Where were you last night?


A common technique for writers to get their creative juices flowing is to use writing prompts. A writing prompt is simply a word or phrase (or picture or quote) that is meant to trigger off your imagination. The writer should listen to (or look at) the prompt and start writing the first thing that comes to their head. It’s about not thinking too much, and letting yourself go. The writer should just go with the flow and plow full steam ahead. Not more than five to ten minutes should be spent on this.
As an example, here is a writing prompt that was given to me:
“Where were you last night?”
Here’s what I wrote in the allotted five minutes:

Susan:
Where were you last night?
Mark:
Wh-what do you mean?
Susan:
Which part of ‘where were you last night’ are you finding difficult to understand?
Mark:
[coughs]
Susan:
Ha?
Mark:
What?
Susan:
Answer the question.
Mark:
I was…I was…I was at home I guess.
Susan:
You guess?
Mark:
Yeah.
Susan:
Do you guess that you were at home? Or were you at home?
Mark:
[gulps] I was…I was at home…
Susan:
What time did you reach home?
Mark:
Umm…I can’t remember…
Susan:
You can’t remember?
Mark:
Around midnight I guess.
Susan:
Again with the guessing…why can’t you give me straight answers?
Mark:
I don’t know…I’m tired I guess…
Susan:
Have you been drinking?
Mark:
Have I been what?
Susan:
Tell me honestly…have you been drinking?
Mark:
I drink water…sometimes…
Susan:
[yells] What’s with you today?
Mark:
[stares at his shoes]
Susan:
Do you have something to say?
Mark:
I guess what I’m trying to say is that…I’m pregnant…
Susan:
What??
Mark:
I mean we’re pregnant…I mean…I mean you’re pregnant
Susan:
What the hell are you talking about? [raises the empty glass of water in the sink, and sniffs it] Are you sure this is not vodka?

The Wheel in the Sky

First, we are born. A lot of random stuff happens to us. Finally, we die.

Life doesn’t come with a user manual, does it? We don’t know how we got here, how long we will be here, or what we are supposed to do while we’re here. Nobody has life completely figured out. Nobody has all the answers.

Life is random and chaotic, and full of uncertainty. We have no idea what the future can bring. We have no idea what situation we may find ourselves in tomorrow.

Sometimes, you might find life proceeding exactly the way you want it to. Your personal relationships are going great. Your career is fantastic. Everything seems nearly perfect. You’re on a permanent high. Then, after some time passes, one thing starts to go wrong. And then another thing, and another thing. Before you know it, the bubble has burst and your ideal life starts to fall apart. You get plunged right back into chaos and uncertainty.

Conversely, sometimes in life, you enter a dark phase and things are just going all wrong for you. Your relationships are in tatters, your career is a disaster. You don’t know what to do and you can’t see any way out. You feel lost and helpless. Then, after some time passes, a small ray of hope appears. You grab on to it. Then, one thing starts to go your way. And then another thing, and another thing. A path emerges in front of you. Before you know it, the dark shadow has passed by. You feel relaxed, peaceful and happy.

And so it goes on and on. The wheel in the sky keeps on turning. The wheel of fortune that is.

King Solomon once had an exquisite golden ring made and he wanted to inscribe some words on it. He called the wisest sages of the land and asked them to come up with words such that they will always be true, no matter who has the ring, where they are or what time in history. If a happy person looks at it, he should forget his joy and if a sad person looks at it, he should forget his sorrow.

The words inscribed on the ring were: “This too shall pass.

The realization that everything is temporary can be liberating. If nothing lasts, why worry about what will happen tomorrow or dwell about what happened yesterday? None of it will matter.

In our daily lives, we will feel joy, excitement, sorrow, pain, anger. We will find ourselves in all kinds of different situations. We will go through many varied journeys. However, in the background of our consciousness, if we can hold on to the realization of the fleeting nature of all things, it will give us a sense of peace.

So all you have to do, is to keep breathing. Be present in this moment. Enjoy the journey, whatever journey you find yourself on. And remember that this too shall pass.

Decisions

Decisions, decisions, decisions. We’re faced with so many of them every day. They range from trivial ones like what clothes to wear or what food to eat, to major ones like which college to go to or which company to work for.

Most people get overwhelmed by having to make all these decisions. Especially, the big ones. We’re told that a single choice we make will determine how the rest of our lives turn out. Oh my God, are you serious? The rest of my life depends on what I decide right now? Oh hell no. I can’t handle that magnitude of responsibility. How am I supposed to know what to do?

Say you come to a fork in the road and have to choose between option A and option B. You think long and hard, consult friends and family. Everybody says different things. You analyze pros and cons. You’re thoroughly confused. You want to feel assured that you’re making the right choice, but there is no way to be sure. Every time you lean in one direction, some doubts creep in. This decision will affect your whole life, after all. The grass suddenly seems greener on the other side.

You know where the grass really seems the greenest? Not having to make the decision at all. The problem is that picking one option, means not picking the other option. It means you will never know how things might have been if you had taken the road you didn’t go on. You can only know what happens on the road you picked.

Wouldn’t it be great if you had a time machine and could simply pick option A, travel to the future and see how the rest of your life turns out? Then, after a quick bathroom break, pick option B and again see how everything turns out. You would be in a position to know exactly which path will make you happier. That would be sweet, wouldn’t it?

The bad news is we don’t have access to such a time machine (yet). But, we have at our disposal a powerful tool that can act as a substitute for a time machine. It’s called our imagination.

Here’s what you do. Find a time when you’re alone, you have some peace and quiet, and your mind is relatively undisturbed. This could be early morning or late night. It could be in your bedroom or your prayer room or even your bathroom, if you can’t find any place else.

Close your eyes. Assume you have already picked option A. Visualize in your mind and feel with your heart, where you are, what you’re doing, who is with you, what the environment is like. Project yourself into the future: one month from now, one year from now, ten years from now.

Take no more than ten minutes to do this. Then, after a quick bathroom break of course, clear your mind, take five deep breaths, and repeat this for option B.

There, in less than half an hour, you’ve traveled to the future and seen which choice makes you happier. No need to talk to many people, or do a lot of research. Too much information is sometimes detrimental to decision-making. All the answers lie within. Learn to trust your instincts.

After making the decision, people frequently revisit it again and again, wondering if they made the wrong choice. This is especially true when things start to go wrong, which they inevitably do at some point or the other. You start to look back and chastise yourself for making an incorrect choice.

Don’t do that. It serves no purpose whatsoever. How can you know that things would have turned out better if you had made the other choice? Maybe they would be even worse than they are now. Or maybe, this struggle that you are going through now is exactly what you need to take that next step in your personal evolution and prepare for what lies ahead.

There is no way to say for sure that any decision you made was a bad one, since you can’t know what would have happened had you made the other choice. So, don’t go back and revisit the decision. Don’t ever do that. What’s done is done. There are no wrong choices.

Besides, it’s not just the decision that matters; it’s also what you do after that. The time when you make the decision is just a single moment in time. It is followed by many more moments in the months and years to follow. Once you make the choice, you have to handle whatever comes your way. How you face the situation from there on is equally important as the decision itself.

And if you truly start to feel that this is no longer the right path for you, you can always backtrack. Very few decisions are irreversible. In the words of Led Zeppelin from Stairway to Heaven, “Yes, there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run, there’s always time to change the road you’re on.”

Above all, remember to follow your deepest intuition. It already knows what’s best for you, before your thinking mind figures it out and gets with the program.

Passing Through

A reporter went to the house of a famous rabbi for an interview. He noticed that there was no furniture aside from a small cot in one corner and a bookshelf in another. The rabbi had lived there for several years.

Curious, he asked the rabbi, “Where is all your furniture?’”

The rabbi paused, looked back at the reporter, “Well, where is your furniture?”

The reporter had a puzzled expression “My furniture? But I’m just passing through here.”

The rabbi nodded “So am I.”

*****

Everything in life is temporary. Nothing lasts. Wherever we are right now, we are just passing through there during a phase of our lives. So, we might as well enjoy it while it lasts.