You know that amazing feeling we experience when we achieve or attain something we’ve wanted?
That comes from relief.
Relief from the tension we experienced from not having it.
That’s it. Relief from tension.
The funny thing is that we were creating the tension to begin with by resisting not having whatever it is we thought we wanted.
So we create the very discomfort we seek to end. And where do we seek it? In the world, of course.
These are fundamental errors that keep people stuck in perpetual states of suffering.
We seek around us what we have within us.
We look for external solutions to internal problems.
We believe in the illusion of external and internal to begin with.
These are the fundamental errors that block us from the truth of who we are.
And the truth of who we are is the source of everything we are seeking.
So when we stop seeking, we come back home to ourselves. We rediscover the truth of who we are.
And that feels damn good.
If we stop seeking because we attain or achieve what we wanted, however, we’re simply upholding the illusion that it was something else that made us feel great.
It wasn’t. It was that we stopped seeking.
But when we don’t realize that, we very quickly begin seeking the next thing.
Very quickly we turn to the next thing that’s going to make us feel great again.
Can you see the twisted game here? Can you see the game so many are playing without even realizing it.
More and more my work is pointed toward a singular focus: to help people remember the truth of who they are.
Because from there, the things we want are already ours. And when we recognize that and live from that place, our experience of reality completely transforms in the best of ways.
I’m no longer interested in helping people get what they’re seeking.
I’m interested in helping them end seeking.
I believe this will elevate humanity and the world, although I’m seeking no such outcome.
My intention is to guide people home and help them live from that place.
If that’s you, let’s talk.
I’m offering a single session experience for the first time ever called The Shift.
You’ll experience exactly what I mean.
Click here to get started.
What a beautiful offering! Also, the paradox that you mention here of external/internal is indeed like a dog chasing it's tail.