Sunday 31 December 2017

New Year

It is the last day of the year. I tend to be more lunar calendar orientated than solar calendar but it is impossible to not feel the opportunity that a new calendar year presents.

At this point in my life I am more focused on what I can, or should, leave behind. I am a minimalist by nature yet there are always things that I drag around that hold me back and weigh me down. Some of these things are material in nature but most are not tangible. My thoughts, my perspective, my limiting beliefs — are barriers to my personal growth and happiness. Time to let them go.

“Some of us think holding on makes us strong; but sometimes it is letting go.” - Hermann Hesse (1877 - 1962)

Sunday 24 December 2017

Season of Gratitude

As Christmas descends upon me, I am overwhelmed with gratitude for all the goodness I have in my life. The love of my friends and family, the freedom of my country, and the wonderment of awareness. I am in want of nothing.

 “Health is the greatest gift, contentment the greatest wealth, faithfulness the best relationship.” - Buddha (563 - 483 BC)

Sunday 17 December 2017

The Abstration of the Environment

As part of our intelligent curriculum, Silent River Kung Fu students engage to raise awareness and funding for several initiatives and charities. It is a challenge to keep the purpose of our intelligent curriculum about that engagement and not allow it to be reduced to just a matter of writing a cheque.

Poverty, addiction, depression, extinction, pollution, starvation — these tend to be abstract concepts for many of us. There is a significant difference between knowledge and experience, but not even first hand experience will guarantee a society the clarity and resolve required to address a problem, even a catastrophic one, right in front of them. Over half of the world’s insects have disappeared in the past few years. Where are the bees? Pine beetles are destroying our forests. Fish are disappearing from the ocean. The coral reefs are dying off. Polar bears are starving. Forest fires and wild fires are the new norm, as are catastrophic hurricanes and storms. These are facts. Unfortunately, they are abstract facts. The consequence of these facts is not being directly felt by most of us. Yeah, the food supply is disappearing but I can still get my Big Mac and fries as easily as ever. Less insects? Maybe I can finally enjoy a summer without being eaten alive by mosquitoes.

It does not seem likely that we are going to be proactive about reducing our society’s impact on our planet. Yes, I know, for many global warming is not being caused by man. Why would deniers slow down their consumption and exploitation if it is not going to make any difference to future generations anyway? The polarization of our society on that front alone is disconcerting. If we are going to make a difference as a species, the environment cannot remain an abstraction. So what now?

I spent some of my weekend frolicking with wolves at the Northern Lights Wolf Centre in Golden, BC. It is unlikely the environment will remain an abstraction for anyone after spending time with Shelley and Casey Black. Passion cuts through barriers and these two are passionate about wolves and their role as a keystone species. The facts are there for anyone who wishes to see them. Yellowstone Park’s ecological revitalization after the reintroduction of wolves into the park cannot be refuted. Even armed with those facts, our society continues to ignore the keystone roll that wolves play in securing our future.

Take a trip to the Northern Lights Wolf Centre. I guarantee the plight of wolves will no longer be an abstraction after you have had a full grown grey wolf stand on your head. Environmental awareness is self defence. Arm yourself by educating yourself.

“Every creature is better alive than dead, men and moose and pine trees, and he who understands it alright would rather preserve its life than destroy it.” - Henry David Thoreau (1817 - 1862)

Saturday 9 December 2017

Slippery Slope

Future success is a product of what we do with past failures and the prevailing attitude that we carry forward from those failures. In reality, failure is only final if we quit trying. As long as effort is still being applied forward, failure is valuable experience. Once effort ceases, failure becomes absolute.

We make promises everyday. These promises are based upon our best intentions, but the problem that comes into play is - they are not always based upon our track record.

The issue we create for ourselves is that once we start breaking promises, it can be difficult to recognize when we are making emotional decisions and commitments that we are ill-equipped to follow through on. It does not take much before breaking promises becomes normalized, as do failure and mediocrity.

It is a slippery slope to travel once we neglect our commitments and promises.

“Commitment is an act, not a word.” - Jean-Paul Sartre (1905 - 1980)

Sunday 3 December 2017

Dreams and Goals

It can take years of hard work to develop and engage a life process that encourages mastery. The discipline and focus that are required are not easy to find consistently. No matter how much time a process has been in place or how much success has been generated by it, mediocrity always finds a way to creep in. It seems to be human nature to take things for granted and lose appreciation for the that which we value. The frustrating thing about this fact is that beginning anew, starting over, can be significantly more difficult than it was to start in the first place. Nevertheless, beginning anew is the only way.

The lynchpin of the entire mastery process is mindfulness. If you are not aware of where you are and what you are doing, beginning, anew or otherwise, is impossible. Mediocrity never arrives with fanfare. It always creeps in. Unseen, silent, and below your radar. Mindfulness forces mediocrity into the open, allowing you to see it, identify it, and address it.

Lastly, when you do begin anew, do it properly. It is amazing how quickly we forget that there is a difference between dreams a goals. That difference is a plan. Get a plan and take consistent action. That is the way to mastery.

“A goal is not always meant to be reached, it often serves simply as something to aim at.” - Bruce Lee (1940 - 1973)