Borrowed thought: I am exactly where I need to be right now
This thought is another one of my stables which I use to focus on the present moment and the various possibilities and options available to me right now. Rather than yearning for a mythical time in the future when I will have achieved a certain goal, I am choosing to believe that it is ok to be where I am right now in the full realisation that the entire premise of a ‘right’ place is ultimately flawed and completely irrelevant.
The simple truth is that we are where we are right now. The train may have left the station leaving us behind. Wishing we were on it doesn’t suddenly magically transport us there. Berating ourselves also does nothing to remedy the situation. We remain on the cold platform, having to wait for another train or adjust our plans. Acknowledging and accepting that we are where we are right now helps us to maintain or restore calm, allowing us access to our creative mind which is much more capable of coming up with clever solutions rather than the flight, fight or freeze response of an overwhelmed brain.
If we cannot accept where we are right now, then where do we think we should be? Even if we’d had a map of our entire life’s journey in front of us pinpointing exactly where we are right now that information still wouldn’t answer that question. All we may infer is a location somewhere between birth and death. The location is merely a station on a long road, a pearl on a string of pearls, one that only exists because of the one before it. In his excellent book ‘The Midnight Library’ author Matt Haig explores the idea of revisiting choices we made in life and catching a glimpse of lives not lived, collapsed because of choices that weren’t made. Nora Seed, who is caught between life and death quickly learns that those alternative lives were not ‘better’. The helping of the good, bad and the ugly were present in all circumstances of her lives as they are in ours.
If we live from goal to goal rather than moment to moment, we’ll find little to interest us in the present. Right now, either becomes a stepping stone to a bigger goal in our mind or a signpost that indicates how far away we are from reaching the end of our current endeavour. If we cannot, even for a while, celebrate what we have achieved and feel true contentment, then life becomes nothing more than a perpetual Sisyphean labour that leaves us forever wanting. Realising that all goals are emotional in nature interrupts that cycle of climbing and falling. We finally see that we only want to reach that point because we are convinced that getting there will allow us to feel a certain way. But if we could generate that feeling right here, right now, reaching that new height becomes as irrelevant as the question of whether we are where we need to be.
Learn more about thought work:
https://schoolofnewfeministthought.com/the-society/