“When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be.” ~Lao Tzu
I have had to find (and am still finding) my balance of what truly makes me the valuable person that I am.
Most of all, I have had to learn how to embrace the fluidity of life. I believe this is what Lao Tzu meant by his words.
I had to learn to stop fighting against the flow.
The illusion of “I am that” holds many of us captive in prisons of our own making. In the struggle to define ourselves as individuals, we often paint ourselves into lonely and sometimes dangerous corners. Gender, sexual orientation, politics, religion, race - although we may belong to a particular group, it is the over-identification with that group that separates us from the next individual. We become stunted in growth when we cling to these outward labels.
We can even become over-identified with the roles we play such as spouse, parent, or child.
What happens when circumstances change?
Does this explain the ex-lover who can’t let go or the overbearing parent of an adult child? Our titles, our affiliations, and even our closest relationships don’t define the cores of who we are. “I am that” leads to stagnation. It blocks our journey to wholeness. We often fail to remember that our commonality is the only identification that matters.
Spiritual progression requires that we learn to welcome flow.
What misguided visions of yourself do you hold?
What constraints have you placed around yourself to impede your own evolution?
What must you let go of to become who you might be?
Cheers.