As you know, we're rounding the bend on 2019. Where did the year go? I know there's that 10-year challenge floating around social media but I can't contemplate that we're about to enter a new decade because I'm pretty sure my mind will explode. No, I'm only thinking about this year and I've cried a couple of times this week because 2019 is not at all what I expected; nor did I accomplish what I thought I would.
I remember starting off this year feeling buoyant and enthused as I flew back from LA to the Bay Area, the sun peeking through the clouds. I took it as a good omen, that the universe shared in my optimism. This year I looked forward to financial abundance, to possibly dating again, and also finishing my novel. None of those things happened. Instead this year was like landing in a new city only to be greeted by wildfire smoke – something unanticipated and I didn't even know I should check for. (That actually happened to me by the way.)
Not quite what I was looking for, but it works! Photo by Steve Halama on Unsplash |
This is the point where I'm probably supposed to talk about how dreams can be deferred, about how things can change on a dime, about how there's still time as long as I'm alive. All of that is true, and I don't want to gloss over the grief. There's nothing to fix here. There's nothing to change. This year was what it was. I showed up like a champ for the challenges life presented me and that's also something to celebrate. Was it a good year? No, but it also wasn't a bad one. It was a year. An exciting, boring, happy, sad, easy, hard, wonderful, terrible year.
What comes to mind right now is a concept underpinning my last couple of posts: surrender. My spiritual teacher says suppose Cosmic Consciousness wants you to become even greater than what you are praying to become. What if Cosmic Consciousness finds greater potential in you than you're aware of? The best thing to do is surrender completely, to be a conduit instead.
This year has felt like that to me – and also that I'm getting polished. All the things I learned this year, all the things I endured, have been necessary to create an even better version of me. I would have been content with not learning hard lessons, with not undergoing hardship, but then I wouldn't be where I am now – able to protect myself, to take care of myself, and not let anyone thwart me, including me. So maybe I've accomplished what I wanted this year after all.
I dream of a world where we mine for gold in the darkness of our lives. A world where we recognize a year can be both good and bad, even if didn't go according to plan. A world where we let go of internal “shoulds” and instead embrace what's here, recognizing maybe we accomplished more than we thought at first glance.
Another world is not only possible, it's probable.
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