At Peace with Life

 Thy will, not my will be done.

How hard these words are to implement in an ego-driven life! I always figured that since God had given me my ability to think and reason, then it ought to be MY will, not thy will be done. I look back and see where that got me, and still misdirects me when I try to be the one in charge.

Oh, my goodness, have I ever made some mistakes! Usually, if I was asking for direction, it usually went something like “Okay, God—here’s what I really, really want to do. Please make it your will for me”.

I can assure you that those requests, followed by my impulsive actions, resulted in damage to myself and to others. That’s not the way I choose to live my life anymore. I’m still learning, but awareness puts me on the right path. 

Step 12 instructs me to practice the principles in all my affairs, Step 11 tells me that I’ll find direction through the process of asking followed by deep listening, and Step 10 keeps me from wandering too far off my chosen path through a daily inventory of my actions. If what I'm wanting to do is in the highest good of all concerned, I will have a sense of clarity. That clarity comes from recognizing that my ego wants to run amok—make a mess, then ask for forgiveness. What I seek instead is to learn to discern desire from intuitive awareness, then take appropriate action.

May my will, through the practice of constant contact with my Source, be in alignment with “thy will”.



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