Finding the answers starts
with posing the right questions
1. What questions should I
be asking myself?
At first I thought asking
yourself what you should be asking yourself was redundant. It isn't. Without
this question, you wouldn't ask any others, so it gets top billing. It creates
an alert, thoughtful mind state, ideal for ferreting out the information you
most need in every situation. Ask it frequently.
2. Is this what I want to
be doing?
This very moment is,
always, the only moment in which you can make changes. Knowing which changes
are best for you comes, always, from assessing what you feel. Ask yourself many
times every day if you like what you're doing. If the answer is no, start
noticing what you'd prefer. Thus begins the revolution.
3. Why worry?
These two words,
considered sincerely, can radically reconfigure the landscape of your mind. Worry
rarely leads to positive action; it's just painful, useless fear about
hypothetical events, which scuttles happiness rather than ensuring it. Some
psychologists say that by focusing on gratitude, we can shut down the part of
the brain that worries. It actually works!
4. Why do I like
{cupcakes} more than I like {people}?
Feel free to switch out
the words in brackets: You may like TV more than exercise, or bad boys more
than nice guys, or burglary more than reading. Whatever the particulars, every
woman has something she likes more than the somethings she's supposed to like.
But forcing "virtues"—trying to like people more than cupcakes—drives
us to vices that offer false freedom from oppression. Stop trying to like the
things you don't like, and many vices will disappear on their own.
5. How do I want the world
to be different because I lived in it?
Your existence is already
a factor in world history—now, what sort of factor do you want it to be? Maybe
you know you're here to create worldwide prosperity, a beautiful family, or one
really excellent bagel. If your impressions are more vague, keep asking this
question. Eventually you'll glimpse clearer outlines of your destiny. Live by
design, not by accident.
6. How do I want to be
different because I lived in this world?
In small ways or large,
your life will change the world—and in small ways or large, the world will
change you. What experiences do you want to have during your brief sojourn
here? Make a list. Make a vision board. Make a promise. This won't control your
future, but it will shape it.
7. Are {vegans} better
people?
Again, it doesn't have to
be vegans; the brackets are for you to fill in. Substitute the virtue squad
that makes you feel worst about yourself, the one you'll never have the
discipline to join, whether it's ultra-marathoners or mothers who never raise
their voices. Whatever group you're asking about, the answer to this question
is no.
8. What is my body telling
me?
As I often say, my mind is
a two-bit whore—by which I mean that my self-justifying brain, like any
self-justifying brain, will happily absorb beliefs based on biases, ego
gratification, magical thinking, or just plain error. The body knows better.
It's a wise, capable creature. It recoils from what's bad for us, and leans
into what's good. Let it.
9. How much junk could a
chic chick chuck if a chic chick could chuck junk?
I believe this question
was originally posed by Lao Tzu, who also wrote, "To become learned, each
day add something. To become enlightened, each day drop something." Face
it: You'd be better off without some of your relationships, many of your
possessions, and most of your thoughts. Chuck your chic-chick junk, chic chick.
Enlightenment awaits.
10. What's so funny?
Adults tend to put this
question to children in a homicidal-sounding snarl, which is probably why as
you grew up, your laughter rate dropped from 400 times a day (for toddlers) to the
grown-up daily average of 15. Regain your youth by laughing at every possible
situation. Then, please, tell us what's funny—about everyday life, about human
nature, even about pain and fear. We'll pay you anything.
11. Where am I wrong?
This might well be the most powerful question on our list—as Socrates believed, we gain our first measure of intelligence when we first admit our own ignorance. Your ego wants you to avoid noticing where you may have bad information or unworkable ideas. But you'll gain far more capability and respect by asking where you're wrong than by insisting you're right.
12. What potential memories am I bartering, and is the profit worth the price?
I once read a story about a world where people sold memories the way we can sell plasma. The protagonist was an addict who'd pawned many memories for drugs but had sworn never to sell his memory of falling in love. His addiction won. Afterward he was unaware of his loss, lacking the memory he'd sold. But for the reader, the trade-off was ghastly to contemplate. Every time you choose social acceptance over your heart's desires, or financial gain over ethics, or your comfort zone over the adventure you were born to experience, you're making a similar deal. Don't.
13. Am I the only one struggling not to {fart} during {yoga}?
I felt profoundly liberated when this issue was raised on Saturday Night Live's "Weekend Update." Not everyone does yoga, but SNL reminded me that everyone dreads committing some sort of gaffe. Substitute your greatest shame-fear: crying at work, belching in church, throwing up on the prime minister of Japan. Then know you aren't alone. Everyone worries about such faux pas, and many have committed them (well, maybe not the throwing up on PMs). Accepting this is a bold step toward mental health and a just society.
14. What do I love to practice?
Some psychologists believe that no one is born with any particular talent and that all skill is gained through practice. Studies have shown that masters are simply people who've practiced a skill intensely for 10,000 hours or more. That requires loving—not liking, loving—what you do. If you really want to excel, go where you're passionate enough to practice.
15. Where could I work less and achieve more?
To maximize time spent practicing your passions, minimize everything else. These days you can find machines or human helpers to assist with almost anything. Author Timothy Ferriss "batches" job tasks into his famous "four-hour workweek." My client Cindy has an e-mail ghostwriter. Another client, Angela, hired an assistant in the Philippines who flawlessly tracks her schedule and her investments. Get creative with available resources to find more time in your life and life in your time.
16. How can I keep myself absolutely safe?
Ask this question just to remind yourself of the answer: You can't. Life is inherently uncertain. The way to cope with that reality is not to control and avoid your way into a rigid little demi-life, but to develop courage. Doing what you long to do, despite fear, will accomplish this.
17. Where should I break the rules?
If everyone kept all the rules, we'd still be practicing cherished traditions like child marriage, slavery, and public hangings. The way humans become humane is by assessing from the heart, rather than the rule book, where the justice of a situation lies. Sometimes you have to break the rules around you to keep the rules within you.
18. So say I lived in that fabulous house in Tuscany, with untold wealth, a gorgeous, adoring mate, and a full staff of servants...then what?
We can get so obsessed with acquiring fabulous lives that we forget to live. When my clients ask themselves this question, they almost always discover that their "perfect life" pastimes are already available. Sharing joy with loved ones, spending time in nature, finding inner peace, writing your novel, plotting revenge—you can do all these things right now. Begin!
19. Are my thoughts hurting or healing?
Your situation may endanger your life and limbs, but only your thoughts can endanger your happiness. Telling yourself a miserable mental story about your circumstances creates suffering. Telling yourself a more positive and grateful story, studies show, increases happiness. Wherever you are, whatever you're doing, choose thoughts that knit your heart together, rather than tear it apart.
20. Really truly: Is this what I want to be doing?
It's been several seconds since you asked this. Ask it again. Not to make yourself petulant or frustrated—just to see if it's possible to choose anything, and I mean any little thing, that would make your present experience more delightful. Thus continues the revolution.
Read more: http://www.oprah.com/spirit/Martha-Becks-20-Questions-That-Could-Change-Your-Life_1/3#ixzz2p9ENtfkX
I loved these questions and wanted
to share them with anyone interested at the beginning of 2014! Martha Beck is
one smart chick!
Happy 2014!
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