Listening To The Wind

Small changes to our normal daily routine can make a difference. Make a small meaningful change in your life and win STEEM, SBI, and LOTUS.

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Photo by Dawid Zawiła on Unsplash

I listen to the wind
To the wind of my soul
Where I'll end up
Well, I think only God really knows
— Cat Stevens
 

A couple of years back, when I was feeling stagnant and stale with my work as a natural medicine therapist, I ran a little experiment on myself.

I say "experiment" ... it was more me following the advice that I was always giving out to my clients at the time who were feeling stagnant in their lives:

I spent a couple of days listening to my ‘wind’.
(No, not like that 💨😂)

The winds of change

The concept of ‘wind’ in ancient China was as a source of disruption. In his seminal book Medicine In China: A History Of Ideas, Paul Unschuld reveals that 'wind' was the first natural phenomenon that was identified as a malevolent force of nature that was thought to cause illness.

In later times, it became associated with the Wood-element, as en expression of a sudden, disruptive force of change. Like wind, change could either be gentle in its movement; or it could be swift and violent.

Usually what happens is we get a sense that something in our lives needs to change. If we pay attention to that sense, then change is gradual and controlled; steady like the gentle wind that blows the seeds around in spring.

Should we ignore these warnings, then things are left unchanged, and build up. Then when change comes, it's more like a turbulent storm.

All we do crumbles to the ground though we refuse to see
— Kansas
 

Aware of all that, I chose to explore the gentle variety. It would've been pretty silly to do otherwise. I guess you can forgive folk if they just don't see the signs; but I was very aware of what was happening around me.

How many times can a man turn his head
and pretend that he just doesn't see?
— Bob Dylan
 

Radical discontinuity

I learned an interesting idea when I attended a training intensive with the International School of Temple Arts. Well, it wasn't something new, but the framing around it was novel, and I also learned ways to implement the idea easily in my normal daily routine.

The idea is stupidly simple: what happens when I do something different to usual?

Change doesn't need to be cataclysmic or cathartic. Remember the wind metaphor: the fertility of spring is dependent on constant, gentle blowing not destructive tempests. So even the smallest change can be 'radical' in this sense; and it can lead to some quite radical results.

As darkness falls
The waves roll by
The seasons change
The wind is wry
— Pink Floyd
 

Back then, I tinkered around with some minor changes with my work. I continued to experiment with different things until I found something that worked. I changed my work habits, changed the days I saw clients, and changed the number of clients I saw per week. Eventually, I stepped up the changes until I found what worked, which led me to leaving the profession completely and pursuing something very different.

This was the kind of approach I used to take with clients who participated in dietary therapy courses I ran. One approach that worked really well was cutting out one food which they ate all the time; this created the space for changes in physiology and patterns of behaviour.

We didn't take remove the food from their diet because it was ‘bad’ or ‘unhealthy’ – the purpose was to disrupt the normal routine and throw them out of their comfort zone.

Try this for a couple of days:

  • Pick something seemingly small and innocuous that you do all the time, or at least every day, and change it.
  • Have a black coffee instead of a latte, or with sugar if you have without.
  • Take a different route to work.
  • Catch public transport instead of driving; or vice versa
  • Sleep on the other side of the bed.
  • Stop eating something you normally eat every day, or eat something every day you don't normally eat
  • Read stuff that you would never normally read.

Get the idea?

My 'Ride Like the Wind' challenge

  1. In the comments, share something you are going to commit to changing. It doesn't need to be massive, just something very simple. It does need to be changing something to your normal daily routine. I'm setting a STEEM bounty on the comments, and will reward the bounty based on these comments
  2. Create a post and let us know how you go. Tell us the story of how you went with the challenge. I'll give away SBI and LOTUS to those who show a genuine display of 'riding like the wind'. Drop your link to that post in the comments so I can find it.
  3. Do this before Tuesday October 15.

I'm looking forward to seeing your small acts of radical discontinuity.
😊🙏🏽☯️

Keep your cool
Do not give into emotion
— Radiohead
 

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Listen to the soundtrack for this story for inspiration







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