The year began with a
phrase that someone
extracts from the
thoughts of a renowned
author, passes on to
many others on the
internet and it
multiplies as truth
throughout the world.
The phrase said: “Relationships
are not here to make us
happy. They are here to
make us deeply aware.” The
phrase is attributed to
the prestigious German
writer and lecturer
Eckhart Tolle, who now
lives in Canada.
As I also want to be
happy in the New Year,
preferably together with
all of humanity, I
thought: let's reflect
on this position, based
on two questions: How
much does our
consciousness depend on
our relationships? And
how much does our
happiness depend on our
conscience?
Much of what we learn in
life comes from our
relationships. But we
could have the same
relationship and learn
much less or much more,
right? So, most of what
we learn depends a lot
on ourselves, on our
attention, on the
respect we have for the
other's way of being and
thinking, on the
critical examination of
our actions and
reactions and so on.
I believe that the
relationship that most
expands our
consciousness is the
relationship with
ourselves. It is looking
inward, examining
thoughts, feelings,
questioning the value of
judgments. All without
forgetting to listen to
opinions different from
ours, without prejudice,
to broaden our
understanding.
Let's practice: I always
thought it would be good
and stimulating for me
to have a friend to
accompany me on the
walks I take at the City
Hall Sports Center, here
in Lapa. As it was not
possible to set a
specific time, I started
walking alone. I soon
realized that when I'm
with myself – for real,
without a cell phone,
without sound equipment
– the walk has its own
rhythm. The rhythm of my
body and soul during the
journey. I remain
attentive to my
breathing, my thoughts,
and the beauty of the
path. In this way, I
enrich my experience and
harmonize myself with
myself and the nature
that surrounds me. It's
a relationship that
really makes me happy.
When I read, I am also
alone. And I learned
that, before starting to
read, I must empty my
head so I can focus my
attention exclusively on
reading. I can read with
the desire to finish the
book or to delight in
its passages, following
them and imagining them
as possibilities. I
bring the author's world
to mine, and travel
inspired by his
creation, adding my own
experiences. Reading
takes on a proportion
that goes beyond the
text, penetrating the
intricacies of who I am
and motivating me to go
further, under the
impulse of imagination.
In fact, they are
choices I learned to
make as a reader.
When I enjoy a song at
a show, I have a
type of attention, but
when I listen to it in
the living room
armchair, following the
lyrics of the song and
paying attention to its
rhythm and melody, I
enrich the experience
even more. Both forms
are very pleasant and
intense. In both,
however, it is not
others who enrich it,
but the way I give
myself to them. When I
go to music shows where
they sell the CD with
the songs, when I get
home, I have the need to
listen to them
carefully, I savor the
lyrics of the songs
contained in the booklet
and notice details of
the instruments and
voices that I hadn't
been able to capture at
the show. They
are two completely
different moments. If I
read something about how
the songs were created,
the experience is
enriched, and I feel
even happier.
In Spiritism, we see
intimate reform as
something essential and
we soon think that we
have to really polish
the diamond of our
existence, of our being.
But how to do it? There
is no recipe. The
possibilities are
endless. But they all
depend on our attention,
on our interest in
improving ourselves not
only in our interactions
with others, but also
with ourselves, at every
moment of life.
In a world where beings
live plugged into cell
phones, computers, and
TVs, paying attention to
social networks that
bombard information,
images, and sounds, all
directed by
sophisticated
algorithms, specialized
in capturing the
attention of creatures,
being alone – me with
myself and you with
yourself – it starts to
feel like a big
challenge. When we are
not sleeping or meeting
basic needs, how long do
we spend looking at the
infinite content offered
by the screens, giving
up on ourselves, and how
much do we pay attention
to thoughts and
feelings, focused on
something we choose
without the interference
of algorithms? This
relationship seems to
have distanced us
considerably from
ourselves, doesn't it?
Someone could argue “but
I only see what
interests me on the
networks.” Exactly, this
happens because they
send us information,
images, and sounds of
the type we like and so
we see more of the same,
along with the
promotional content that
sponsors its broadcast.
How many times have you
asked yourself: why am I
wasting so much time on
this and failing to do
what I need to do? Have
you ever noticed how
tired you get after
being plugged in for
about an hour? Have you
ever felt how your
anxiety increases when
you receive a lot of
stimulation from the
screen? Have you ever
felt irritated after
these observations? Have
you ever had difficulty
relaxing and sleeping
after unplugging?
In the book The Art
of Meditation,
written in 2005, the
author of Emotional
Intelligence, Daniel
Goleman, makes a
fundamental
recommendation for
today: “Learn to calm
your mind, relax your
body and develop the
power of concentration.”
We can only concentrate
on something if our mind
is calm, allowing our
body to be relaxed.
Sounds easy? How great
it was this easy. This
is one of the biggest
challenges to being
happy today!
Many human beings need
to get sick to decide to
face the challenge of
reconnecting with
themselves in a
conscious and loving
way. Others need to
suffer considerable
losses in their
relationships, such as
separation or distance
from children. Have you
ever seen a family -
parents and children -
in a restaurant, all on
their cell phones,
rarely talking? Some,
even though they know
that there is less
chance of being happy
through this path, are
unable to change habits
that distance them from
themselves and those
they love.
Can you pay attention to
your breathing for a few
minutes? Let's say 15
minutes, following each
inhalation and
exhalation, making your
breathing a little
deeper. Start with five
minutes and work your
way for up to 30
minutes. Disconnect from
your surroundings. Feel
the movement of your
chest and abdomen and
relax each part of your
body as you breathe.
Start walking and feel
each step throughout the
walk, how the body's
perception changes with
the movement and the
changes in the path, the
ascent, the descent, the
flat terrain, the
contours. Cross paths
with people without
losing attention,
without letting your
thoughts wander about
how they are, what they
think, what they feel,
how much perfume they
have worn, how many laps
they are capable of
doing, whether they are
more or less prepared
than you to endure the
journey. Is it
difficult? Certainly.
Therefore, we train as
many times as necessary,
until we are able to be
alone, within ourselves.
Full of conscience. We
can wander and lose our
attention countless
times, but if we
persist, we will lose
ourselves less and find
ourselves more. Got it?
After mobilizing
ourselves to solve
problems and face
everyday challenges, we
need to learn to relax
our body and mind to
recharge our batteries.
Tension allows us to
focus energy and
attention on solving the
challenge. But then we
need to relax again to
regain physical strength
and cognitive capacity
for what comes next. We
often see people who
face normal everyday
situations as if they
were in a life-or-death
battle, always with a
lot of anxiety. For many
of them, life becomes a
journey of suffering. A
permanently mobilized,
tense body becomes
excessively tired and
quickly runs out of
energy to solve new
problems.
Returning to yourself,
to your body and
breathing, relaxing
after challenges and
remaining calm and
confident when carrying
out tasks requires
attention and awareness.
Almost all occurrences
in our lives can be seen
as natural and lived
with tranquility. The
walker's mind, however,
needs to be under his
control, just as
breathing must dominate
anxiety, imposing a
gentle and affectionate
rhythm, to oxygenate his
body, giving him more
energy.
A mind that often
wanders aimlessly on or
off the internet, does
not reach desired
places, gets tired and
wears itself out
excessively and
unnecessarily, leaving
us anxious, distressed,
and unhappy. If you want
the New Year to be
different and better,
review your way of
dealing with life. Don't
give yourself so much
time to the excess of
external stimuli that
arrive from all sides,
put your attention on
solving problems, but,
after solving them, turn
to your well-being, your
deep and pleasant
breathing, your body
relaxed, your mind calm.
This way, recover the
energy you need to move
forward with the best of
yourself.
Answering the questions
asked at the beginning
of this text, we should
depend as little as
possible on
relationships with third
parties to be happy or
to become conscious. Our
free will must be a
passport to our greatest
freedom – the inner one
– and to our well-being.
As social beings, our
relationships are an
essential part of our
lives, but the better we
are with ourselves, the
more likely we are to
get along with those we
interact with.
If you are aware of
yourself, you will
understand with greater
clarity and depth the
messages of those around
you and you will relate
better with your
neighbors, confirming
the teachings of ancient
and modern sages.
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