What does “having it all” mean to you? Is it attainable?
The concept of ‘having it all’ implies an appreciation of what is also ‘moderate’ and what is ‘minimal’. It also assumes a type of thinking process based on linear measure. There are numerous theories as to the origins of this type of thought (too numerous for this blurb) but it is fundamental in our modern Western way of life. Everything is measured and compared, everything is scrutinised and evaluated from numbers of grains of sand, kilometres travelled to the size of the universe. How much have you got in the bank? How tall are you? How pretty or influential are you? Science, engineering and technology are each based on specific terms of measurable analysis bringing us closer and closer to what would appear to be greater appreciation and understanding. Similarly, sport and artistic endeavour are measurable when applied to competition providing supply for the gambling industry. But the fallout is severe with addiction and personal financial loss.
However there is another way of living, another way of seeing that is quieter and seems to go unnoticed in today’s noise. Terms such as ’go slow’, ‘vibration’ and ‘present’ reflect something else that is gaining traction. There is nothing new in this of course. Writers such as Eckhart Tolle focus on contemporary dilemmas and reveal how we fall victim to abstract thinking. Burkeman in Four Thousand Weeks speaks of our artificial appreciation of time: ‘this strange moment in history, when time feels so unmoored, might in fact provide the ideal opportunity to reconsider our relationship with it.’
Nicely put!
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Thanks 🙂
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To be unmoored is to feel adrift, confused, and insecure. The phrase is apt for these tumultuous, rapidly changing times. We are caught in a storm not of our own making. And if we look for our security to material things, the things that can be weighed and measured, we will surely be lost.
But God placed a sense of eternity in every human heart, an innate awareness of something beyond this temporal life (Eccle. 3: 11). If Christ is our anchor, He provides hope and security in every circumstance (Heb. 6: 19).
This does not mean we will not face trials and hardship. That is guaranteed in this broken world of ours. But Christ remains our rock and fortress, a solid foundation from which we cannot be unmoored (Ps. 62: 6-7).
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🙏 We are lucky to be in your orbit Anna
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You are too kind, Ravishank. ❤
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Not at all Anna 😊
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