Friday, October 5, 2018

Letting go and moving on


--> WE have to learn this art of letting go and moving on.
Especially these days, when we are bombarded with so many competing
things and the possibility of getting cornered by some problem or
difficulty is very high, we need to know how to let go and move on

            We have to realize that there are some predicaments that
we cannot anymore resolve or overcome, at least, humanly speaking. But
if we have trust in God’s providence, we should be convinced that
there is no point getting stuck and entangled in them for so long that
we cannot do anything else.

            We just have to let go and move on with our life which
continues to offer us more challenges to face, more goals to reach. In
this, it pays also if we know how not to get too emotional or too
psychologically affected by the twists and turns of our life, the
possible consequences of failure and frustrations, etc.

            We should learn how to discipline our emotions and
psychological dynamic. It is good if we know how to be cool, sport and
game, and avoid getting easily nervous and tense. Let’s remember that
our physical, emotional and psychological make-up can only take so
much burden. Beyond that, we break down.

            It also helps that we know how to regularly purify our
memory and train our imagination to tread on the positive,
constructive and encouraging path, rather than on the negative,
destructive and discouraging one.

            Let’s remember that it is in our spiritual selves, always
open and receptive to God’s grace, that can take on anything. It’s in
our spiritual life that we should take utmost care of, since it is the
one that enables us go beyond what our physical, emotional and
psychological constitution can manage.

            If properly nourished by faith, hope and charity and the
many other human virtues, our spiritual life can see a picture much
bigger than what our physical, emotional and psychological selves can
see. It can tackle anything!

            It is in our spiritual life where we can always feel
reassured that everything would just be all right, because as St. Paul
would put, “all things work together for good to them that love God,
to them who are called according to his purpose.” (Rom 8,28) We should
never forget these reassuring words of St. Paul.

            We have to learn to live a proper and healthy sense of
abandonment which is not at all a case of negligence or an
I-don’t-care attitude. We have to be completely responsible for
everything in our life, although we know that life has a lot more to
offer and to challenge us than what we can handle. There are mysteries
to tackle and humanly impossible predicaments to bear, and we just
have to know how to live with them.

            Christ told us not to worry about anything because he
knows how to derive good even from evil. If we strive to assume the
mind and the very life of God, then we can also have this worry-free
attitude, and would know how to let go of certain difficulties and
move on to the many other things that our life will ask us to get
involved.

            Let’s remember that while we have to be 100% responsible
for our life, God is also 100% responsible for it. Everything is
actually in God’s hands. Our 100% should be united to the 100% of God.

            We should just focus on doing what is good, on following
what we know is the will of God for us. We actually cannot afford to
waste time and to get stranded in some corner. There are so many
things to do, many people to reach out to, many problems to resolve,
many places to go, etc.


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