Sunday, February 1, 2009

Keep Your Eye on the Ball

It is the job of your conscious mind to pay strict atten­tion to the task at hand, to what you are doing and what is going on around you so that these incoming sensory mes­sages can keep your automatic mechanism currently advised of the environment and allow it to respond spon­taneously. In baseball parlance you must "keep your e y e on the ball."
It is not the job of your conscious rational mind, how­ever, to create or to "do" the job at hand. We get into trouble when we either neglect to use conscious thinking in the way that it is meant to be used, or when we attempt to use it in a way that it was never meant to be used. We cannot squeeze creative thought out of the Creative Mech­anism by making conscious effort. We cannot "do" the job to be done by making strained conscious efforts. A n d because we try and cannot, we become concerned, anx­ious, frustrated. The automatic mechanism is unconscious. We cannot see the wheels turning. We cannot know what is taking place beneath the surface. And because it works spontaneously in reacting to present and current needs, we can have no intimation or certified guarantee in advance that it will come up with the answer. We are forced into a position of trust. And only by trusting and acting do we receive signs and wonders. In short, conscious rational thought selects the goal, gathers information, concludes, evaluates, estimates and starts the wheels in motion. It is not, however, responsible for results. We must learn to do our work, act upon the best assumptions available, and leave results to take care of themselves.

No comments:

Post a Comment