JAYA the TRUST COACH
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diamonds & trust nuggets

Force nothing

9/5/2019

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Picture
(Would you, could you believe that it’s supposed to be easy?)
I just found a little note I wrote for myself with an Abraham-Hicks quote that struck me: “The path of least resistance is also the path of greatest joy, greatest clarity, and the most fun!”
 
Abraham’s path of least resistance is a crazy-simple concept: You watch for and find the easiest, most effortless spot to next place your foot. Don’t see the whole picture? Don’t have a start-to-finish plan? No problem. Find your next step, knowing that’s enough. Take the easiest step you have access to.
 
You can do it tired, scared, confused. Point yourself roughly in the right direction (as I talk about in part 4 of Scooch!) and step forward, wherever your foot can land without some big leap or forceful stomping.
 
You can do it with curiosity instead of dread; you can stay tuned for the guidance rather than fear you’ll get it wrong. You can trust yourself to course-correct as you go.
 
It’s always okay to find you’re in resistance. Watch it dispassionately, compassionately. Then find your point of least resistance, and step there. Rinse and repeat; rinse and repeat. You’ll see and feel the resistance melt away. You’ll find the momentum builds as you go, often surprisingly swiftly.
 
To proceed along the path of least resistance, start by noticing when you’re in resistance.
 
In your body, resistance can feel like
  • contraction/tension
  • anxiety/adrenaline
  • discomfort
  • distress
  • illness or disease or anything out of whack
  • depression, procrastination, shut-down
  • those gut feelings that something is off

You’re in resistance when you're
  • second-guessing and what-iffing
  • talking yourself into and out of things
  • making excuses (even for others) or rationalizing your decisions
  • treating someone else in the story like a victim that you have to be careful with
  • declaring yourself to be a victim of what’s hard or going wrong (vs. getting curious and paying attention)
  • wondering whether you're attracted or not; whether you really want to go somewhere or do something or not
  • thinking you need to see the whole picture, have a whole plan, before you move
  • thinking you need to gather more knowledge or garner more support before you start
  • making it about money (no, in case you balk at that, I actually do personally and viscerally know what poverty looks like)
  • giving yourself lectures on things like responsibility or commitment (when you haven’t failed to be responsible or to commit)
  • telling yourself why you can’t have what you want, or why it won’t work
  • calling yourself XYZ for wanting what you want or going for what you’re after (What do you call yourself to stop your right movement? Privileged, greedy, selfish?)
  • calling yourself XYZ for being immobilized, instead of looking at fears (de)constructively and compassionately (Do you call yourself lazy, bad at follow-through, undeserving?)
  • going in again and again after each next nosedive or shut door (I don’t mean appropriate persistence when you feel connected to your vision! I mean when you’re more like a bull in a china shop than a curious explorer picking your way through uncharted territory—hey, you get to choose the metaphor you want to play out!)
 
It also helps to be clear about the signs that you're on a path of least resistance:
  • it often feels easy
  • even where it’s hard, you’re having fun, you feel inspired
  • you feel challenged in the good way
  • where there’s actual effort needed, you feel equipped for that—not overwhelmed—so it’s effort worth exerting
  • there's a sense of rightness (or, in romance/relationship, that you get each other, that you’re super curious about this individual, that you feel their genuine interest in you)
  • you're able to be present, able to come back from wondering or worrying about the future
  • you're not riding a yo-yo in a stay-or-go decision-making process
  • there's more right than wrong
  • you feel a series of obstacles as an interesting journey that’s building muscles you need (not as a string of defeating, demoralizing debacles)
  • you often see that what comes up is your stuff and you're therefore able to process it at that level, not go after the situation or the other person requiring them to change (in dating or in working/living closely with others, you can process what comes up without necessarily involving the other, or you can process it first for yourself then bring them the short version; note you’re not asking them to fix it for you or adjust themselves for your well-being)
 
How to follow the path of least resistance:
All you need to do is gingerly pick your way along the unknown way, one step at a time, simply finding your next point of least resistance. What’s the easiest way to go that feels like it’s in the right direction? Forget the whole picture. Don’t call this one step a drop in the bucket. Your point of least resistance simply gives you access to movement. One step, and another, and the next, until you’re moving so well, you forget you didn’t know how to do this. You’ll course-correct as you go, so don’t worry about whether you’re heading just the right way. You’re meant to build and ride momentum.
 
Hey, it’s not just that the path of least resistance will get you to where you’re going in the most effortless way. Remember the quote I began with from Abraham-Hicks? “The path of least resistance is also the path of greatest joy, greatest clarity, and the most fun!” So when it feels like that … you’re on it!
 
Love & blessings, Jaya

Note that an earlier post on least resistance approaches these concepts from another angle.

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