Time powers life’s roller coaster of ups and downs of love and birth. Of loss and death. Of good and bad. Of pleasant and dreadful. Scarce and abundant.
Opposites attract to balance each other.
On “12 Rules for Life”, Jordan Peterson quotes or writes: the line between good and evil bisects everyone down the middle. Good people do bad things. Bad people do good things. We aren’t just good. Evil is in our DNA.
I’ve been listening (on repeat) to Rule 8: Tell the truth – or at least, don’t lie.
Because it tugged at my insides. It helped me to confront my habitual sin of omission for the fear of conflict. Not saying to not offend. Not knowing how. Never been taught.
This is also a learned behavior of two generations. Therefore, it is difficult (if not impossible) to unlearn terrible habits. This may be due to inadequate parental guidance due to economic hardship, incompetence, and absent parent.
At the same time, my optimism and stubborn nature won’t let me settle for anything less than a triumphant defeat of my previous self.
I know very little. I could be wrong about many things. The frame is misshapen or broken. I may have misunderstood. And I am blessed to have special people in my life to push, prod, guide and lead by example. Superb people surround me all over the world.
I am trying to get better at speaking up. To be brave. To have difficult conversations. To ask for things. To break the cycle. To break free from the collective tyranny of my former self.
Because if we can’t reveal ourselves to others, we will be unable to see ourselves for what we are.
Life is a journey of self discovery. Time is the road. Our thoughts, efforts and actions determine our path and destination.
I used to pray to stop the suffering of the soon to be departed. Once she left us, I prayed for her peace. Then for her to protect us. Then it turned into a longing and wishful thinking. I missed her and I reached out in the only way I knew how.
I no longer pray. I still believe in the power of positive thinking. I believe in the power of acknowledging fear, facing the monster inside of me, and taking small steps to do better.
I see a parallel between bible and best of the fables.
God and Jesus.
If we are on a road to self-discovery, and we must shed our old shells before moving forward. We must destroy our former selves to reveal the next level of truth waiting to be discovered. We must forge ourselves through self-immolation of our former and younger selves. No pain, no gain they say.
Maybe God is me. God is you. God is every single one of us. The future. The end.
And Jesus is me. Jesus is you. Jesus is the past. Fallible human of the today.
When we celebrate Jesus’s demise, we acknowledge the necessary sacrifices of the past before being born anew. Transformation is as painful as being nailed to the cross of our former selves blistered with terrible habits. Maybe we must be forced to carry the burden of the past before we get the courage to offload the baggage weighing us down.
We continue the burning process until we arrive at the end of our times, when we become the best (or for some, the worst) version of our greatest (or sadly, wasted) potential.
When we pray to God, we dig into our deepest and sincerest desires. Prayers are daily reminders to do what is necessary. I wonder if we become God on our last day on earth. Yesterday and Today is all that is left. Tomorrow will never come, and with this knowledge, I wonder what thoughts flash before we take our final breath (that is, if we are lucky to be awake and lucid). Like all mysterious things, we don’t know because the ones who know are gone. And by the time we do know, documenting is probably the furthest thing from our minds.
And the wind will blow.
Ash scatters to reveal a set of bright, strong and magnificent wings of a bird.
It jumps from the ledge. Plunging into the abyss of total freedom, it spreads its wings to let truth carry its body into the embrace of self acceptance.
The Phoenix rises.