For
those who are very entrenched in low-awareness living, it will take a lot
longer to get all
the false answers out, possibly more than an hour. But if you
persist, after 100 or 200 or maybe even 500 answers, you’ll be struck by the
answer that causes you to surge with emotion, the answer that breaks you. If
you’ve never done this, it may very well sound silly to you. So let it seem
silly, and do it anyway.
As
you go through this process, some of your answers will be very similar. You may
even re-list previous answers. Then you might head off on a new tangent and
generate 10-20 more answers along some other theme. And that’s fine. You can
list whatever answer pops into your head as long as you just keep writing.
At
some point during the process (typically after about 50-100 answers), you may
want to quit and just can’t see it converging. You may feel the urge to get up
and make an excuse to do something else. That’s normal. Push past this
resistance, and just keep writing. The feeling of resistance will eventually
pass.
You
may also discover a few answers that seem to give you a mini-surge of emotion,
but they don’t quite make you cry — they’re just a bit off. Highlight those
answers as you go along, so you can come back to them to generate new
permutations. Each reflects a piece of your purpose, but individually they aren’t
complete. When you start getting these kinds of answers, it just means you’re
getting warm. Keep going.
It’s
important to do this alone and with no interruptions. If you’re a nihilist,
then feel free to start with the answer, “I don’t have a purpose,” or “Life is
meaningless,” and take it from there. If you keep at it, you’ll still
eventually converge.
When
I did this exercise, it took me about 25 minutes, and I reached my final answer
at step 106. Partial pieces of the answer (mini-surges) appeared at steps 17,
39, and 53, and then the bulk of it fell into place and was refined through
steps 100-106. I felt the feeling of resistance (wanting to get up and do
something else, expecting the process to fail, feeling very impatient and even
irritated) around steps 55-60. At step 80 I took a 2-minute break to close my
eyes, relax, clear my mind, and to focus on the intention for the answer to
come to me — this was helpful as the answers I received after this break began
to have greater clarity.
Here
was my final answer: to live consciously and courageously, to resonate with
love and compassion, to awaken the great spirits within others, and to leave
this world in peace.
When
you find your own unique answer to the question of why you’re here, you will
feel it resonate with you deeply. The words will seem to have a special energy
to you, and you will feel that energy whenever you read them.
Discovering
your purpose is the easy part. The hard part is keeping it with you on a daily
basis and working on yourself to the point where you become that purpose.
If
you’re inclined to ask why this little process works, just put that question
aside until after you’ve successfully completed it. Once you’ve done that,
you’ll probably have your own answer to why it works. Most likely if you ask 10
different people why this works (people who’ve successfully completed it),
you’ll get 10 different answers, all filtered through their individual belief
systems, and each will contain its own reflection of truth.
Obviously,
this process won’t work if you quit before convergence. I’d guesstimate that
80-90% of people should achieve convergence in less than an hour. If you’re
really entrenched in your beliefs and resistant to the process, maybe it will
take you 5 sessions and 3 hours, but I suspect that such people will simply
quit early (like within the first 15 minutes) or won’t even attempt it at all.
But if you’re drawn to read this blog (and haven’t been inclined to ban it from
your life yet), then it’s doubtful you fall into this group.
Give
it a shot! At the very least, you’ll learn one of two things: your true purpose
in life -or- that you should unsubscribe from this blog.
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