2016. A banner year. Not “it will be a banner year.” It is. 17 hours into it and I have decided. And there are no wrong decisions.
Contemporary philosopher Alan Watts gets credit for the “there are no bad decisions” line. “Worriers are people who think of all the variables beyond their control and what might happen,” he says. “Choice is the act of hesitation … before making a decision. It is a mental wobbling.”
When you know this, there is no fear. No hesitation. No “mental wobbling.” Life becomes a seamless flow. I’m not much of a skier but it seems to me it is like a schuss down an infinite hill for which you have, as the kids say, “mad skills,” skills so mad that you needn’t mentally plan your route, where you will turn, how you will avoid the trees, what vistas you will stop to appreciate. You are confident that you can’t make a wrong turn (or to put it more positively, you will make all the right turns) because you are letting your intuition, which KNOWS much more – so much more – than your “mighty” intelligence, have the reins, or the poles.
I’ve been doing this lately: practicing on things that clearly don’t matter in a big way but that I have spent far too much of my life stressing over. What movie to watch, which book to buy (easy – all of them), what to write about in a blog post. These, and countless more, are choices around which I’ve spent possibly and literally years getting my knickers in a knot. It’s an exercise in freedom to make a decision without a second thought. That doesn’t make it a random decision, like pulling a name out of a hat (though for lots of dilemmas, that would work as well as anything) but one that’s guided by some hard-won mad skills in the life department. You might consider a decision made this way random, not based on “the facts,” but the end result is the same: a perfectly acceptable choice AND no stress.
I’ve also exercised this new approach in my studio. What mark to make, what color to use, even “what shall I play on today?” It really doesn’t matter, as long as I show up.
The moral of the story is this: “Show up for life.” 2016 is a banner year and the banner says, “Get on the playing field. Pick up the brush or the camera or the pen. Ski down that hill.”

Yep.
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What a grand philosophy! No, I’m not kidding! If it works for you, run with it, and I’ll be running at your side!
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Well Cousin, I love what you are doing! I have been releasing myself from fear and loving the way the world looks without it. Rock on!
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It’s revolutionary, actually!
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Once again, you reach into an unknown space and come out with a handful of beauty.
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That may truly be the nicest thing anyone has said to me. Ever. Thank you, Trudy.
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Thank you for being a glorious artist AND a gentle mentor.
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You’re welcome. But perhaps the thanks should be mine for your compatible soul. Loves to you.
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Quoting an old dying man on his biggest regret: “All the times that I’d worried and nothing happened.”
Debra, You have found your center and it is everywhere.
Love your art!
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This is an admirable and somewhat enviable conscious awakening and one that I must embrace NOW! Thank you for sharing…
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