Things to Meditate On

These are tough times.
We’ve been slogging through a pandemic which — while predicted — still seems unfathomable. And yet; we’re persevering.
Businesses are closing, jobs are compromised, and never in our lifetime have we seen such shelter, job, and food insecurity. This global pandemic will irreversibly alter our economic landscape. The loss of life and the loss of prosperity is very real.
And then, there’s the ever-shaky political and social unrest. Oppressed people finding their voice (good); dangerous extremists finding their voice (very bad.)
This ever-present goal of meditation — of calm, focused thought, effectively filtering out distractions and recurring worry — may seem an unobtainable, futile goal. How in the *world* can you be expected to tap into your inner realm and access a calm, serene layer of consciousness when thoughts are racing, disturbed, and vexing?
I’m definitely an eternal optimist, and I have always found salvation in imagining positive outcomes. When it becomes all too easy to imagine a negative outcome, I feel it’s just as easy to substitute negative imaginings with positive ones — even now.
Here’s some thought patterns to focus on, ways to circuit your thinking in a more positive direction, especially challenging when all forces seem to be dragging your thoughts to the “dark side”:
This, Too, Shall Pass
Not just a well-worn homily. Even all this will pass. Not minimizing; not negating. Just pointing out: even everything we’re all going through right now is temporary and eventually will be seen in the rearview mirror.
There’s Opportunity in This
I’m finding a greater awareness in keeping in contact with people virtually — in fact, I’m probably seeing some groups of friends more now than pre-pandemic. I’ve never read more than I do right now, and I’ve never written more. My house is cleaner, our dog is completely blissed out by having both my husband and I around all the time, and I have a greater appreciation and understanding for my husband’s work, seeing him do his job first hand at home. I have a profound gratitude for my own job continuing uninterrupted, and I’m so grateful for my home, which has become the locus of our professional and personal lives.
Tests are Good
As the saying goes: “Nobody learned to be a good sailor on calm seas.” We’re not working at our optimal level when we’re not tested or challenged. Only through overcoming obstacles can we truly learn about ourselves, see what we’re capable of, and appreciate untold stores of strength which we never knew we had.
Reflecting Back on This Will be Golden
When this is all over — and it will be someday soon — we will look back often and think about this time as a surreal, unprecedented event we all lived through together. I firmly believe that having lived through this global pandemic together will promote feelings of unity from having that shared experience. Having endured this together gives us all some commonality, more similarity, and — if we’re truly seeing the gifts in this strange time — it will lead to great kindness and compassion.
Plus: hugging people without thinking twice; leaving the house without a mask; and being able to board a plane and roam the globe with abandon will feel so good.
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