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To Be In The Moment Is A
Thing Of The PastOnce upon a
time, around ten to twenty years ago, people believed that
it was essential to be in the moment. People actually
thought that the closer your lived in the present the more
in touch with your senses you were. They truly believed
that life was fleeting and therefore to experience life at
it’s fullest it was necessary to experience all the sensory
stimuli taking place around you.
That quaint notion today is ancient history. Being in the
moment is a thing of our past, shelved as impractical and
self-defeating. Today the moment is lost to the
transformational vagaries of the Blackberry, the IPod and the
ubiquitous cell phone. We are typing, talking and otherwise
distracted as we proceed with our daily lives. We can neither
drink a cup of coffee, nor walk down the street without an
electronic device diluting the ambience.
We have stopped paying attention to our surroundings. When you
stop paying attention to your surroundings, then you stop
paying attention to all the things great and small that make up
our lives. We are denying ourselves experience. We no longer
fail to live in the moment; arguably it is difficult for most
of us to even define what really constitutes that moment and
how it affects our lives.
So if this is the case, then how do we define a fulfilling
experience? Can we really say we are immersed in our
environment if we are text messaging or talking to someone on
our cell phone? Not really. Certainly there are important calls
and business calls, but aren’t most calls a result of our
inability to deal with our solitude?
How did this happen? Is it our love and infatuation with our
relatively new electronic devices that drove us to a new
dimension of consciousness? Perhaps there is more to it. It may
be the pressures of the modern world have built up to
unmanageable proportions. It is perhaps the anxiety of silence
or the fear of spontaneity that has us clinging to our cell
phones. Like ostriches we put our heads in the sand by turning
to the predictable security of a familiar voice or text on a
screen.
Or maybe there are better reasons than risk aversion. The world
is not only a scary place; it also breeds banality and
repetition. The last thing most of us need is more banality and
repetition, so we dive into our electronics in order to avoid
it. But in avoiding the downside of life in the present, we can
also deny the magic that happens through observation and
interaction. When we turn our backs on fate and serendipity, we
exchange the chance of something wonderful happening for a dull
and predictable routine. We leave it to the movies to cultivate
our fantasies. We believe we will never meet our lover on the
street, so why bother looking. It is easier to join an Internet
forum or online dating service and call them up by category. It
is dull, but it is easy. Why look up, when it is easier to look
way?
To assess quality and value means you have to pay attention.
You have to study things. But, obviously, when we are busy with
your electronic distractions we don’t really pay attention. It
is like the people we all know who travel to some exotic locale
rich with architectural and cultural wonders, and the best they
can do is tell you about the food.
Instead of really understanding the difference between quality
and junk, we rely upon marketing and branding. It is through
the purchase of labels and not necessary quality that we
express our desire for the better things in life. We don’t make
choices on what we buy, wear, eat or drive, based on artisan
skills and the quality of design and engineering as much as a
perceived status and branding. We leave it up to others to tell
us what is good or right for us, and then we wonder why we feel
frustrated and short changed. Sadly, we often choose our lovers
and enter into relationships on the same basis.
Despite our best efforts to distract ourselves from living in
the present, we can’t avoid actual human contact altogether. We
still acknowledge underlying chemistry is at least part of the
cause of attraction to others. We speak of pheromones and vibes
and our sexual response to certain intangibles. Yet in spite of
our instincts we eschew diversity and variety in favor of niche
categories. We overlook the fine distinctions that make someone
unique. We seek instead the behavior that makes them the same,
that makes them easy to define through generic slogans and
simple jargon. It makes us comfortable when we can pigeonhole
the world and classify our lovers by assigning them to
rudimentary categories.
With this as the modern base line as to how we judge things,
you have to wonder if you really know the people you are
thinking of dating. Of course you know them according to niche
and preconception. They told you stuff about themselves, either
through email or over the phone, perhaps over coffee or in a
speed dating session. They told you about their tastes in food,
clothes, fashion and what they do for a living. But do you
really know them? Judging by the way we allow ourselves to be
distracted from the moment, you probably don’t know them as
well as you think.
Reason would stand if you are not really paying attention, then
you are missing the tell tale signs of behavior. Tell tale
signs can go either way. They can direct you to opportunity or
reveal hidden dangers. If it’s opportunity, you miss out. If
it’s danger, then you had better look out.
This may be why singles are using background checks to
investigate the history of their potential lover. Considering
the compressed time for meeting and evaluating, this seems like
the smart thing to do. Otherwise, how do you know who you are
really meeting on line? Are they really who they say they are?
If you are a single parent and dating online or through speed
dating services or agencies, you had better be sure Mr.
Wonderful doesn’t prefer your children over you.
So, at the very least, protect yourself from your own
inattention. Since you really haven’t been paying attention,
when you meet someone you find interesting, before you start
dating, order a background check. It’s always nice to know
whether you are about to date Jumping Jack Flash or Jack the
Ripper. A background check won’t tell you everything, but it
will help you decide if they really are who they say they are.
Hey, just think of it as branding.
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Please report any
broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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