Be in Your Own Power

Your own power can help you wield your own personality.

The ’80s was a decade in which we discovered our blockages and fixed them. The ’90s was a decade in which we discovered our strengths and used them. Your own power is something to not take lightly.

From 2000 until now are the years in which we are waking up to what power and responsibility really means–that we do create our own reality, and that it is time to put our spiritual awareness into use for the greater good of humanity beyond ourselves as individuals.

So why does everything seem to be speeding up?​

Because, as Julian Lennon says: ‘Time is not a friend, and friends, we’re out of time.’

Perhaps now our sense of urgency is motivating us to learn, pretty quickly, to take responsibility for what is going on, and put a stop to it, in all sectors: financial, ecological, ethical…

It is still possible to change the path we are on, individually and collectively, but we can’t let things take their natural course. We don’t have that long. So ‘fate’ is giving us a much-needed push to act with world events such as the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) and various political upheavals.

When you find your own power, nothing can stop you.

We are good at saying ‘Someone should do something’, but not so good at acknowledging ‘I am someone’.

The lesson we are facing right now is to take responsibility. To stop waiting for ‘someone’ to fix things for us. We need to have flexibility–to lose rigid patterns of thinking and living.

We are learning that it is the decisions we make, not the conditions in our life, that shape our destiny

I am reminded of the story someone told me of a hardened criminal who had two sons. One became a criminal and spent most of his life in jail, just like his father. The other became a successful businessman and happy family man. When asked what factor had contributed to their current situation, they both said: ‘With a father like mine, how else could I have turned out?’

As more people make the right choices as individuals, we teach others to make the right choices and so establish new codes of behaviour in our communities and, ultimately in our country and in our world. It will spread.

We can speed up the process, not necessarily by trying to change everyone else, but just by making new choices about our own behaviour and reactions.

As you change your own attitudes and behaviours in small ways, your vibrations change and you therefore influence others without knowing it.  Therefore, new norms are born and a new way of being is created in the world.

There are three things we can each do to know the way, go the way and show the way and, as Gandhi said: ‘Be the change you want to see in the world.’

Steps

1. We can search for the reasons–identify the purpose.

This we can do with exercises designed to help people find the major purpose of their life, be it:

  • to learn and grow to be a better person, having a more constructive impact on the world around us
  • teaching others, perhaps by example, so enabling them to grow
  • to accomplish something, or contribute to the creation of good, and finally
  • to be authentic, centred and in harmony with your life (which means not resisting what is right for you)

Being in your own power is strength.

Every major turning point or influence changes you in some way. The changes can be positive or negative, depending on how you choose to react to that experience. Understanding the conditions brings courage and peace.

If you feel blocked, you need to assume it’s for good reason, even if you don’t see it at the time. Perhaps the necessary conditions are not yet in place and you need to wait for them.

Perhaps you are not yet ready for faster progress and will remain in this unpleasant situation until you learn something or develop new strengths.

Why does finding your own power help?

Looking back, it’s often easier to see that things turned out for the best, no matter how painful they were at the time. Sometimes the benefits are indirect, so we can’t readily see the connection. For instance, a new law, beneficial to many, is passed as a result of a buildup of small events to a few individuals.

2. You can take responsibility for the choices you make – and for the consequences.

You are making choices every day – little decisions about who you spend our time with, what you study, what you give priority to. The problem is that many of your decisions are being controlled by beliefs and values that, for the most part, you did not consciously select.

The only way to make a change is to align your beliefs and values with your actions, so that you can control the direction you go in.

When I get bogged, the one thought which always motivates me is the reminder that we have only four choices in life, and it’s up to me to make the right one.

Your own power is something you can harness.

The first choice is to run away and avoid the situation. (Well some people mistakenly perceive it as a solution!)

The second choice is to do nothing to improve conditions–but blame, complain, regret, and while we’re at it, make everyone else miserable too.

Or, if you decide that a priority is to tolerate the situation, you can choose to adapt to it by modifying your attitude or expectations, so that you can find happiness within those constraints.

The fourth and last choice, is to choose to change.

Power is a personal choice.

But change means risk, and risk takes courage. It also takes work! Thinking about areas to be improved and even deciding how to go about it may be a good beginning, but will remain just that unless such thoughts are translated into concrete action. In your vision of what things could be, you need to include a realistic action plan.

3. You can learn to go with the flow–stop swimming against the current.

Whenever I get stuck, or frustrated with the way things are going in my life, I think of a mountain stream and try to behave according to its example.

Like water, we have only to proceed along the line of least resistance. If a steam meets a boulder in its path, it will search until it finds a way around, over, or under the obstacle, but it will find the easiest way, which is not necessarily the most direct.

A stream reaches its goal by flowing continually, never giving up, never losing sight of the goal ahead. It doesn’t have to know where it will end up, it just keeps flowing wherever is most natural at the time, never shrinking from any dangerous spot nor from any plunge. It fills up every depression before it flows on, even if it means side–tracking a little on its journey.

Why it is important to find your own power.

A spring is only a tiny trickle at first, and has to travel some distance before it can gush forth with force. It knows that only with time and persistence, it will be able to carve a track in even the hardest earth. A track that will one day become a river bed, perhaps with other springs that join the flow.

So, if you want to be in your own power, bear in mind your four soul purposes and the choices you make.  The metaphor of the mountain stream will remind you of the best way to journey through life.

Imagine how you would feel if you were able to Be in Your Own Power. Interested? If so, contact me directly to arrange a convenient appointment time.

Being in your own power is something you learn.


I’d love to know what you think of what I’ve said here.

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If you or someone you know would like a personal consultation, please call +61 439 969 081.

Take charge of your life with Jacquie Wise.

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