, and part 1 will open up in a new window. If you find this series useful or enjoyable, please consider leaving a tip of $2 or more in the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Thanks!)




Our choices determine whether we succeed or fail at uncomplicating our lives.

The quality of the energy we bring to these choices is really important. To become more successful at uncomplicating your life, start by noticing when you make choices or act with partial energy.

"Partial energy" is present:

-    whenever we do things half-heartedly;

-    when we feel overwhelmed or "blocked" (especially when we cave in to pressure from others);

-    when we find ourselves wishing that we were doing something else;

-    when we are distracted (full attention is critical to success);

-    when we are high on alcohol or some other drug (that's always a bad time to make a decision, especially an important one, or one involving someone who loves and trusts us);

-    and especially when we are indecisive. You never need to make a decision when you are feeling indecisive! That would be crazy, wouldn't it?

YoucantrushacatbookIn all of these cases, it is better to wait until the time is right. In other words, save your power for something you can focus on with your full energy. Bringing your partial energy to anything is a waste of your valuable time.

Remember that you own the right to change your mind about choices you have previously made. No one can take that away from you — unless you let them.

CatpinkclawsIf you sign a contract, and then you change your mind, maybe you will have to live with the consequences. But maybe there's a way to break it! I have had to break contracts, and sometimes I had to be pretty pushy about it to get my way, but it was always worth it. Or maybe there's a way to change your agreement Catjailbreakso that it is something you can live with. Really rich people do this all the time, and they get away with it; why shouldn't you? (Often their lawyers call it a "loophole.") You'd be surprised what you can change, once you bring your full energy to changing it. Sometimes a commitment turns out to be a bad choice. It complicates life in a painful way, and the only way to uncomplicate life and stop the pain is to break the commitment.

Cat01_2HellocruelworldWe all find ourselves faced with tough choices. When you are feeling the pressure of being at the bottom of the heap, sometimes any decision, however ill-advised, is better than making no choice at all, just so you can feel as though you are moving forward. These are usually pretty desperate measures, though. If you can step back and view your situation from a different perspective, even for a moment, you may help yourself avoid an even greater, less reversible disaster a minute from now.

FlyingcatIn other words, kiddo, look before you leap! When you come to a decision point, you can think of a crosswalk. You wouldn't want to walk across the street without looking for traffic first. The bigger the decision, the busier the street. So be sure that you have checked carefully before you make your move, and then make it with your full energy. (Stop walking once you're halfway across? Yikes!)

There are many ways you can check out the street before you cross:

-    ask yourself which choice feels most right to you;

-    ask yourself about the best and worst possible outcomes that could result from your choice;

-    ask someone whose opinion you trust;

-    ask someone else, just in case they're wrong! Ha ha ha! But don't spend all day worrying about it. Most choices are pretty easy once we're being honest with ourselves. More on that in a moment.

-    wait for a sign (some kind of "green light" — for example, something you overhear, or read in the paper, or simply realize all of a sudden, by yourself.)

BravecatI need to talk about this idea of being "honest with ourselves," because "denial" has become such an evil buzz-word nowadays. It seems like if you want to disapprove of someone else's choices, all you have to do is claim that they're in "denial" about something. Now, I'm not saying that everyone does this manipulative kind of behavior, or that it's always an unjustified judgment call. Still, it has become easy to point fingers and substitute the "D" word for doing the harder but more rewarding work of thinking your way through a situation from the other guy's perspective. (Often we call this "empathy.")

CatinfiniteRemember that you can't really control anyone else's choices for very long. That's a very good way to make yourself sick with anger and hate. Again, it is better to take this partial energy you are wasting on trying to bend someone else's choices, and move toward your own goals with full energy and unbending purpose.

4kittensfullattnIf you want good role models for full energy and unbending purpose, try watching animals. Other species are seldom lackadaisical about doing anything! Our pets, such as cats and dogs, seem to indulge in this luxurious laziness more often, but that is probably because they have been unduly influenced by foolish humans!

Yet even we foolish humans can achieve our goals with the certainty borne of a clear mind and a glad heart.

So I leave you with this thought:
Lionsmeetinggoals
Whenever you can meet your goals and have fun while you are doing it, then you are living in Paradise.
    -- me, again

That is what full energy looks like. Why do you deserve to settle for less?

Uncomplicate your life.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.06.23, 8:10 a.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $200 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do here. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution on my next blog post.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

April 12, 2007

Mean Doggies, Nice Kitties

I am blessed with lots of natural beauty in my neighborhood. I love to go for walks in the afternoon, sometimes lasting for an hour or more. It's a good way for me to decompress, enjoy the fresh air, and get some thinking done.

However, our neighborhood has a lot of dogs. Most of them spend most of their day outdoors, and practically all of them start barking whenever someone walks past on the street, even at a considerable distance. It's terribly disruptive and annoying. Some of them are quite persistent. On occasion I will walk past as many as five houses at once, all with barking dogs out in the yard somewhere. All it takes is one stupid dog to set off the others. (The small ones are the most aggressive and obnoxious. Sometimes I think that the larger, calmer ones might let me pass in peace if the terrier types didn't incite them to join in raising a ruckus.)

I have tried a number of coping mechanisms, none truly satisfactory, but today I think I finally found one that works.

Anytime I start to think bad thoughts about dogs, I will think good thoughts about cats instead.

Cats, of course, have their own range of annoying qualities, but at the moment I find myself beset by barking bowsers, they don't seem so bad. So I think of soft, fluffy, smart, happy, quiet little kitty-cats, and suddenly the damned dogs don't bother me as much. I know this is no great revelation — replacing a negative thought with a positive one is an age-old tactic for dealing with life's little (and not-so-little) challenges — but I'm far from the most emotionally intelligent person in the world, so it's always a kick when I stumble upon something like this.

(To remind myself that not all dogs are so obnoxious, here is a picture of a cute, quiet puppy with the calmest disposition out of a litter of five in my neighborhood. Their Mommy brought them all to visit us yesterday:)

I am going to try this thought-substitution with all forms of obnoxious behavior to see what happens. When I am trapped in a restaurant or on a plane with screaming kids, I'll think about polite, intelligent adults instead. When I am stuck behind a slow-moving driver (which happens a lot in Hawaii, where practically all the roadways run a single lane in each direction), I'll think about fast bicyclists, or maybe picture myself running along a beautiful beach. How about oppressive forms of authority? I'll think about my tolerant friends instead. I will seek whatever image works to relax me and restore my sense of inner calm.

What this really boils down to, I guess, is the age-old dictum to count your blessings. Even if they're not my blessings, I can still feel grateful to be part of a beautiful world, even if my tiny corner of it feels rather ugly at the moment. Soon the ugliness will pass.

In other words, living well is the best revenge. I'll get it right yet.




Wishing you a beautiful day,

€Bill Brent


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $179 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
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This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution within 24 hours.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

April 07, 2007

THE BIG PERSPECTIVE: Stop thinking small, start living LARGE!

"Argue for your limitations and sure enough they're yours."
   — Richard Bach, Link to Amazon com Illusions: The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah (1977)

"We still attribute to the other fellow all the evil and inferior qualities that we do not like to recognize in ourselves, and therefore have to criticize and attack him, when all that has happened is that an inferior "soul" has emigrated from one person to another. The world is still full of bêtes noires and scapegoats, just as it formerly teemed with witches and werewolves.""
   — C. G. Jung, Link to Amazon com Civilization in Transition, p. 130; quoted at: Projection of the Shadow

"Man will always howl and rage / against the infinite cage."
   — me, in poem, lost and undated

"I'm not a nag, I'm a motivational speaker."
   — magnet slogan on file cabinet next to this desk right now

"You cannot be a fierce force if you're always running around apologizing for it."
   — me, in email, 2005.02.05

"Right now I'm into 'reversing questions' about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness in order to break open some new energetics. The process is simple. Instead of asking, "Why don't I have enough?" you instead ask, "Why do I have enough?" Every negative thought that percolates up from my subconscious in the last four days, I've done this Link to Amazon com Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy approach mentally, and lo and behold, this calm, relaxing sense of well-being bubbles up from inside and my shoulders let go. I like this method; I want you to try it next time you get writer's block and tell me if it works."
   — my friend Romy, otherwise known as "Leane Roffey Line " (who got inspired after getting Link to Amazon com The Great Little Book of Afformations [sic] by Noah St. John and Denise Berard (ISBN 0-9715629-6-2) from a close friend for her birthday on March 17. The statement (in email, 2007.04.01 a/k/a April Fool's Day), is her synthesis of what they had to say.

Okay, so I didn't wait until I had writer's block. I keep having writer's blog.

Hee haw.

I sit typing at this window, and in the morning, birds might fly across the yard and momentarily rest near me on the other side of the glass. Sometimes I get the camera raised and focused soon enough, sometimes not. Due to the zoom lens' delay, I just missed a shot of a particularly beautiful bird, which would have been my first picture of a mynah. So I said to myself, "Maybe the oncoming generation of new digital cameras will be faster at this. Maybe I should get one." And then, without even thinking, I said out loud, "This camera is good enough. I get lots of good bird pictures." (Click on my birds link, HERE, and you'll see what I mean.)

So I think I'm using this "reversing questions" technique a lot already.

I'm also pushing myself to lead life from an even less defended position than I already do. So far it's working well. It feels like I'm gearing up for yet another quantum leap in psychic growth sometime down the line (six months to a year, I'm guessing). I can see new cracks forming in the current perceptual façade — even as I write this article.

In other words, my reverse-thinking friend's perceptual shaking-up exercise has been shaking up things for me here in lava-land this week, boosted by a three-day visit from one of the most active reverse-thinkers I have ever met.

Yet even the visitor, who is highly scrupulous and honest, seems blindsided at times by confirmation bias and ego projection.

It's tough not to be. It was also tough for me to be such an active listener for three days, despite plenty of experience with other highly verbal, extroverted thinking personalities. To complicate matters, I have a giant ego too. Or not. To paraphrase "Karma Chameleon," I come and go. How do you measure an ego, anyhow? Is it based on the strength of one's need for attention? Or how cranky the observer is on a given day?

In fact, here's an ingenious little reminder you can use, the next time you catch yourself having a difficult moment. I just made this up. Whenever you feel the need to find a SCAPEGOAT — for anything! — ask yourself:

Where's my

SCAP   <—click this!

EGO

AT?

In other words, what am I at war with, within myself?

Right now?

(Re-read the Jung quote at Projection of the Shadow if you need further information.)

Because this is the kind of reverse-thinking that's going to keep us from getting into World War 3. I mean it.

(But humorously, folks:)

Every mind needs candy.


So this is my gift to you today, a mind-candy mnemonic designed to short-circuit your mind-gamey [squawk! phew!] ego. No more scapegoats! (Hmmm, and goats smell pretty gamey, too, come to think of it.... Hens and goats; do they sound [or stink] like anyone you know?)

I like myself as I am, clown-shoes and all. But self-importance makes it hard for me to hear others. With my guest, though, I pushed myself not to tune out, and it really worked. So even though my extroverted side is out of practice (and not particularly strong to begin with), the visit was highly invigorating.

Remembering the Aloha Spirit LAW helped me meet the challenge, although I've noticed this week how sketchy my hearing and retention can be, whenever someone is steadily talking into my ear while I'm concentrating on driving. So at times I experienced mental overload and missed cues, even though the conversational content was rich and I didn't want it to stop.

(Some, stretching a metaphor nearly to its breaking point, would identify this as my "addictive behavior," whereas I would reply that I was merely raising the bar on my willingness to split focus while remaining in control of my vehicle. See what I mean? Unless you can somehow free yourself from your usual context, every perception will suffer from confirmation bias. To free yourself, allow yourself to get lost at least once whenever you travel somewhere new. Solitude works best for this. Ask a stranger — yes, a stranger! —  for directions, and follow the yellow brick road.)

Our interaction entailed a rapid, nearly constant cross-referencing of my brain's contents with my guest's, and while the high level of quantity and quality was at times exhilarating, at other times it nearly wore me out. Yet persistence pays, and you are reading part of the dividends right now. The experience brought to mind Ladybird Johnson's description of LBJ: "He's just more."

Thus I was called to draw upon a much greater degree of extroverted thinking and extroverted sensing in three days than I am used to in a typical week of solitude here. I'm quite used to free-associating for long stretches of time and rarely interacting with others for hours, if not days, at a time. It's delicious.

So I have a question for you, reader: Do you think that we tend to be better multitaskers when we are younger? Or is it simply that we have more energy and thus can get more done overall? I don't know whether I'm imagining that it was easier to be more interactive then, and to concentrate on more than one thing at a time, or whether I am more focused now and less overcommitted. In any case, I am beginning to realize how distracted I must have been in my twenties, to have multiple giant commitments in motion around me at all times, requiring a constant division of my attention. I probably didn't even notice.

Okay, some observations now:

  1. Akin to Emily's epiphany in Thornton Wilder's Our Town, most of what we call our "experience" —  including this post! —  is a half-remembered, half-submerged history we embellish to convince ourselves that we are perceptually accurate, morally correct, mentally sound, factually complete enough, interesting enough to be listened to, etc. (i.e., "okay"), when it is in fact mere wish-projection. This is most true when we blame others for faults we fail to see within ourselves. It's that SCAP EGO A-Talkin'.
  2. Yet this is not even the distorting lens of retrospect (that so-called "20-20 hindsight") at work; that would be tragicomic enough, yet most of us simply don't pay enough attention at the moment of interaction to accurately see (perceive) much of what is really going on around us in the first place. We are too busy planning our next speech, or thinking back on something we remember badly, or cross-referencing mentally with others. So we try to fill in the gaps by remembering what wasn't even there. Yet this is what passes for truth. (NOTE: As driver, I was often aware of a magnificent scenic moment that flickered past, and which my friend did not observe because he was busily —  and happily, for that's the main thing after life and liberty (so they say) —  thinking out loud. So we got to share his moment, but not our moment, if you follow my meaning. Sharing a rich and full mutual moment often entails both parties' being present and silent, inside and out. Sharing a joke may be the best exception to this rule. Sharing a song is probably a close second. All of this, of course, depends upon the level of mutual pleasure of the experience. The consistent inability to achieve such moments — I refer to them sometimes as "the moments between the moments" —  accounts for the failure of most long-term relationships.)
  3. Often I had a sense of déjà vu, due to my having driven around another hyper-thinking friend while in this identical tour-guide role, even over many of the same roads, back on August 1.
  4. Conversely, I found myself saying "I don't know" nearly constantly this week. When I was younger, not knowing something used to bother me to the point of guilt; it doesn't bother me so much anymore. (Such is the bargain of aging.) I find it very difficult, not to mention treacherous, to feign knowledge; actually, it's quite repulsive to me because it's a form of lying and cheating. That's bully behavior.
  5. Those with the clearest integrity of thought and action are the least likely to be in positions of political power because that kind of power is typically sought by men and women who prefer setting agendas for others to experiencing life from a position of observation and inquiry. Oh, and most politicians started out as bullies. Someone, give me funding for a study, access to the poli-ticks, and a polygraph machine, and I will prove this. (Dream on, LitBoy! But you can leave me a penny for my thoughts, anyhow, in the Tip Jar — it's at the top of this page.)
  6. Just before we departed the other evening, I treated my friend to ice cream. Later that night, I told hubby that someday I will reach a point at which my force of character (visually aided by a bit of gray hair) will be so strong that all I will have to say to discourage distracting people is to look them in the eye and state, "You don't want to make an old man angry," and they will just drop it, whatever "it" may be. I did a coded version of this at the ice-cream store, when I told the chatty employee that I'd had a grueling day and I wanted to eat my ice-cream cone in peace. He understood, and set about closing up the shop instead. This will happen more.
  7. So why wait to be old? I deserve that much respect right now. Sold.

I'm not a scientist, although I have gone through several major life-stages characterized by a habit of testing boundaries (perceptual as well as more subjective-moral-societal ones). Mostly this has served me well. (Thus stated an astute therapist to me once. He did not seem to intend it as a compliment.)

So ... is it a canonical piece of scientific inquiry to examine defective functioning in order to determine what is normal? How do we know this works? Wouldn't this process give rise to many cases of simply ignoring the obvious? How much of the time do we need to compare apples to oranges in order to understand apples? OTOH, if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, that could still mean that it only appears to be a duck, right? Especially nowadays.

Isn't perception a product of our categorizing brain at least as much as it is of the five senses? For example, my hyper-thinking friend says he is afraid of swimming in the ocean, although he did discriminate between a fear of sharks versus whales at one point. He claims he's more afraid of the whales. Why is it that we can formulate theories, likely scenarios, and opinions (formed by us, or likely in our minds to have been formed about us by others — ah, the house of mirrors!) without needing direct sensory experience? Sharks versus whales? A man being attacked by either during a swim is a pretty unlikely scenario. This is imagination in action, right? Isn't imagination a perception just as much as any sensory input? So why is confirmation even necessary in order to have a perception? That's putting the cart before the horse. How do we ever really know for sure, anyhow, when a perception is "valid?" Validity is subjective. Any conflation of "information" and "meaning" destroys objectivity. A cognitive process does not equate to objectivity, either. (I'm sure that the logical-fallacy camp has a rejoinder for that one, boiling down to some "proof" akin to: "'Everything's subjective, nothing can ever be proven for sure' is a load of crap." You can visit Maturana on Cognitive Strategies if you're ever curious to hear a contrasting point of view. Be prepared to engage your brain and take your time.)

So much of what we perceive is based on confirmation bias rather than direct experience anyhow. Why do we so often create inaccurate expectations of outcome? Sometimes that happens because we see what we want instead of what's right in front of us. If you thought that George W. Bush wouldn't get re-elected, then it is possible that you suffered from confirmation bias. We all miss evidence constantly. It's Stone Age wiring in action: magical thinking, overconfidence, or "psyching ourselves up" to take on anything difficult and potentially life-threatening, such as hunting  big, scary animals (then) or war (then and now). A more rational approach would dictate self-preservation; save yourself, then worry about the village.

So if confirmation bias is hard-wired into our species, then arguably, it could have won George W. Bush a second term as the leader of the so-called free world, by appealing to an electorate's emotions; i.e., the need to believe "we" are invincible. (And yet somehow "we" invincibles are supposed to feel threatened by Weapons of Mass Destruction? Wow, talk about a perceptual gap... and a stunning display of SCAP EGO.)

Oh, and how to start living large? You mean, the self-help portion of this rap? Aside from all of it, already? Well, that's the simplest part, right here:

Step 1. Just keep doing the next right thing.

Step 2. When you are not sure what that is, ASK SOMEONE YOU TRUST.

...and if there's no one around whom you can trust, then ask yourself: why the fuck not?

Don't forget to check where your SCAP EGO is AT.

Oh, and the next time you find yourself starting to settle for less than you deserve, ask for more instead. That's one more secret.

You may not get what you want, though.

You may not need it anyhow.

...but once you can learn to discriminate reliably between a want and a need, you'll be truly invincible. Bigger than life.



Wishing you a beautiful, wise and foolish day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.08.10, 5:12 p.m. Hawaii time]


LitBoy.com is a professional blog. Keeping it online costs me $179 per year. That's before paying me for my writing, photography, or anything else I do. If you enjoy this blog, please use the Tip Jar at the top of this page. Your two-dollar minimum donation helps keep this banner-free site alive. It's quick and easy!

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
31 / 179
(17.2%)

This meter displays this year's contributions to date in U.S. dollars (after the funds processor takes its cut). Make a donation, watch the meter rise! Usually I post your contribution within 24 hours.

All original materials here on LitBoy.com (writing, photos, drawings, graphics, etc.) belong to Bill Brent. If you want to re-use something here, please ask. Higher resolution images are available.

January 23, 2007

UNCOMPLICATE MY LIFE

[Note: I'm recovering from a tooth extraction this week, so I am reposting an article that originally appeared at my AuthorsDen site in November 2005. From time to time I will repost one of my "greatest hits" from the past two decades.

23 June 2007: I have added a second article to this blog titled Uncomplicate My Life, part 2. If you want more ideas about how to manage your life, CLICK HERE, and it will open up in a new window.

Any time you find something on this blog useful or enjoyable, please consider leaving a tip of $2 or more in the Tip Jar at the top of this page. That will help defray the monthly cost of this blog ($14.95) and, more immediately, recompense me a bit for the hundreds of dollars I lost this month in author royalties for the past quarter. For details, you can see my blog post here dated January 11, 2007: "Once more, unto the breach of trust." As always, thanks for reading. --Bill]



It’s so tempting just to grow lazy in the current cultural climate. Mentally lazy, spiritually lazy, physically lazy. It’s all just too easy. We can always blame our parents, the kids at school, the bullies in the neighborhood, society at large (“an un-understanding world,” as the film Heathers famously put it) for our frustrations and complications.

It’s easy to lose faith in ourselves. There are so many tempting distractions, and it’s so easy to feel depersonalized. The workplace is either too challenging or too boring. The Internet and the TV all bring us more information or stimulation than we can sort coherently. It seems like we’re always staring into some goddamn screen in order to get a grasp on reality.

No one understands us.

There’s always a new car or a new house to buy. Some new gadget that’s supposed to make our lives more streamlined or more pleasant, anything from an iPod to a vacuuming robot to a vibrating sex toy.

Yet how can we determine what’s really important to us and how we exist in a relatively natural state, unless we put down the toys and stop blaming others for our problems?

Find an affordable place to travel. Take long walks. Talk to the people who live there. If they don’t speak your language, learn a bit of theirs. If you’re American, see how long you can go without telling people where you’re from. Disassociate yourself from your usual group while you’re visiting. Wear something that doesn’t give you away. Try to listen more than you talk. Take a bus or train, or get into your car, and travel for a few hours without a map or destination. Try to end up someplace unfamiliar, where you can get yourself lost for a while. Don’t use a global positioning system to tell you where you are. (After all, it’s just another screen, right?)

You will become more alert, more aware of the sights, sounds, and other sensory aspects of your surroundings. You may have thoughts and feelings that surprise you. That is good, even if they seem frightening at first. Just sit with them, and let it all wash over you. Just be in the moment. Then, when you feel you’ve had some experience that you recognize as a defining moment of your adventure, find your way back.

Talk to people when you need help finding your way, or when you want something that catches your interest explained to you. Don’t let yourself grow too frustrated or bored with your surroundings, but recognize that a bit of disorientation and boredom is okay, wherever you are.

Once you’re back in your room, leave the TV off, and if possible, the Internet as well, for these things tend to distract you from your immediate surroundings and can suck up more of your time than you intend for them to. If you must use these devices, then set yourself a time budget for that and stick to it. The discipline will do you good.

Then, once you’re home from your trip, keep acting as if you’re still traveling. Budget your time for distraction, but don’t get tedious about it. Make time in your life, at least once a day, to visit some unfamiliar place. It can be a neighborhood, a park, a museum or library, a family-run restaurant — just make it anyplace that is not set up with the express purpose of entertaining you. Go for experiences that increase your activity, rather than encourage your passivity. Find situations that engage you, rather than pre-packaged “experiences” that remove you from your opportunity to make original choices.

Stop buying products and services that you don’t really need. Don’t borrow money to pay for things. Learn to pay your bills on time, even if it’s uncomfortable and even if you can’t afford to pay off the whole thing at once. Close up any loopholes that make it easier for banks or other companies to keep you hooked on their products and services.

You don’t have to buy everything you think you do. For instance, walk into a library and open up an account so you can borrow their books, CDs, tapes, and other media. If you eat prepackaged meals a lot, learn how to make something from cheaper “scratch ingredients” that’s easy and tasty. Go for a walk instead of paying for a movie.

Figure out what you care about, passionately, and strive to make it part of your life. Cultivate a personal style. Don’t wear what everyone else is wearing, and don’t say what everyone else is saying if you don’t believe in it. Do things on your own sometimes, without your family or friends, and pay attention to what moves you. Learn discernment — the capacity to make choices that reflect your true priorities and concerns, rather than those of others. There are many good books and tapes on assertiveness, time management, and other topics that help you manage your life and free yourself of family or societal pressure to conform. Read some reviews and get the information that seems like it might work for you.

Every time you say “yes” to a commitment, say “no” to another. If you need a reason not to commit, just say that you’ve got other priorities. Don’t feel compelled to explain yourself.

After you’ve done this for a while, up the ante. Every time you say “yes” to a commitment, say “no” to TWO others. And so on. The power to make choices that reflect your true priorities and concerns is perhaps the most amazing gift any human can possess.

Uncomplicate your life.

P.S. When you see media that's about other media, typically they are pushing some kind of agenda. Usually it's an effort to get you to buy something you don't really need.

see also PutDownTheToys.com
see also www.AuthorsDen.com/BillBrent




Wishing you a beautiful day,

Bill Brent


[this page last updated: 2007.06.23, 7:50 a.m. Hawaii time]


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