Are you living consciously in an unconscious world?
 You may have noticed that our world is something of a chaotic place 
lately. Loud. Noisy. Frantic. Angry. Violent. Fearful. Just watch the 
news. Actually, don’t. And by ‘world’, I mean the physical world we 
inhabit, not the self-created one inside our head. Although that can be a
 pretty awful place too. When we let it be.
You may have noticed that our world is something of a chaotic place 
lately. Loud. Noisy. Frantic. Angry. Violent. Fearful. Just watch the 
news. Actually, don’t. And by ‘world’, I mean the physical world we 
inhabit, not the self-created one inside our head. Although that can be a
 pretty awful place too. When we let it be.A Personal Search
For me, a large part of the last decade 
has been something of a personal expedition beyond the world of logic, 
academia, business, conventional thinking, religion and even (the 
traditional approach to) personal development. While all of those things
 serve a purpose and have value (of course), I wanted to see what lives
 beyond them. After all, sometimes terms like ‘logic’ and ‘common sense’
 are just euphemisms for fear and not-knowing-any-different. And, to be 
completely honest, sometimes success doesn’t feel very, er, successful.
If you know what I mean.
A Realisation
I arrived at a point in my life where I 
had an overwhelming sense that, despite my reasonable education, mildly 
successful career and alleged knowledge and intelligence, I was
 missing out on something that could be fundamental to my existence, my 
future and to my potential growth. I wanted to see what existed beyond 
my programming. Beyond my (then) ‘current world view’. My social 
conditioning. My default setting. My comfort zone. My formal education. 
My self-limiting beliefs. My expectations. My fears. And my prejudices.
I considered the notion that maybe my 
concept of how the world and all its intricacies ‘worked’ (life, death, 
people, relationships, spirituality, wealth, happiness, misery, success,
 failure, fear, destiny, etc.) was the very thing which held me back. I 
also considered the notion that perhaps my over-thinking mind was, 
ironically, my barrier to learning, understanding and enjoying a new way
 of being. I wanted to learn more about my non-cerebral self.
Could it be that in some ways, with some
 issues, I was missing the point? Could my mind possibly be a handicap 
(with some things)? Could it be that I’ve been taught things – perhaps 
many things – which simply aren’t true? Or maybe, not true for me. But 
surely if enough people believe the same thing, it must be true?
Much of the information (teaching) you 
and I receive (from about kindergarten onwards) tells us that success, 
and therefore happiness, is largely about what we can accumulate, do, 
achieve, control, own and look like. I decided to explore what success 
might look like working from the inside-out and not the other way around
 (the conventional model).
A Glimpse of What Might Be
Have you ever had an experience, perhaps
 a brief moment in time, when a door to a different world was opened for
 you? Perhaps a moment when you got a glimpse of something more than 
your current perception of reality? A time when you secretly (or maybe 
openly) questioned everything you’ve ever thought, believed and known? A time when you realised that maybe there is a different way to ‘do’ life? A different way to experience, think (or not think), feel and be?
For me, there came a stage when I realised that the way I saw the world was just that: the way I
 saw it. My version of reality. And that in itself can be a limitation. 
Doesn’t have to be, but can be. This realisation, this awakening, was 
the beginning of my journey towards consciousness. Or, should I say, a 
more conscious version of me. I committed to becoming more aware, more 
open and less ‘right’. Damn that need to be right.
I determined to stop thinking that I 
knew so much, to stop assuming and to stop finding comfort and safety in
 the familiar and the cerebral. And no, I didn’t have any plans to 
become some kind of soft-speaking, all-knowing, sandal-wearing mystical,
 magical, enlightened guru living in a cave and writing sacred texts on 
parchment (although, I don’t mind a good sandal and I do like a nice 
piece of parchment) but rather, just a simple and hopeful desire to 
become a more conscious, aware and humble person.
A Parable
Imagine you’ve spent your entire 
life in a medium-sized town (probably not a stretch for some of you). 
And living in that medium-sized town, your parents have always warned 
you, no, they have ordered you, not to venture down certain streets or 
to go into certain areas. For your own good. You’re told not to go down 
those streets because it’s dangerous. Unsafe. You might get hurt. Bad 
things happen there. Since you were a kid, you were taught that all you 
ever needed for happiness and security existed in ‘your part’ of town.
Strangely, nobody in your part of town ever seemed to be particularly happy.
Then one day you’re an adult and you
 make a bold decision to talk to your parents about life beyond the 
safe-zone. You’ve been curious for a long time but nobody ever discusses
 it. Ever. You wonder why. You feel you’re now old enough to know 
exactly what lies beyond those safe and familiar (and let’s be honest, 
boring) streets. You want to know more. To have some insight into a 
world beyond the only one you’ve ever experienced.
You muster up the courage to ask 
your father exactly what it’s like down those forbidden streets. You 
want details. You tell him it’s time. You ask the question and he stares
 at you blankly. He says nothing. He looks a little guilty and sheepish;
 two looks you’ve never seen before. You ask again. More silence. Your 
stomach sinks a little as you begin to realise something. Something big.
 You look to your mother. She shrugs her shoulders and looks to the 
ground. Your stomach churns. You realise they’ve never been there. They 
have no answers for you. Only fear. Fear of the unknown.
They’ve trained you to be terrified of something they know nothing about. Just as they themselves were trained.
In desperation, you run to the phone
 and dial your grandfather: the wise old family patriarch. He will know.
 He knows everything. Two minutes later you put down the phone. 
Shattered and disillusioned, you walk slowly to the window. You feel 
physically ill. You stare out and wonder what lies beyond your familiar 
surroundings. All of a sudden, those streets you know so well have come 
to represent something else. In a heartbeat you make a decision to take a
 trip. You tell your concerned parents you’re going on a journey. They 
panic. They protest. Scared of the unknown.
They have built their own prison. And you decide you’ve been an inmate for too long.
You fill a backpack with some 
supplies and prepare yourself mentally. You’re not really sure what to 
pack because you don’t know where you’re going, what you’ll find or when
 you’ll return. Or even, if you’ll return. You walk out of the house 
and, as you do, you close the door on a lifetime of fear, control, 
pointless repetition, repression and self-limiting beliefs. You love 
your parents and they love you but, despite your respect for them and 
appreciation of them, you don’t want to become them.
As you begin your walk, your heart 
is filled with hope and possibilities. In a moment of clarity and 
insight, a small voice tells you that an important part of the journey 
ahead is really about what you’re leaving behind: insecurity, fear, 
self-doubt, self-limiting thinking, crazy rules and destructive beliefs.
 
As you reach the outer limits of the
 ‘safe-zone’ your irrational (but understandable) childhood fears have 
been replaced with curiosity and excitement. Before long, you have 
travelled further than ever before and to your surprise and delight, the
 new place is not terrifying at all. In fact, it’s beautiful. And 
magical. Even though you’ve never been there, you feel like you’ve come 
home. For the first time ever, you feel like you belong.
Knowledge Beyond Education
It’s my belief that in the process
 of life we often allow ourselves to become disconnected from our inner 
intelligence. From the ‘knowing’ we have beyond our experiences. Beyond 
our education. Beyond logic. Beyond what we’ve been told to believe and 
trained to do. I believe we’re all born with an intelligence and a 
consciousness that’s hard-wired into our DNA. There are things we ‘just 
know’ without ever having been taught them. In animals we call this 
instinct.
We humans have no problem believing in the ability of animals to just know
 certain things. However, when it comes to us very educated, 
intellectual and over-thinking humans, we often find ways to discount 
things such as inbuilt knowledge. Or human instinct. Some call it 
genetic intelligence. And sadly, for many of us, if we can’t see it, 
touch it, measure it, graph it or explain it, we won’t believe in it. Or
 even consider it.
Sometimes science is a limitation. As is knowledge.
Being a fundamentally flawed (but 
eternally curious) alpha-male, I’m still using my training wheels to 
explore the realms of consciousness and enlightenment. My ‘L’ plate is 
firmly fastened around my neck as I learn, grow and continue to ask 
questions. I know next-to-nothing but what I do know, excites me. The ideas of ‘tuning in to’ my genetic intelligence and becoming a more conscious being are things that simply feel right for me. Overdue even.
Choosing to live consciously in 
an unconscious world presents many challenges, opportunities and 
lessons. It also presents me with a chance to experience life beyond 
those old familiar streets of my own medium-sized town.
Source: http://www.lifehack.org/articles/lifehack/are-you-living-consciously-in-an-unconscious-world.html
 
 
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