7 Root Causes of Bitter Failure
There are seven critical features necessary for even moderate
success. Should any of these features be at a low ebb, then you
will find yourself living a life of quiet desperation and bitter
failure. Ironically, these key elements can be healed with some
sustained effort. Alternatively, should you be able to raise all
seven levels of personal power, you will find yourself living in
a whole new world, where success becomes the norm rather than
the exception.
In your efforts to improve your life by healing these symptoms
of failure, do not look around you for much reinforcement,
because most people are in deep denial of their own
inadequacies. In fact, you will find yourself a pioneer.
However, if you do not heal the conditions of failure, you will
eventually have to pay a high price for such negligence.
One: Low physical energy. In our modern day world of constant
struggle to sustain ourselves economically, it is easy to let
stress become predominant, and this in turn, will lead to
compromising the immune system and creating illness, sometimes a
fatal illness. Low physical energy comes from insufficient
sleep, little or no quiet time of restfulness when awake, little
or no physical exercise, and poor eating and digestion. When
physical energy is low, sluggishness is prevalent and little is
achieved. Unless this is healed, a person is heading toward ill
health and low moods. Dysfunctional and addictive behavior,
bitter losses, and personal crises arise from not having enough
physical energy to fix things in our lives when they break down.
We succumb before the smallest of obstacles.
Two: Mental sluggishness. The world is fast moving towards
becoming entirely based on knowledge as a key economic skill.
The industrial revolution, where strenuous labor was sufficient
to pay the bills, is being replaced by knowledge workers.
Machines and sophisticated technology are quickly replacing
manual labor. In a decade or two, robotic intelligence will far
outstrip the most competent human technician. Yet, all
educational systems are still using the archaic factory methods
of mass production and if you wish to have an intelligent mind,
you will have to develop self-reliance. Ignorance, stupidity,
and emotional jingoism and dogmatism have wrecked havoc on human
life...and unless our species learns to value artistic and
intellectual achievement, we will self-exterminate through
overpopulation, pollution, epidemics, the collapse of nations,
or a final war.
Three: Low ideals. All greatness and all examples of cultural
heroes arise from those who have held themselves up to a higher
ideal then what the consensus reality deemed necessary. I am not
talking here about morals, whose values arise from dogmatic
creeds, but about an individual's desire to better themselves
and the world around them. Egoic desires for wealth, popularity,
and total domination are not high ideals. Many world dictators
have held all three, and they have brought nothing but misery to
their countries and the world at large. Champions of worthy
ideals have been people like Joseph Campbell, Mother Teresa,
Martin Luther King, Mahatma Gandhi, and others. Dipping into the
biographies of great souls is the beginning of your own
greatness. When Buckminster Fuller decided to made the decision
to make his life an example of what one man can do to improve
the world, he created a precedent whose magnitude if replicated
will have a far-reaching effect. A high ideal is one that is
good for you, that is good for others, and that is good for all
mankind.
Four: Dogmatic religiosity. Fanaticism is not spiritual.
Understanding the great invisible forces of life can only come
from original experience. Books and teachers may point the way,
but ultimately, they do not light the path to deep
understanding, and only make a false impression of learning.
True spirituality consists of acts of kindness, moments of
wisdom, and feelings of high inspiration. When we learn and
absorb the lessons of our own life, enjoy genuine warmth in
relationship to other people and experience wonder when
contemplating the great scheme of all life, then we may awaken
to spiritual understanding. Institutions, no matter how
venerable, cannot make you spiritual. Gurus, no matter how
advance, cannot make you spiritual. Only your own unrelenting
efforts at seeking the origins and meaning of the good, the
true, and the beautiful will put your feet on the path to
spiritual understanding. Spirituality, ultimately, cannot be
taught; it can only be learned.
Five: Superficial relationships. The entire fabric of life is
based on relationships between various forms of life. The more
superficial your relationship with other people, the more
manipulative your interactions, and the more self-seeking your
motivations, the more you hurt yourself. We know neither
ourselves nor each other, and the results of this neglect of
interest and affection is that we live lonely lives in a world
where chaotic human behavior appears to be slowly but inevitably
eroding the quality of all human experience.
Six: The unhealed past. All of us have been wounded by our
interactions with the world, and as these psychic scars
accumulate inside our emotional bodies, the more disturbed we
become. Neurotic tendencies originate from psychic wounds. Over
time, they only get worse. Unless effort is made to heal the
experiences of hurt, disappointment, rejection, and humiliation
from the past, then their psychic force will continue to have a
debilitating effect in our lives. So numbed out are we to our
own pain that often it takes skilled professional intervention
to uncover it. All examples of dysfunctional behavior and poor
life conditions arise from some psychic wound making its silent
impression. All acts of rampant evil arise from a psyche that
has completely deteriorated into psychosis.
Seven: No self-inquiry. Life is complex. Yet we respond with
simple reflexes to what ails us. Rare is the person who takes
time to journal, to walk in nature, or to discuss with others at
a deep level what can be done to improve the quality of life.
When we don't contemplate the conundrums that face us, we
continue to tread ruts of self-defeat. Reflexive living means a
dearth of proactive solutions, and the more wrong answers we
accumulate on what to do about things, the worse they get.
Quickly enough a lifetime will pass and regret will be the last
emotion experienced. The unlived life arises from the
non-reflected life. It is better to reflect on what is happening
in our lives when we have a chance to correct our course than to
do so when it is too late. Perhaps there is no greater
philosophical statement than that made by Socrates when he said:
"The unexamined life is not worth living."
It is a rare and wonderful thing to be born a human being. It is
also the most difficult of undertakings. Unless we choose to
heal these seven levels of failure in a consistently committed
way, we will find ourselves impoverished by our own
unwillingness to seek significance. Behind pain is pleasure,
behind sorrow joy, and behind failure success...we have only to
effort to turn things around for ourselves, and in the nobility
of saving ourselves, we will look around and find that where we
thought to find an abomination, we have discovered a god, and
where we thought to have been cast alone, we have found
ourselves one with all the world. All of us have a greatness and
splendor that yearns with desperation to be liberated into the
light of experience.