A PROVEN ROADMAP TO BANISHING FEARS -
How You See Your Life Is Up To You
Our design is our own; life is inquiring and we reply. Do we humbly submit and let life, let those about us, decide where we're going? Do we answer a maybe in response to life in a hushed voice? Or do we remain firm and remain true to our innermost wants; to live a life of merit and fulfillment – a life of responsibility?
Ever observed how we straightaway offer a defense when somebody confronts us about our unfit conduct? We‘ve all been guilty of it sometimes and what a finer way to divert that confrontational attention off of ourselves. ―If you believe I behaved badly, you ought to see how she acted!‖, ―I only betrayed her because she did it to me first, I‘m not a immoral person‖, ―You believe our relationship has troubles?
What about the Smiths‘, they‘re genuinely the ones who need couples counseling‖. All of us can come up with somebody else to fault or at any rate find somebody else who has some more faults than ourselves to take the heat off and position ourselves in a beneficial light. Making comparisons in this manner seems to be constructed into our DNA. When we consider our own lives, adapting the line ‗I might not be perfect, but I‘m no sorrier than the next individual‘ seems only too familiar but acting badly or in a less suitable way than what we would require from other people, compromises our own integrity.
The thought that we're ‗not as bad‘ as somebody else lets us think that our own actions are hunky-dory and cautiously selecting somebody with whom we can equate ourselves to only gives the backing we need to rationalize this to ourselves. It‘s all really handy right? This sort of conduct lets us skip out on being responsible for ourselves, to carry on acting poorly or to just ‗put our head in the sand‘ about particular matters. If our actions are ‗not as sorry‘ as another person‘s, does that signify we're right?
Is it truly just when we perpetrate an act we recognize is wrong, to not anticipate being held responsible for it? We frequently hurt other people in ways we, ourselves wouldn't enjoy happening to us. As a matter of fact, a few of life's hardest examples can serve as brutal reminders that we have treated somebody in a way we'd detest to be treated ourselves so how come do we do it? How come do we do something if we‘re afraid to face to outcome? A friend once afforded me some of the finest, yet simplest advice I‘ve ever gotten – ‗don‘t be remorseful, just don‘t do it!‘
Its dandy advice that compliments that old adage of ‗Do unto others, how you'd have them do unto you‘ and is a marvelous doctrine to live your life by. Consider it, if you tell yourself this any time you‘re pondering lying to somebody, treating somebody poorly, speaking out of turn or doing something you shouldn‘t behind another persons back – and let‘s face it, nine times out of ten you‘re going to get found out, you‘ll never have to be ‗sorry‘ ever again.
If you don‘t do the bad behavior in the first place, you won‘t have the face-off with that individual, there‘ll be no disturbance or judging, no relationship doomed or tarnished and utterly no need to apologize, best of all - your moral sense will always be clean and guilt free. It might be rather an easy way to set about life but it most decidedly works. Regrettably, doing unto other people, how you'd have them do unto you isn‘t always assured in today‘s society but you are able to at least be responsible for your own actions.
Passing off the blame only displays a cowardliness and lack of value for yourself and everybody around you. We're responsible for our own lives. No person is precisely like us; not even an identical twin. Our seeds of joy are our own; our resolves are as unique as our fingerprints. Take responsibility for your own life.
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