Published on 12, July, 2020
I think any sense of the spiritual helps me, but literalism in my understanding has often hindered the benefit. My condition means I hear words literally and for some reason this tends to interfere slightly with spiritual ‘letting go’. I used to trade peace of mind for the notion of certainty. For me a sense of the spiritual - perhaps strange to some - starts with ‘what can I do?’ Not ‘what can’t I do’.
Reality is what exists: what I can do, what I have, not the
Imaginary, the Unreal: what I can’t do, what I don’t have.
focus on the solution and it increases
Interesting! I can agree with this
I had to give up playing the piano as a child as I just couldn't "let go" as it were and just play even though i knew the keys... I had to look down constantly to ensure I was about to depress the right ones it stopped me enjoying it which was sad really.
Interesting! I have a related issue. When I almost distract myself from trying too much I find I can play entire pieces from memory but if I focus too much on each event - especially as they happen - I lose the inbuilt capacity to play from memory. letting go for me is often just not trying too hard. As an autistic person I demand certainty as the solution but actually the solution comes about by a type of ‘not caring too much’. Actually I should say ‘acting as if I don’t care TOO much’. I realise these words can’t explain what I’m trying to say: words are practical tools not spiritual tools. Even that sentence seems to misrepresent what I would have hoped to say.