Habiba Zaman

Blog

I Choose To Truly LIVE

The sense of not quite feeling like we are enough can almost always be traced back to being an outsider in your own family. This feeling as if they had sensed the lack in you early on saying that you didn’t fit in with what they believed in or how they behaved. There is a pain that comes from constant disapproval; a sense of having lost something unnamed, unknown. Kristin Hannah shared, ‘All you can do is to survive it by being quiet, by not demanding are seeking attention, by excepting that you are loved, but Unliked’.

This nagging disapproval will more itself into the negative self-talk asking ‘What do you have to show for your life? How would your time on this earth be marked? Would anyone remember you, and if so for what?’

What is it that most people dream of? Many would say that it’s having a purpose in life, but I would like to challenge that. I would say what most people really want is to make a life, not merely an existence. A life that would be based on your very own choices and not defined by whatever everyone else demands of your existence. A life where you can uncover your strength, your joys, where you are judged on more than just your appearance, how much you earn, or what you do.

But what does it mean to truly live- if you are not living for someone else? How do you measure a life worth lived? Everyone has a different metric to define a successful existence. For some, effort is given for as long as it takes one to the next step or next level. To have a measurable goal to meet. To continue play an instrument only if progress is made to get better.

Many will say that they are not enjoying the craft, sport, hobby because they are not doing well at it. Is it that they are not enjoying the process of the event or is it that they are not enjoying the association they have attached to the outcome of this event related to their worth and achievement? Is it because of the thoughts, ‘I’m not measuring up, I’m not good at it, what’s the point of trying when I am going to be bad at it, or I am embarrassed because others are watching”? We are conditioned to avoid pain, but does partaking in the act have to be associated with pain/discomfort/ unease? Can it just be neutral? As in, I am taking this knitting course and laughing because my creation looks like a sausage instead of a blanket and taking pride in learning a new skill instead of feeling shame because it is not living up to the expectations, I have set out for myself.

My query is, could worth perhaps be present even if not measured on quantifiable reasoning? Someone who continues to sing even though their sound would rouse birds from their sleep to take flight. To sing simply for the enjoyment of it. To read a book not to gain perspective, knowledge, or skill, but rather to be transported to another world and live through the eyes of the characters. To continue to create even if a price will never be placed on the vestige. What if… what if we partook in activities for the sheer pleasure of it? Not to achieve, gain or grow but just to experience life?

When someone says it is not logical to put effort into an action because the outcome cannot be measured, that is a sure indicator that the person struggles deeply with black and white thinking and is motivated deeply by perfectionism and fear of failure. How can we shift from fear of failure to having the focus on just the interaction in the moment and the emotion this particular action evokes? There is not attachment to what it should be, OR who you should be.

If the focus is always on the outcome, then you cannot ever be in the moment. You are missing out on learning about yourself in this current moment and the process. If I want to go outside and sit in the breeze… can I just stop at that instead of saying I went outside and read, coped, gardened, or journaled?

Do we need to always have a point behind what we are doing that needs to be more than ‘I am because I like it’? I challenge you today to just BE. Be in the moment, check in with yourself and acknowledge what it is like to just be in that moment. Just exist for a moment.