By Phil Stutz

Our culture denies the nature of reality.  It holds out a promise that you can live in an ideal world where things come easily, a world in which unpleasant experiences can be avoided, where there is never a lack of immediate gratification.  Worse, it suggests that if you do not live in this world, something is wrong with you.  This ideal world is a realm of illusion.  No matter how promising this world seems, it does not exist.

Be honest.  Your own life experiences have been far from ideal.  But what you have experienced is what is real, not what you would like to experience.  In short, the nature of reality is this:

  • life includes pain and adversity
  • the future is uncertain
  • accomplishment of any kind requires discipline
  • you are not special; no matter what you do, you cannot avoid these aspects of life
  • this will never change

There is love, joy, surprise, transcendence, creativity as well, but these never occur separate from the above five points.

Yet, there always seem to be others who are exempt from the adversity of daily living.  The media portrays them to us.  They are physically more perfect, do not worry, are certain of their course through life.  They never lack for love or companionship.  They are secure in themselves.  These people seem to have abolished the negative aspects of life.  And this power makes them special.  Products are marketed with promises of putting us in this group.  We all feel a pressure to convince others that we are part of it.  This holds for the ghetto kid with the $120 sneakers and the billionaire with six homes.  When everyone acts as if a fantasy is real, it begins to seem real.

But only for someone else.  In your own life, you find yourself unable to take a risk.  You don't know how to make a decision.  Your financial future is uncertain.  Your face has a new wrinkle.  There is no time to parent properly.  You simply cannot get life under control.  There is nothing wrong with this.  This is how it feels to be alive.  The problem is that the other group has become the standard, and self-esteem starts to depend on being like them.  An adverse event feels like something is happening that is not supposed to be happening.  The natural experiences of living make you feel like a failure.

Is there another way?  Can you live life with its conflicts, uncertainties, and disappointments and somehow feel good about yourself?  You can.  But it requires a completely new orientation.  The first step is to realize that life is a process.  Our culture leads us to forget this fact, and makes the destructive suggestion that we can perfect life and then get it to stand still.  The ideal world with the superior people is like a snapshot or a postcard.  A moment frozen in time that never existed.  But real life is a process, it has movement, life, and depth.  The realm of illusion is an image, dead, and superficial.  But images are tempting.  There is no mess.

. . .


Preparing yourself with a philosophy enables you to change the meaning of a negative event.  With a specific philosophy, you can aggressively change your perception of events.  The philosophy of events is as follows:

  • adverse events are supposed to happen
  • their existence doesn't mean there is something wrong with you
  • there is always an opportunity in a negative event
  • developing spiritual skills is more important than getting a good result

It is not possible to know what adversity you will face in the future, but whatever it is -- misunderstanding, abandonment, risk, conflict, etc. -- this philosophy helps you not to be taken by surprise.  It allows you the distance to step back and label the event, and give the event value above and beyond its immediate details.  The event becomes generic.  Events of abandonment, for instance, will teach you to develop a set of skills that make you more emotionally independent.  But if you fail to label an event, you can't see the value in it.  All you want is for it to be over.  And once it is over, you forget all about it.  You learn nothing...

Try an experiment.  Next time you face an adverse event, apply the philosophy of events.  Observe how you feel.  If you are open-minded and do this with regularity, you will begin to experience the first glimmer of higher meaning in events.  Your experience will change.  In training to make events your teachers, you make real experience the foundation of your philosophy.  That is the purpose of human life.