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  • I really like you guys.

  • I consider it a privilege to be able to drop in,

  • unscheduled, to talk to you.

  • Thank-you for making time for me.

  • I know youre busy.

  • I’m going to say a few things about the challenges of life.

  • But first I want to congratulate the new Avatars.

  • You are acquiring a set of tools that you canuse if you choose

  • to unlock your greatest potential.

  • Use if you choose…”

  • Of course you could sit back and let temptation and circumstance

  • shape your life and your beliefs and your character.

  • It’s not what I’d advise, but plenty of people do it that way.

  • And, as always, if there’s something that I say that you don’t agree with,

  • just label itanother viewpoint”.

  • Since our life experiences evoke different choices,

  • it’s not surprising that the conclusions

  • that we draw are different, too.

  • My choice is to live deliberately.

  • I feel so strongly about that

  • that I wrote a book calledLiving Deliberately”.

  • Maybe youve heard of it

  • The Avatar tools won’t do you much good if you don’t choose to use them.

  • But if you start out using them deliberately,

  • and continue using them until they become a habit,

  • you will learn to live deliberately.

  • Circumstances might get you there, but it’s unlikely.

  • And temptations which start out hot soon cool off.

  • You want another word for temptation?

  • It’s an attractive desire that promises quick happiness.

  • I heard a story about twin brothers:

  • one was a ruined bum and a drunkard,

  • and the other was happy and successful.

  • And somebody asked the drunkard

  • how he came to be where he was, and his answer was,

  • “I’m where I am today because my father was a drunk.

  • And the successful brother was asked the same question

  • how did you come to be where you are?

  • You want to know his answer?

  • “I’m where I am today,” he said,

  • because my father was a drunk.”

  • Same temptation, same circumstances

  • two different outcomes.

  • Temptation and circumstance only shape your life if you choose to let them.

  • And there will always be temptation and circumstances

  • that you have to live through,

  • but you don’t have to let them ruin your life.

  • Hard times, everyone has to deal with a few.

  • These are the challenges of life,

  • will you deliberately choose,

  • or will you let

  • temptation and circumstance make the choice for you?

  • Victor Frankel, who survived a Nazi Concentration Camp wrote:

  • Now, “because my father was a drunk

  • which brother made a deliberate choice?

  • Which brother allowed temptation and circumstances to shape his life?

  • I’m a big promoter of deliberately practicing virtues.

  • And it’s not because I’m a great paragon or model of virtue,

  • but because I think that the struggle between

  • temptation and deliberately practicing virtues

  • is the real game that we came here to play.

  • I don’t mean to sound like a Preacher, but there it is all the same.

  • It’s the ageless battle between good and evil.

  • Maybe you just believe in good and don’t believe in evil.

  • Someone once told me that the motto of evil is “I don’t exist.”

  • But without the contrast of evil you wouldn’t have good.

  • Could you be good if you couldn’t be evil?

  • I mean, which side do you want to be on?

  • Not everybody chooses the side of good.

  • There are some people who measure their success

  • by the amount of suffering they inflict.

  • I give a lecture in Wizards calledVirtues”.

  • You ought to see me, I get really steamed up!

  • And the message is that virtues are notshouldsorshouldnts’,

  • but theyre wise advice on how to live a happy life.

  • Virtues are the nuts and bolts of a spiritual path.

  • Human virtue is the courage to act like a merciful god would act

  • a merciful god.

  • Do you act toward others like a merciful god would act?

  • That’s a tough question.

  • Virtues are also good strategies.

  • Some people have virtue mixed up with judgment or suffering,

  • or living a really dull boring life.

  • That’s a wrong view.

  • Virtues are time-tested strategies

  • for dealing with whatever the world throws at you

  • and coming out of it a merciful god, an Avatar.

  • You develop these virtues by working on yourself.

  • Jim Rohn, a renowned business philosopher who I admire,

  • That’s good advice.

  • I’ve got my own version of that philosophy:

  • if you work hard on developing virtues

  • youll not only be successful,

  • youll be happy when you get there.

  • Success is no protection against depression

  • virtuous actions are.

  • Virtues are like,

  • patience,

  • kindness,

  • forgiveness,

  • tolerance,

  • compassion,

  • responsibility.

  • I once made a list of virtuous actions,

  • and I had over a hundred on the list.

  • And it’s an easy list to make because

  • you have a built-in virtue meter

  • it’s called feeling good about yourself.

  • Any action that you take out of loving-kindness

  • will register on your virtue meter.

  • Your honest intention is what moves the meter.

  • You might refer to your virtue meter as a moral compass,

  • or intuition,

  • or guidance from the higher self.

  • Virtuous acts make us noble.

  • They connect us with a divine current,

  • that in our best, sanest moments

  • we would sacrifice anything to join.

  • Here’s something interesting that you probably already know.

  • How many ends to a stick?

  • How many directions to a path?

  • Always at least two, right?

  • For every virtue there is an opposite vice

  • and virtues nurture loving-kindness,

  • vices nurture selfish fears.

  • Like positive and negative, this is a two-pole universe.

  • There’s love and kindness at one pole,

  • and fear and evil at the other pole.

  • And it appears to me

  • that the life-stream flows from the positive,

  • which is motivated by service to the universe, down to the negative

  • where it disappears into egocentric selfishness.

  • Did you know that there are no virtues connected solely with concern for self?

  • I mean, there are a few virtues that are connected with concern for family,

  • and a few connected with loyalty to a group,

  • but most are connected with love and kindness for strangers.

  • Wow, isn’t that interesting?

  • The life-stream washes around you, and you know what?

  • The virtues are always upstream.

  • And we talk about ascension,

  • rising higher, higher self, aspiring... all upstream.

  • I don’t know why it is that way

  • Maybe were meant to turn in to the life-stream, and

  • maybe the challenge is swimming into the current.

  • I mean, succumbing to temptation doesn’t take much effort.

  • Practicing virtues, ooof...

  • at least at the beginning it takes a lot of effort.

  • Maybe you think this isn’t fair, that

  • living deliberately takes effort, that life is a challenge,

  • that the best rewards are upstream.

  • But even my tilapia seem to know this.

  • Virtue is helping someone, and wisdom is knowing who to help.

  • Helping a serial killer to commit more crimes is probably a lack of wisdom.

  • Or helping a sociopath to wreck

  • the work of good people is a lack of wisdom.

  • Setting the wisdom issue aside for a moment,

  • here’s the brutal bottom-line on virtues and vices:

  • an action done with harmful intent brings suffering into your life;

  • an action done with good intent brings happiness into your life.

  • It would be wisdom if we would print that on our money

  • so it kept reminding us

  • I mean, maybe that’s whatin God we trustmeans. I don’t know

  • I do believe that an action done with harmful intent

  • brings suffering into your life,

  • and that an action done with good intent

  • brings happiness into your life.

  • And a person can get into a state,

  • mostly through transgressions and bad intentions,

  • where they feel they deserve to suffer.

  • And this is where confession and forgiveness can turn a life around.

  • I was 24 by the time I discovered the value of virtue,

  • and by that time I was really out of practice.

  • Don’t wait that long.

  • I wasted a lot of lifegoing with the flow’.

  • Have you seen theNo Fear” t-shirts?

  • My t-shirt would have saidNo Effort”.

  • I was drifting downstream in the current of

  • temptation and circumstance.

  • Hey, manbe cool.

  • Oh, chilldon’t take sides.

  • Love the one youre with.

  • Hey, if it feels good, do it.”

  • Do you know where that philosophy of life took me?

  • Downstream.

  • I was treading water;

  • I was heading for a divorce, I hated my work...

  • yeah, I was real cool, though.

  • One of the few people who would still be straight with me, my Dad,

  • gave me some advice.

  • Son, if youre going to get anywhere,

  • you need to take control of your life.”

  • What fabulous advice, fabulous advice;

  • I knew it was genius, you know. It was right.

  • Do you like good advice?

  • Son, if youre going to get anywhere,

  • you need to take control of your life.”

  • It took me 10 years to figure out how to take control of my life.

  • You see, I was working at it from within the mind

  • thinking, figuring...

  • which is like stirring a boiling pot of temptation

  • while youre sitting in the middle of the pot.

  • That’s a lot of cooking.

  • Stick a fork in me, I’m done.

  • It took me 10 years to discover that

  • taking control of my life could only be done from source.

  • I’m not a fast learner.

  • Wasn’t it kind of God to finally take pity on me and let me discover Avatar?

  • Avatar is the quick-start instructions for taking control of your life.

  • Now you can be up and running in 9 days.

  • That’s fast.

  • You might not be able to improve the world a lot in 9 days,

  • but you can accomplish miracles in your own life.

  • And your life is where you start.

  • And when you start to get that squared away,

  • there’s the Masters Course.

  • Most of the people who know me know that I’m an amateur gardener.

  • And they also know that when I talk about the mind

  • I’ll probably start using the garden for an analogy.

  • What? If it was good enough for Buddha and Christ,

  • it’s good enough for me.

  • Ok, you know I could be more modern and creative and use an analogy like:

  • you go down to the local Mind Store

  • and you buy this fabulous mind that’s hungry for thoughts.

  • You bring your mind home in a big box,

  • and you body-modem it into the collective consciousness,

  • and as soon as you boot it up it will

  • multiply, amplify, and defend whatever it finds.

  • Hey, and don’t worry about saving the packing box

  • once this mind is out of the box it will never go back.

  • And your new mind doesn’t care what thoughts you put in it.

  • It will amplify, multiply, and defend anything you put in it.

  • That’s fantastic when you think about it.

  • Uh-huhIn fact,

  • ...the more you think about it, the more amplified the idea becomes.

  • The mind will amplify, multiply, and defend anything you put

  • or allow... into it.

  • If you want to trash the mind up with dirty pictures,

  • or plans for revenge,

  • or grudges, or fantasies about being rich and famous,

  • it doesn’t care.

  • I mean, it will amplify, multiply, and defend a rumor

  • as quickly as it will the truth.

  • To a mind, one thought tastes pretty much like another thought.

  • It’s hungry for thinking

  • and it doesn’t care what you feed it ... as long as you feed it.

  • What do they say in the computer world,

  • garbage in, garbage out. It's like that

  • Just out of curiosity,

  • were computers modeled after the human mind, or

  • and you have to stretch way across the stars for this possibility

  • were human minds modeled after computers?

  • Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

  • You see why I feel a lot safer with the garden analogy?

  • So let me illustrate it by this,

  • your mind is a fertile garden.

  • Whatever you plant will seek to survive and grow.

  • And if you don’t deliberately plant anything,

  • a crop of temptation weeds will grow.

  • Anytime you make a primary, or for that matter, an excuse,

  • youre planting a thought that will seek to survive and grow.

  • Anytime you characterize yourself or another,

  • youre planting a thought that will seek to survive and grow.

  • Anytime you voice a limitation,

  • youre planting a thought that will seek to survive and grow.

  • Anytime you set a goal or you create a belief,

  • youre planting a thought that will seek to survive and grow.

  • You see, the garden doesn’t care what you plant.

  • I think one of the wisest sayings that I ever heard was,

  • "You reap what you sow".

  • And it’s true, but some crops require a lot more work than other crops.

  • I have practical experience with this.

  • I planted tomato seeds with the expectation of harvesting tomatoes.

  • Wow, it was a struggle!

  • There were a lot of secondaries.

  • I had to keep the bugs away, I had to keep the plants watered,

  • shade them from the summer sun, battle the weeds.

  • But the final creation was a harvest of fresh tomatoes.

  • Can you imagine how good I felt bringing a bowl of perfect tomatoes

  • into the house and giving them to Avra?

  • Wow – I felt like a winner.

  • Now I could have planted temptation weeds and there

  • wouldn’t have been any secondaries with the bugs or the weather,

  • but no valuable harvest, either.

  • I would go, “Damn, I should have planted something useful.

  • So, what do you prefer?

  • Wow, I feel like a winner”, or...

  • Damn, I should have planted something useful".

  • As you draw your last breath in life are you going to go,

  • Wow!”

  • orDamn”?

  • See, here’s that upstream lesson again.

  • It’s harder to grow a perfect tomato than it is to grow temptation weeds,

  • but the personal reward for growing tomatoes is a whole lot better.

  • If you intend to live without putting forth any effort

  • youre going to end up with temptation weeds.

  • Damn, I should have planted something useful.”

  • And unless youre really lucky and you happen upon a gold mine,

  • it takes effort to succeed.

  • Anybody can grow temptation with almost no effort.

  • No effort is why temptation isn’t valuable.

  • Temptations are secondaries,

  • and secondaries spring up without effort.

  • It’s the primary that takes a lot of effort.

  • If you plant negative emotions;

  • pride, greed, envy, jealousy or hatred in your garden,

  • what do you think the crop will be?

  • Of course; pride, greed, envy, jealousy, and hatred.

  • And while these things are easy to grow, almost no effort

  • theyre just not worth very much.

  • Your life will unfold according to what thoughts you plant.

  • This is old wisdom, really old wisdom.

  • Gautama Buddha said,

  • Marcus Aurelius, a Roman philosopher, said,

  • Good advice all,

  • but not much in the way of instruction.

  • God wasn’t ready to release Avatar yet.

  • Avatar requires honest self-examination,

  • and the willpower to make deliberate choices.

  • Therefore it doesn’t work for everyone.

  • Cynics and psychotics and Avatar bashers

  • are not big on honest self-examination.

  • They don’t like to work in their own garden;

  • they’d rather criticize yours.

  • Their own gardens are planted with secrets and transgressions,

  • and the only harvest they ever get are hidden agendas.

  • They grow blame to explain their troubles and difficulties;

  • the problem is with blame, it’s a harvest that nobody wants.

  • Hey, if you think differently, I’ve got a whole stinking

  • truckload of blame out in the parking lot – I’ll sell it cheap.

  • But now if you deliberately

  • make the effort to plant thoughts of forgiveness,

  • the harvest will save your life.

  • If you plant thoughts of resentment, the harvest will ruin your life.

  • Caring and sharing thoughts will leave you feeling good about yourself.

  • Envious and selfish thoughts will lead to disaster.

  • Compassionate thoughts will make you wise,

  • angry thoughts will make you stupid.

  • Plant an opinion about yourself and you will grow an identity,

  • and youll discover more about identities on the Masters Course.

  • They are the scarecrows in your garden.

  • You are the gardener,

  • the essence of source.

  • And your life unfolds according to

  • the thoughts you allow to grow and the thoughts you weed out.

  • What you think, you become.

  • Pull out the “I can’t” thoughts and plant some “I canthoughts.

  • Weed the fears out of your courage patch

  • I know you can do it.

  • The Avatar Course may shock you at first,

  • but you will finally figure out

  • who’s been keeping you down,

  • who’s been suppressing you,

  • who’s been causing you to fail,

  • who’s been making your life such a struggle...

  • the guy in the mirror.

  • I’m sorry if that’s too blunt.

  • But the good news is,

  • if it’s the guy in the mirror,

  • you can fix it.

  • So here’s my advice to the new Avatars

  • open your hearts and look for good.

  • Choose to use the tools.

  • Enjoy the rest of your course, and I’ll see you at Wizards.

  • Thank-you for your love.

I really like you guys.

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生命的挑戰 (Life Challenges)

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    pao2ge 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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