Seeing the Gift in Hardship

Seeing the Gift in Hardship
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1/12/2023
Updated:
1/12/2023
There are a number of common deterrents to creating powerful change in your life:
  • Feeling that the effort is pointless
  • Resisting the effort
  • Frustration with yourself or others
  • Disliking the activity
  • Feeling an urge or compulsion to do the old habit
Each of these can derail your efforts to create something new. And to be clear, there’s nothing wrong with any of these—they’re wonderfully human traits. But to create powerful change, we have to learn to work with them.

I’d like to introduce a magical tool that I call “seeing the gift.”

If you deploy seeing the gift, you can work with any of the above deterrents. Let’s take a look.

What’s ‘Seeing the Gift’?

In any activity, in any person, you can find a gift. Sometimes it’s obvious—the person in front of you is kind and generous, and you feel them very easily as a gift. When you’re watching a sunset out in nature, you can feel the wonder and joy of the gift of that moment.

But other times it’s more challenging—the person in front of you is being annoying, or you’re going through illness or injury, or the project in front of you is boring and hard. In some situations, or with some people, we resist seeing the gift. We want to just complain. And that’s OK! Let yourself complain, and see the gift in expressing the frustration or despair in your heart.

How can that emotion be a gift to you?

If you continue to sit with that emotion, you’ll relax a bit. Then you can look deeper. While the person in front of you is causing you frustration, there’s something they’re offering you. There’s a gift in them, if you are willing to look.

Are you willing?

If you’re taking on an overwhelming or boring project, it can be hard to see the gift—but if you sit with it for a little longer, you’ll find it in the silence. You’ll start to realize what the project has to teach you. It will start to change you.

The gift is what it has to teach you; how it changes you; and how it connects you to the divine, to yourself, and to everything around you. The gift is the sacredness of the moment and of you. The gift is a profound realization of the wonder of life.

It’s always there, if we’re willing to look.

How to Use ‘Seeing the Gift’ for Powerful Change

Let’s take each of the deterrents to change that I mentioned above.
The effort is pointless: It feels like you’ll never accomplish what you want to achieve, so it feels pointless to even try. This feeling of pointlessness stops every one of us. Could you see the gift in trying even if you don’t get to the goal? Could the effort be a gift no matter the outcome?
Resisting the effort: You have the project sitting over there waiting for you to start it, or you planned to do a workout today, but you’re resisting it. Everything else seems more urgent, so you put it off. What if you paused for a minute to sit still and see the gift in the project or the workout? What if you let that gift call you to the change you want to make in your life and the world?
Frustration with yourself or others: The person in front of you is obnoxious. Or you aren’t living up to your expectations. These kinds of frustrations with yourself or others can be a huge deterrent to creating something new in your life. What if you paused for a few minutes, took some breaths, slowed down, and looked for the gift in this person, or in yourself? Could this frustrating person be teaching you something unintentionally? Could there be something beautiful in them for you to find? Could you find the gift in the sacredness of your frustration?
Disliking the activity: Sometimes, to accomplish a goal, we have to do something we don’t like. This will often cause us to decide that the goal isn’t worthwhile. But what if there could be a gift in this dreadful activity? Could we find it, and allow ourselves to claim the gift? This gives us access to more possibilities than if we shut out every activity we don’t like.
The urge to do an old habit: Let’s say you’re trying to change your diet or go on social media less. The best of intentions can be derailed by an urge to do what you normally do. But an urge is just a momentary sensation in the body, nothing that has to dictate our lives. What if you could just sit with the urge for a moment, and see the gift in that sensation? What if the moment of the urge is simply what change feels like, and the gift is learning to be with the sensation of change?

As you can see, seeing the gift can unlock powerful possibilities. All it takes is a willingness to sit for a few moments, and a willingness to see.

May the gift unlock new possibilities in your life.

Leo Babauta is the author of six books and the writer of Zen Habits, a blog with over 2 million subscribers. Visit ZenHabits.net
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