13 Lessons
13 Lessons From the Movie ‘Peaceful Warrior’
- Fear creates restlessness and contributes to a lack of peace within your current reality
– Makes a lot of sense when you really think about it. Fear, no matter
it’s trigger, takes you out of the moment by forcing you to focus on
your physical and emotional reaction to it. How can we expect to be at
peace with this moment if we can’t even truly look at it because we
instead are run by the fear it seems to have created.
- Doing something for an end result makes it harder to accomplish
– On the surface this may seem non-sensical since there are countless
examples we can all think of where people let a desired end result
motivate them throughout the entire process of trying to attain it. Why I
still think this statement holds some validity is because the
expectations of an end result can often discourage and downplay the
process in getting there. Rather than setting an end result of losing 20
pounds in 1 month and then gauging our success on whether or not that
was accomplished, wouldn’t it be easier to just choose to begin taking
care of our bodies or working out and letting the results be what they
are at whatever pace they occur.
- Old mentalities and past experience define our limitations
– Who ever said that the highest you could jump was to barely touch the
bottom of the mesh on your basketball net? Was it the set in stone
voice of your heart/ soul? Or was it just what you have done the last
few times you tried? Too often we let past results dictate what our
bodies can and cannot do, rather than simply being in each attempt as a
completely separate experience.
- Rushed/ busy mentality prevents us from experiencing the moment
– We all lead busy lives. Lives that often result in us multi-tasking
(eating on the go, talking while we work, etc.) This lesson simply
reminds us to take some time to actually fully experience one thing at a
time. No matter how mundane or complicated the task we might just be
surprised by how much it has to offer when we fully give ourselves to
it.
- Don’t run away from defeat, in fact stop evaluating everything as a win or a loss (success/ failure)
– In the human experience we take something out of everything. It just
seems to be a lot easier to value and enjoy what we take when it gets
coupled with a favorable result. Imagine we didn’t evaluate all of our
results and instead focused on what we took from the experience
regardless.
- Thoughts don’t reveal anything about you
– Thoughts are just thoughts, many of them arise automatically and can
very easily be used to either falsely satisfy or beat yourself up.
Rather than letting your thoughts run you, simply observe them for what
they are, perhaps even take the time to see where they might have come
from (what triggered them, what contributed to that view/ opinion.) We
might just be surprised by how much of what we think of regularly is
really quite useless and unfounded.
- There is never nothing going on
– Boredom. We’ve all experienced it at times to varying degrees. The
truth of the matter is even in those most boring of moments there is
plenty going on. Next time you find yourself bored take the time to
truly observe your surroundings, realize that your very existence alone
is quite the thing to be going on, and see if anything in particular
calls for you to get involved with.
- Society/ media/ others love to thrust limitations on us, they only become true if we accept them
– People can say whatever they want and say that its based on whatever
they choose to credit it to. It only becomes a true part of your reality
if you truly accept it. Think about the countless number of people who
have defied what we previously thought possible, imagine if they let our
previous definition of it not being possible stop them from showing us
otherwise.
- Everything has a purpose, it’s up to us to find it
– Even the most difficult, challenging or emotionally engaging
experiences in life have a greater purpose and servitude to our
existence. It’s our choice whether we want to look internally and find
it or continue to dwell on the outward experience it created.
- Death does not equal sad. Sad equals the fact that some people never live
– A lot of people find a great deal of peace and strength in death, for
many that is a lot more of a profound experience than what many of us
call daily life.
- Don’t give up what you love, find love in what you do
– The idea of giving up something that you love only stems from a
disappointment in how it has worked out thus far. Rather than letting
the past bury you, find the love in what you do and realize that no
matter how it plays out it is a part of you.
- “What if I can’t do it?” That’s the future, throw it out -
All we have and can impact is this moment. Why would we let thoughts
about a future moment hold us back from doing something that in this
moment we would like to do.
- Getting caught up in wants leads to nothing but suffering
– Think about it. When we don’t get what we want we define it as a
version of suffering. When we do get what we want we quickly suffer
because we can’t hold onto it (it either slips from our grasp or loses
its previous value shortly after we attain it.)
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