Will it ever get better?

“The ego is a prison you have built around yourself,                                                                 and now it holds you captive within its walls”

Humans have a need to be social. We need to feel others respect us. We get our self worth based on how we perceive others perceive us. This causes us to interpret the world in a way which will not hurt our ego. We tend to look for things that rationalize our behaviors and make us feel good about ourselves. Many times that interpretation is wrong.

You are playing a game with the entire world. Sometimes it can be enjoyable and fun, but most of the time it’s hard and complicated. Your ego loves playing the game. It loves comparing itself to others to see who is winning. To see who has the most money. To see who has the most power. To see who is the best. To see who is happier. To see who is making the most out of their life. Every person you meet your ego is sizing them up. Deciding who is ahead in the game. But here is the catch. We may make the comparisons but we constantly feel we are losing…

We come into this world and we have agreed to so many things which are just not true. These agreements are making our lives much more complicated than they need to be. We have agreed because the majority have told us this is how it is. This is not how it is.

Living is not this tawdry, mediocre, disciplined thing which we call our existence. Living is something entirely different; it is abundantly rich, timelessly changing, and as long as we don’t understand that eternal movement, our lives are bound to have very little meaning.

Children look to parents and other authority figures for security in an unfamiliar world. This in turn causes neural pathways to develop in patterns similar to the parent or authority figure. This is why children for the most part develop the same beliefs as their parents. Most live out their entire life and never question beliefs accepted as a child.

For the most part your brain was wired when you were a child. You may think you have come to conclusions on your own, but your brain has been conditioned to see the world in such a way as to support conclusions that were given to you by your parents and society when you were very young. Did your childhood limit how you see the world?

As a child we live in a world of miracles and magic. As we become adults the world loses its astonishment as we interact more and more with the harshness of society and the miracles and magic begin to fade. It does not have to. In fact it should be the exact opposite. The magic should increase but we were not told as a child how to keep the magic alive.

Most have been taught incorrectly. They have been taught how to achieve. They have not been taught how to enjoy life.

The tendency is to believe that if the majority believes it, it must be true. When in fact the opposite is usually the case. Chances are you would have been one of the ones who believed the earth was flat :-).

What if you could look inside yourself and find the answer to any question you have ever had? Now wouldn’t that be a life changer? So what are you waiting for? Get in there.

Question Everything. Most of your beliefs were given to you by others. Until you begin questioning you are not living your own life. Be honest with yourself. Are you living the life you want to live? If you are like most you are living a life others have created for you.

One of the best things you can ever do for yourself is just take 15 minutes a day and concentrate on your breathing. Slow it down. Breathe in 1, 2, 3… Breathe out 1,2,3,4,5… You will be amazed at what happens.

And do let me know  any comments or questions you might have. Share them with me!

With kind regards,

Dieter Langenecker

Dieter Langenecker

 

The yardstick of success is not measured by fame and wealth;
it is measured by your level of understanding of who you are,
 why you are here and where are you going from here. 
                                                                 -Tulshi Sen

xmas

Sign up for the free Dieter Langenecker Mentoring Solutions (+ Bonus)

Great Stuff I’ve Found Recently

5 weeks until the end of the year … time is rushing by. Take a couple of deep breaths, smile and – slow down (=recharge your batteries) for some minutes. You do deserve it, don’t you?!

 

To Know Yourself: Why It Matters                                                                           Wisdom has become a musty word even though it described the highest vision of life for many centuries. But the only real test must come in daily life. Someone who makes wise choices in life should wind up happier and more successful than someone who doesn’t. This test depends on knowing what wise choices are and what they aren’t.             Wisdom

It’s the problem, not the person 
Think back to a difficult situation you had to navigate at work. Were you able to distinguish the problem from the person?

 

Moving Deeply Into the Now
To be identified with your mind is to be trapped in time: the compulsion to live almost exclusively through memory and anticipation. This creates an endless preoccupation with past and future and an unwillingness to honor and acknowledge the present moment and allow it to be.

 

How to Live at Ease
sadhguru2

 

“The purpose of life is a life of purpose.” !
Dieter Langenecker

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Dieter Langenecker

 

From Existing to Meaningful Living
Sign up for a free LifeMastery session:

 
 

27
Sign up for the free Dieter Langenecker Mentoring Solutions (+ Bonus)

Ask Dieter November 2013

This month’s question from my portal Ask Dieter: Directions for living a meaningful Life comes from Peter in New York, USA.

What can I do, right now, that would be the most powerful use of this moment?

Hi Peter!

Thank you very much for your question!

Billy Joel was speaking at Vanderbilt University when a young student, Michael Pollack, raised his hand. When Joel called on him, Michael asked if he could play the piano to accompany the musician for a song. A silence followed. Michael had taken a big risk just by asking and you could feel the tension and suspense in the room. After a pause, Joel said “OK” and the video of their astounding spontaneous collaboration has now been viewed over 2.5 million times.

How often have you been in a similar situation, at one time or another, wanting to say something or do something, yet letting the moment pass by? Next time you’re in that situation, pay attention to it. Notice the feelings that come along with it. Observe the physical sensations in your body. Can you feel your heart beating? Can you connect with the conflicting urges to act and not to? Getting in touch with those feelings is the first step to acting in the face of them.

Your greatest opportunity is to use your time to take risks that will shake things up.

So, what can you do, right now, that would be the most powerful use of this moment?

Don’t hesitate to let me know if you have any follow-up question!
Smile, breathe, and go slowly!
With kind regards
  Dieter Langenecker
   Dieter Langenecker

“Being myself includes taking risks with myself, taking risks on new behavior, trying new ways of being myself, so that I can see how it is I want to be.”

 

Great stuff I’ve found recently: Confidence, Turbulance, Awareness, The Shift

Time for a break. Especially if you don’t have time for it. Enjoy some inspiration & wisdom!

9 Qualities Of Truly Confident People                                                               Confidence is not bravado, or swagger, or an overt pretense of bravery. Confidence is not some bold or brash air of self-belief directed at others.                                         Confidence is quiet: It is a natural expression of ability, expertise, and self-regard.

6 Things To Do When You Encounter Turbulance 
“Those who surrender freedom for security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one.”  – Benjamin Franklin

 

Why Awareness Will Free Your Mind and Transform Your Heart
Awareness is a quality of being awake and present to the moment.

 

THE SHIFT
A movie being made by a movement.
shift
“The purpose of life is a life of purpose.” !
Dieter Langenecker
Dieter Langenecker

 

From Existing to Meaningful Living
Sign up for a free LifeMastery session:

 

95
Sign up for the free Dieter Langenecker Mentoring Solutions (+ Bonus)

The Most Powerful Video on Spirituality and Happiness

I consider Eckhart Tolle one of the most profound contemporary spiritual teachers ever since I have read his “The Power Of Now”.

(In case you haven’t heard about him yet:

“Eckhart is a spiritual teacher and author who was born in Germany and educated at the Universities of London and Cambridge. At the age of 29, a profound inner transformation radically changed the course of his life. The next few years were devoted to understanding, integrating and deepening that transformation, which marked the beginning of an intense inward journey. Later, he began to work in London with individuals and small groups as a counselor and spiritual teacher. Since 1995 he has lived in Vancouver, Canada. Eckhart Tolle is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller The Power of Now (translated into 33 languages) and the highly acclaimed follow-up A New Earth, which are widely regarded as two of the most influential spiritual books of our time.”)

Eckhart’s profound yet simple teachings have already helped countless people throughout the world find inner peace and greater fulfillment in their lives. At the core of the teachings lies the transformation of consciousness, a spiritual awakening that he sees as the next step in human evolution. An essential aspect of this awakening consists in transcending our ego-based state of consciousness. This is a prerequisite not only for personal happiness but also for the ending of violence on our planet.

In this rare video he is not giving a public lecture but rather is in a conversation with a young man. So get yourself a cup of coffee or tea (or better two, it is a 100 minutes video), make sure you are in a quiet environment, open your mind – and enjoy!

Eckhart Tolle

And do let me know  any comments or questions you might have. Share them with me!

With kind regards,

Dieter Langenecker

Dieter Langenecker

 

“Being myself includes taking risks with myself, taking risks on new behavior, trying new ways of being myself, so that I can see how it is I want to be.”

 

 

Sign up for the free Dieter Langenecker Mentoring Solutions (+ Bonus)

Great stuff I’ve found recently: Shareholders, Creativity, Truth, Happy Secret

‘It was a bit of a crazy week here, to be capped off by preparation for a speaking tour next month. So it’s a relief to take a minute for a cup of tea and some interesting reading material. And how about you?

 

What’s Lost When Shareholders Rule
What economics does not recognize is the fundamental role of commitment in all aspects of our commercial as well as social lives, and the way in which institutions contribute to the creation and preservation of commitment.                                                              What’s Lost When Shareholders Rule

6 Steps To Being More Creative
Creativity is easy – just let yourself be more childlike, curious, open

 

Can the Truth Come Back With a Capital “T”?
In a sense, the modern world was created with a simple editing stroke when Truth lost its capital “T.” Instead of pursuing the Truth, along a hundred paths stemming from philosophy and religion, the rise of Newtonian science and the Age of Reason taught us to seek lower-case truth, which consists of a body of verifiable facts.                                    Or is it all relative?

 

Shawn Achor: The happy secret to better work
We believe that we should work to be happy, but could that be backwards? In this fast-moving and entertaining talk from TEDxBloomington, psychologist Shawn Achor argues that … well. see for yourself :-); another “must see”!
shawn
“Do or do not… there is no try.”,
Dieter Langenecker

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Dieter Langenecker

 
 

From Existing to Meaningful Living
Sign up for a free LifeMastery session:

 
 

07
Sign up for the free Dieter Langenecker Mentoring Solutions (+ Bonus)

7 Ways Meditation Can Transform Your Life

While teaching a workshop I asked the group: “If you like to suffer then raise your hand.” No one raised a hand. So why do we create suffering for both ourselves and others?

Seems like we love to suffer as all the ways out of suffering are staring us in the face. If not, then why do more people drink alcohol than meditate, or why do more people eat fast food than get exercise? Smoking cigarettes is a major cause of death in the western world, as is sugar consumption leading to obesity, so why do we love everything that is bad for us and keep away from things that do us good?

Presumably it’s because we really don’t like ourselves too much and live in such a way that our own needs take second place. Or we believe we’re invulnerable and will go on forever: “Things like that don’t happen to me!” But once a cycle of self-denigration gets started it takes a huge amount of determination and motive to make real changes. For the mind is a perfect servant as it will do whatever it’s told, but it’s a terrible master as it fails to help us help ourselves.

Which can be even harder when our mind is like a deranged monkey, leaping from one thought or drama to the next, never allowing us time to be quiet, peaceful and still. Meditation can make a huge difference to this, which may sound farfetched but it’s a direct way to cut through the chaotic monkey mind that’s constantly making excuses and supporting our resistance. Yet so many people pay it so little attention. Drinking alcohol can kill and meditation can save, yet there are far more people who drink.

It is fascinating to note how the Buddha recognized suffering and it’s role in our lives all of 2,600 years ago. His basic teachings are the Four Nobel Truths: 1) life is suffering; 2) the reason for that suffering is because of our desire for things to be different to how they are; 3) the way to become free of suffering, which includes meditation; 4) the ultimate state of freedom from suffering.

Here are seven ways meditation can transform your life:

1. Chills You Out

Stress is responsible for 70-90% of illnesses, while quiet time is the most effective remedy for a busy and overworked mind. In a stressed state, it is easy to lose touch with inner peace, compassion and kindness; in a relaxed state, the mind clears and we connect with a deeper sense of purpose and altruism. Your breath is your best friend. Anytime you feel stress rising, heart closing, mind going into overwhelm, just focus on your breathing and quietly repeat: Breathing in, I calm the body and mind; breathing out, I smile.

2. Releases Anger and Fear

Anger can lead to hatred and violence. If we don’t accept our negative feelings then we are likely to repress or disown them, and when denied they can cause shame, depression and rage. Meditation enables us to see how selfishness, aversion and ignorance create endless dramas and fears. It may not be a cure-all, it’s not going to make all our difficulties go away or magically transform our weaknesses into strengths, but it does enable us to release self-centered and angry attitudes and generate a deeper inner happiness.

3. Generates Appreciation

A lack of appreciation easily leads to abuse and exploitation. So, start by taking a moment just to appreciate the chair you are sitting on. Consider how the chair was made: the wood, cotton, wool, or other fibers, the trees and plants that were used, the earth that grew the trees, the sun and rain, the animals that maybe gave their lives, the people who prepared the materials, the factory where the chair was built, the designer and carpenter and seamstress, the shop that sold it-all this just so you could be sitting here, now. Then extend that appreciation to every part of yourself, then to everyone and everything in your life: For this I am grateful. And see how your attitude to your world changes.

4. Develops Kindness and Compassion

Every time you see or feel suffering, whether in yourself or in another, every time you make a mistake or say something stupid and are just about to put yourself down, every time you think of someone you are having a hard time with, every time you see someone struggling, upset or irritated, just stop and bring loving kindness and compassion to yourself. Breathing gently, silently repeat: May you be well, may you be happy, may you be filled with loving kindness.

There is a reservoir of basic goodness in all beings but we often lose touch with this natural expression of caring and friendship. In meditation, we go from seeing our essentially selfish and ego-bound nature to recognizing that we are an integral part of a far greater whole, and as the heart opens we can bring compassion to our fallibility and humanness. Meditation is, therefore, the most compassionate gift we can give to ourselves.

5. Actives Harmlessness

Simply through the intent to cause less pain we can bring greater dignity to our world, so that harm is replaced with harmlessness and disrespect with respect. Ignoring someone else’s feelings or needs, thinking thoughts of revenge and dislike, affirming our hopelessness, or seeing ourselves as incompetent or unworthy are all causes of personal harm. How much resentment, guilt, or shame are we holding on to, thus perpetuating such harmfulness? Meditation enables us to transform this through recognizing our essential goodness as well as the preciousness of all life.

6. Inter-Connects

Without sharing and caring we live in an isolated, disconnected and lonely world. We can take meditation ‘off the cushion’ and put it into action as we become more deeply aware of our connectedness with all beings. From being self-centered, we become other-centered, concerned about the welfare of all. Then, reaching out beyond ourselves becomes a spontaneous expression of genuine generosity seen in our capacity to let go of conflicts or forgive mistakes, or in our desire to help those in need. We are not alone here, we all walk the same earth and breathe the same air; the more we participate, the more we are connected and fulfilled.

7. Invites You To Be With What Is

The very nature of life includes change and unfulfilled desire and a longing for things to be different from how they are, all of which brings discontent and dissatisfaction. Almost everything we do is to achieve something: if we do this, then we will get that; if we do that, then this will happen. But in meditation we do it just to do it. There is no ulterior purpose other than to be here, in the present moment, without trying to get anywhere or achieve anything. No judgment, no right or wrong, simply being aware.

Meditation enables us to see clearly, to witness our thoughts and behavior and reduce our self-involvement. Without such a practice of self-reflection there is no way of putting a brake on the ego’s demands. Stepping out of the conceptual mind, however, doesn’t mean stepping into nowhere or nothing; it doesn’t mean that there is no connection to a worldly reality. Rather, it is stepping into sanity and, more importantly, into even greater connectedness. Then we have no more need to do ourselves harm!

Do you have questions about meditation? Share them with me here.

 Dieter Langenecker

Dieter Langenecker

PS: If you want personal support for living your life in meaningful happiness visit  Personal Mentoring
WhoHappy
Sign up for your free Dieter Langenecker Mentoring Solutions (+ Bonus)