Low Bandwidth Version
Whose Pictures Are You Taking Home?
by Alan Cohen
While walking through Costco, I noticed the large bin of photographs that had
been processed and were waiting for customers to pick up. There were probably a
couple of hundred packets listed alphabetically according to customers’ names.
I was struck by the fact that all of these personal bags of photos were just
sitting out in the open, to be purchased on the honor system. Anyone could have
stolen any of them, or taken someone else’s package and paid for it as their
own.
Then it occurred to me that this system works because no one really wants to
take someone else’s photos home. Who wants to see Joshua Bernstein’s Bar
Mitzvah pictures? Or little Ashleigh in her high chair with goopy baby food
dripping from her lips? Or the Hendersons’ motor home vacation to Florida? No,
no one really wants to take anyone else’s pictures home.
Yet on a psychological level, we do this all the time ¾
and live to regret it. The photos we erroneously purchase are other people’s
pictures of reality. We adopt our parents’ model of relationship; our
mother’s fears about money; our older brother’s attitude about sex; our
minister’s relationship with God; our teacher’s opinion about politics; and
on, and on. And we pay dearly for them. Most people’s pictures of reality are
fear-based and limiting, and do not serve us. Yet we take them home and
replicate them in our own lives, to the point that we believe they’re our own.
Then, if we are not careful, we pass them on to our children. Then we wonder why
we, and the people we know, are so unhappy. All because we accepted and paid for
boring or unhappy pictures that never belonged to us in the first place.
Contrary to what you have been taught, the reality you live in is a choice.
You generate reality by the images you focus on. The more you pay attention to
any picture of reality, the more real it becomes to you. You can create and live
in vast worlds simply by thinking they are real. This does not mean they are
real; it just means you have given them a great deal of attention and belief.
A classic story tells of a man who went to visit a friend in his country
home. In the middle of the night, the man got up to go to the bathroom and found
a huge deadly snake coiled up on the floor, ready to strike him. The next
morning the host awoke to find his guest dead on the floor, lying next to a
coiled up piece of large rope. The fellow died not of a snakebite, but of
fright. He was just as dead as if the snake had been real. His murderer was not
a snake; it was his own mind.
This parable applies to every fear we experience. Enlightened teachers tell
us that nothing we fear is real at all; the objects we fear exist only in our
imagination. The word "fear" is an acronym for "false evidence
appearing real." A Course in Miracles poignantly adds, "You can
indeed afford to laugh at fear thoughts, remembering that God goes with you
wherever you go."
In a world where many people are afraid, and reinforce their fear by
attacking the objects of their fear, you can bring significant healing by
remaining sane and recognizing perceived snakes as actual ropes. Nothing can
hurt you unless you give it power with your thoughts. When you remember the
presence of love in a situation where others have forgotten it, you are
returning unwanted photos back to their bin, and taking your own home.
The critical voice is not your own. Your were not born with thoughts of
judgment, lack, and separateness. They are all learned -- and can be unlearned.
Children and animals are our greatest teachers because they have not yet passed
the photo department and taken home other people’s yucky albums. Children are
connected to God and have not been taught otherwise. Thank God for children,
animals, and nature; they are our lifelines to Original Innocence.
A five-year-old boy observed his parents bringing his newborn younger brother
home from the hospital. For days he pestered his parents to let him be alone
with his little brother. Fearing the older child would hurt the infant, the
parents resisted. But the boy persisted. Finally the parents gave in, and hooked
up an intercom in the baby’s room so they could monitor any potential
disturbance. Instead, they heard the older brother close the door behind him,
gently approach the baby’s crib, lean over, look into the infant’s eyes, and
speak these words: "Would you please tell me about God? I’m starting to
forget."
At this time of year we celebrate the holidays of Easter and Passover -- both
powerful lessons in letting go of the old and limiting so we can step into a
life of greater freedom and aliveness. In essence, both Jesus and the Hebrew
nation returned unwanted photos to the bin, and took home their own instead. In
doing so, they set the stage for us to do the same. Those dark pictures never
belonged to you anyway. You have your own and better to enjoy.
About The
Author
Alan
Cohen is the author of many popular inspirational books, including the
best-selling
Why Your Life Sucks and What You Can do About It, the award-winning
A Deep Breath of Life, and his latest book
Mr. Everit’s Secret--What I learned from the
World’s Richest Man.
(The above books can be ordered by clicking on the book titles.)
Alan offers four on-line courses throughout
the year and the
life-transforming Mastery Training in Maui. For
information on these programs and a free catalog of Alan's books,
tapes, and seminars, phone 800.568.3079, visit
www.alancohen.com, email info@alancohen.com,
or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708.
More
articles by this author.
Printer Friendly Page |