What Do We Really Seek in Life?
by Robert Taylor
How many of us truly know what we seek in our lives? Do we confuse our
desires and wants with our needs?
Are we really seeking that new home, job, car, boat, vacation (you may add
anything you can imagine to this list)? Or are we seeking the "peace that
passeth all understanding"?
We are driven by our needs, wants and desires. The greater these are, the
more we are driven. A driven person is not a person who is at peace. That
person's needs, wants and desires keep that individual in a state of constant
turmoil.
Society teaches us we should constantly strive for all the finer things in
life. The paradox is that society dictates what those finer things should be.
The labels society provides cannot fit every individual, for we are all
different. No two of us have the same wants and desires.
My wants and desires may be to live simply and peacefully. Inasmuch as my
needs for food, clothing and shelter are met, I am at peace. There is no concern
about having the most toys, or the biggest home, or the most money, or the
fanciest automobile.
Society says that unless we have these things or at least strive to achieve
them, we are failures. This can only hold true when we allow society to dictate
to us.
There are many people who, in the eyes of society at large, are abysmal
failures. However, in the opinion of those closest to them, they may be
considered the greatest of successes.
Consider those who live simply and within their means. They are totally free
of debt and the worries that come with being in debt. Another thought to bear in
mind is the fact that inasmuch as you owe any other person or institution, you
are a slave to that person or institution.
Ponder this thought! Do not lightly pass it by.
So long as you owe another person or institution, you are a slave to that
person or institution.
Our basic needs for food, shelter and clothing are relatively easy to
satisfy. It is when we desire a 20-room mansion for a four-person family that we
place ourselves in stressful situations.
How much is enough? That depends on what you want out of life. Too many
people tell us we are foolish to settle for anything less than the latest model
automobile, a beautiful and well landscaped home, a great amount of money in the
bank and on and on. Are we really foolish to not want these things?
Would we not be better off to have sufficient for all our needs that we don't
have to worry about them? We can spend the time we would have wasted trying to
accumulate the most toys on much better things. Some of these would be more
quality time with our families, the time to really enjoy all the beauty
surrounding us, and more time for spiritual development.
An individual who is stressed out cannot enjoy the beauty abounding on this
earth. This is easily explained. When you are truly ill and hurting all over,
your pains and illness dominate your thoughts. When you are in excellent health
and high spirits, everything about you takes on a new nature and is viewed from
a different perspective.
The choice is simple, but not necessarily easy. Live simply and free of
stress within your means according to your own dictates, or endure the striving
and stress of keeping up with the dictates of society.
About the Author
Copyright 2001 by Robert Taylor Subscribe to the Key To
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