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Anonymous.
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August 26, 2015 at 4:02 am #82420
Inky
ParticipantHi Marcus,
You’re a homebody and want to stay near your family. There’s nothing wrong with that! We’re led to believe that “High School is the Best Years of Your Life!” and “You’ll Meet Your Life Long Friends in College!” and “I Bet You Can’t WAIT to Get Out of Here!” and “Now You Can Finally Fulfill Your DREAM!” All media. All hype. All quasi-cultural.
Most people do stick close to home and only move when they have to. Most people do what they have to do to make a living, and come home and hang out with the family watching TV. Maybe barbeque with a beer on the weekends. Or even go to the city or to a live event in town occasionally. That’s Life. That’s actually Real Life. But we’re not “supposed” to want that, you see.
If you find your passion, have a cabal of Friends and get a burning desire to move far away, great. But don’t beat yourself over the head with it!
You’re doing fine!
Inky
August 26, 2015 at 5:03 am #82421Saiisha
ParticipantMarcus – whether you know it or not, you’re actually doing it right. What you call “copping out” is actually following your heart, what your gut is telling you, rather than doing what other people expect you to do. Do more of it – cop out more, please people less, follow your own gut – that’s the surest way to passion and purpose.
There’s two ways to get closer to your purpose / calling in life:
1. To follow the beeline of where the honey is – where you feel drawn, where your joys are, what makes you smile, what makes you feel alive. If you don’t know this yet. Start experimenting. Create a ritual for yourself to do at least one (new) thing each day that will make you smile, laugh or feel purposeful. Since you said helping people is one activity you like, maybe start doing one thing to help someone each day – not just money, but maybe helping an old friend who’s in trouble, buying someone coffee, or helping kids in highschool, etc. You only have to look and you’ll find your one thing for the day. The point of this exercise is for you to learn what brings you joy. Following your joys is the shortest way to finding your purpose.2. Let go of what doesn’t serve your purpose – you’re already doing this by “copping out”, letting go of the internship that doesn’t feel right in your bones. Continue to do this. Stop doing things to please other people, out of obligation or expectation. “When I let go of who I am, I become what I might be.” (Lao Tzu). Take the time to know what you might be. Take all the time you need. That’s what your life is about – to become who you truly are!
Namaste, Saiisha
http://www.NestInTheForest.comAugust 26, 2015 at 7:50 pm #82464Anonymous
GuestDear Marcus S:
I am going on a limb here, not based on much information from your post, just intuition: I wonder if the problem is that…
You are too attached to your parents, too invested in them and in the past. Your life is not about YOU and your FUTURE. It is about them and the things of your past.
You move around but your heart is with them, there. You are not the focus of your life, almost irrelevant to your own life.
Stay away from them, make your own life. How sad for a child to give himself away from such an early age, it shouldn’t be that way.
anita
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