Life Lessons From Death

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Second Life
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Life is good at teaching us lessons - keeping us on our toes when things get too easy.

Like many of you, I called my Mom in May to wish her a happy Mother’s Day. She told me she had a cold that just wouldn’t go away. She had finally been to the doctor about it, and he ran some tests. Four days later we found out she had liver cancer. My mother died in two weeks.

I still can’t really believe she’s gone - it happened so quickly. But that’s the way life is sometimes, and sometimes it takes a great shock to drive some lessons home. Think about your own life as I share some of the lessons I’m trying to learn with you.

Don’t wait to live. My Mom was the hardest working person I have ever known. She put in at least 50 hours a week and on top of that worked every Saturday and some Sundays. She was an accountant and a perfectionist. Every month the work started over. There was always more work. Her boss was a great guy - he used to encourage her not to work so hard, but my Mom was type-A, wanted to do her best. Sound familiar?

She was 65 when she died. Forget about that big retirement in the sky - all the traveling she would do, all the free time to finally rest after years of working herself to exhaustion. You have got to live today - take the trip this year - stop and enjoy your life right now - because you do not have forever.

Know what brings you joy. My Mom knew how to work hard and how to sacrifice her own needs for others. She always put herself second. I truly don’t think she knew how to find joy - I think she thought joy was somehow selfish. It was like she held herself too tightly. Do you know what brings you joy?

Maybe it IS doing things for others, but it has to be with no expectation of receiving anything in return, just for the sheer joy of giving. When you have expectations, you’ve attached strings to your gifts. And your joy depends on the recipient’s response. What brings me joy changes with each new adventure I have. FireStar brings me great joy. Nature brings me joy. My wonderful friends bring me joy. Sprinkles on my yogurt bring me joy! What brings you joy? Do you bask in it? Throw your head back and laugh, throw your arms out and embrace life - it will be over all too soon.

Let people get close to you. My Mom was tremendously independent and self-reliant. She didn’t want to burden anyone. At her funeral many of her friends told us how they tried to do things for her - drive her to doctor’s appointments, etc. and she would never let them. This took away a chance for them to get closer to her, and they were so sad they didn’t get to do more. Her passing made me realize I can be very much like her and keep people at a distance. I need to work hard on changing this.

Are there things you see in your parents that you are also doing? We tend to repeat their patterns without even thinking about it. It’s not too late to change - but do it now. You won’t be around at your funeral to see all those people grieving the lost chance to be close to you.

You can’t make someone love you. My parents divorced when I was in my teens. I can still remember all the hundreds of ways my Mother tried to hang on to my Father. It was an impossible task - one all of us have attempted at some point in our lives. We feel that if we just give more, become better, work harder - that special person will love us. Unfortunately, it just doesn’t work that way. You simply cannot make another person love you, be faithful to you, or stay married to you. All you can do is your best and if they don’t choose you, you have to let them go. You have to choose yourself and make your own life as big and as wonderful as it can be. Twenty years after the divorce, my Mom was still bitter. I would have given anything to have her let that pain go. It stole her joy.

Are you letting someone from your past cause you pain? If they don’t want to be with you - let them go! You deserve someone who wants to be with you for who you are - not because of pity or guilt or because you sacrificed yourself to make them happy. The past is over - take back your power and your joy and live in the present. Take good care of your health - now. Americans work more hours than any other nation - we’ve now surpassed the Japanese. We are taking fewer vacations and we’re constantly checking voice mail and e-mail. We never stop. My Mom literally worked herself to death - never taking a sick day, pushing herself to the limit for over 40 years. No one can take that over the long haul. Professional athletes have an off season; they know their bodies need time to recover. For most of us, the off season never comes - the constant stress is a way of life.

You have got to change this for yourself NOW. Take your vacations and totally disengage from the office. The company will not collapse without you. And you’ll be more productive when you return. You also need to build regular exercise into your schedule. Too busy? Or too lazy? 20 minutes of walking everyday can make a huge difference in the quality of your life. Your health is the basis for everything - are you putting it last?

I’ve learned a lot of other lessons from my Mom’s death and from her life. Sometimes we only learn lessons through pain. Is there some pain in your life right now you can learn from? If you can find the lessons, it helps ease your suffering. Thanks for taking the time to review these lessons with me.



By: Denise Ryan

About the Author:

Denise Ryan, MBA, is a Certified Speaking Professional, a designation of excellence held by less than 10% of all professional speakers. She is a blogger http://motivationbychocolate.blogspot.com
Her website is http://www.firestarspeaking.com when you can find more articles and sign up for a free newsletter.



Death: Teacher of Life

Posted by: admin  /  Category: Second Life
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To me, death is a teacher whose wisdom and simplicity can be awe-inspiring. Humanity, as a whole, fears death; however, death is inevitable. For as an old saying goes, you can win a million battles with death, but death only has to win once.

This resistance to an inevitable part of nature brings a certain amount of pain and discomfort. When we come into this life, we are already starting to die as the sands of our life start to run. So many people see death as the enemy; these dame people don’t always live life, which is an entirely different focus.

Long ago, I realized that what we focus on tends to have a strong influence on our everyday lives. So one day I decided to focus on life…instead of my inevitable death. I found that in trying to live life to the fullest, the idea of death bothered me less and less. Then, by keeping death as a companion and teacher instead of my enemy, I found true living and a new perspective that lays the foundation for a smooth transition later when my time comes.

Death became a great teacher of life. Death teaches perspective and priority. How many times have we heard of people who radically change their lives and lifestyles after surviving a life-threatening situation or after having a near-death experience? Once you see death face-to-face, life takes on a whole new look and feel. One way to allow death to teach us is to remember that death is always on your left shoulder, just behind you. This is similar to thinking that this will be your last day, week, or month. The problem with this exercise is that if you only have a month to live, you would leave nothing in reserve. For example, if all the money you have would only have to last a month, you could spend everything, liquidate your assets, and live very well, doing whatever you whish for the remaining month. The odds are that you will live past the month, so obviously this method has flaws. But thinking that death is just past your left shoulder, a constant companion, also changes your perspective:

For some, the drive for fame and accumulation of wealth no longer looks as appealing compared to issues of family.

For others, petty arguments cease. For example, the next time you are in an argument, just glance over your left shoulder and sense death standing there. Many times, I find the argument seems pointless to me and I just want to quickly resolve it or just drop it completely.

Forgiveness sometimes is easier for people to address. Some things become easier to forgive and some people seek to let others know they are forgiven. Others seek forgiveness for past wrongs.

Some find that the physical world itself doesn’t matter as much as spiritual development, and hence, they lose much of their attachment to this world. Death standing very close to you makes much of the physical world and its activities seem very temporary and trivial, while some of the trivial now seem much more important. Unexpectedly, you may want to take the time to see a sunrise and experience other simple pleasures.

I believe death has been my teacher in showing me what is really important. I am actually quite young (28), so as my peers are trying to make a name for themselves, accumulating money and possessions and working 50+ hours a week, I find that the extra money and other dangling carrots do not appeal to me. For me, time to do the things I now see as important is more valuable than money. I try to spend time wisely instead of squandering it and wasting it.

I am living my life to the fullest. I try to squeeze every ounce of life form each second from each day. Regrets have become a thing of the past with death as my teacher. If only I did this instead of chickening out, death tells me “carpe diem, my friend.” With death at my shoulder, I tend to seize the day more often, for I am willing to take that chance because this may be my last chance. This is not to say I have become reckless, but the risks and costs appear differently. Procrastination diminishes for the same reason. What needs to get done is done because I may not have another chance.

In living this way, I foresee that when my time comes, I will not leave as much to be done as I would have. And in all likelihood, I will not hesitate to accept death’s hand when he gestures that it is my time.

Death, for me, is not to be feared. It is a teacher and companion. In the end, death will release me from a frail body, a painful injury, or however I leave this world, and usher me to a new beginning. In the meantime, I live life to the fullest.



By: Eric Putkonen

About the Author:

A modern-day mystic and yogi, Eric Putkonen focuses on the “Direct Path” traditions (a.k.a. Pathless Path): Jnana Yoga, Advaita Vedanta, Zen Buddhism, etc. After searching for thirteen years and awakening in 2005, he has devoted himself to spreading the concepts and insights of these traditions. See his website Awaken to Life.