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Inspiration

the change in perspective that helps me

By February 22, 2015 26 Comments

What is my soul here to learn-

“What does it mean to you to live a good life?”

Earlier this year, Jonathan Fields posed that question to me. It’s the very last question he asks his guests on his Good Life Project podcast.

I’d forgotten entirely that he would be asking me that question, and I hadn’t given any thought to what my answer would be. So in the moment he asked it, I had to stop and consider, “Hmm, what do I think makes “a good life”?

When I repeated the question back to myself, I heard an answer, fully formed, right away.

But I didn’t want to say it. I knew that the words I’d just heard in my mind weren’t very palatable or understandable.

I wanted my answer to be something like, “A life of loving and being loved,” or “A life of serving others while being true to oneself” — a definition everyone could agree upon and admire, something just mainstream enough yet just countercultural enough to be cool.

I considered giving one of those substitute replies, but of course, I did not.

I said what was in my head.

“A good life is a life in which your soul learns what it came here to learn.”

I know. It’s a bit opaque. It is disturbingly free of words like love or freedom or abundance or fulfillment or pleasure or connection. That’s what’s troubling about it, and what’s radical about it.

A good life is a life in which your soul learns what it came here to learn.

That is the deepest “good life” truth for me; that the real good life goes beyond the personality’s experience of ease and difficulty, wins and losses.

What I want to propose to you today is that there are two rooms in the house of your life, and in each of them a different play goes on.

In one room, there is the play of your ego. In this play there are things you hope for and want, and you celebrate when you get them or worry or complain or try harder when you don’t. There are events you deem positive and events you deem negative, often according to a rather narrow story of what’s supposed to happen, or our collective norms around what good and bad events of life are.

In the other room, it is as if a different set of characters are experiencing the same drama. They experience the same plot events of your life, but these entities experience it through the lens of the soul. In that room, it’s not about things being positive or negative. It’s not about wins or losses. It’s about the lessons being learned. It’s about the core questions being wrestled with. It’s about the polarities (self/other, order/chaos, active/receptive), being danced between, the balancing points between them being sought.

An example from my own life. A few weeks ago, I learned that, for some unpredictable logistical reasons, my carefully crafted childcare plan for the coming months was not going to work out. I was upset. I had my vision of what was supposed to be. I had my plan, people! And of course I had my beliefs about why the plan, as it was, was very important for myself and my family.

From my ego’s perspective, I had a problem.

A few days into worrying and complaining and holding this as a problem, I asked myself, “What if I look at this from the soul perspective?”

The ego experience of worry and “I don’t like this!” didn’t go away, but I could see a second view of the situation: that this particular problem was really forcing me deeper into questions of my mother vs. writer identity, of self vs. other, of consistency vs. change – questions my soul was already grappling with and is clearly here to grapple with this lifetime.

Remarkably, when I considered each other person involved in the situation, I could see how it, for them too, it was providing a kind of intensive curriculum in just the core issues I already knew them to be grappling with in this life time.

And when I think of the greatest tragedy in my life – a painful, ongoing issue  – from the ego perspective, I’m filled with frustration and pain. When I think about it from the soul perspective, I feel all that it is teaching me about compassion, acceptance and the costs of fear.

When we touch into the soul-room of the house and see the drama being played out there, the oddest thing happens.

We experience the difficult in our lives without the feelings of difficulty, even if just for a moment.

There is a gorgeous neutrality that the soul offers, instead of our comfort and discomfort.  That doesn’t make it all easy and smooth. The soul’s territory is one of wrestling, of layering and layering on experience to turn it into wisdom. That is gritty, rough, dense work.

But asking ourselves to see any situation from the soul’s perspective takes us out of the shallow story of life as a series of triumphs and misfortunes. It takes us into the richly dimensioned helix of experience, through which life teaches us the most important lessons our soul is here to learn.

You know you’ve tapped into the soul perspective when:

  • you see the connection between the experience and the big questions you have been grappling with for long time
  • you see the learning and growth purpose of the experience
  • you feel some distance on the pain and pleasure the experience is bringing you
  • you feel a sense of mystery, larger picture, and even the sense of being loved through the experience – even if it’s difficult

How to see the experience from the soul perspective? Start by asking the question, “What does this situation look like from the soul perspective?” or “What does this have to do with what my soul is here to learn?” See what comes.

Click to tweet, “Shift from ego perspective to soul perspective.”

Love,

Tara

Join the discussion 26 Comments

  • Laura says:

    Although it may sound cliche, your message today has just crystallized the past 6 months for me. Immediately, I visualized both doors and the choice to open one door or the other. Now having the visualization of the question(s), the shoulders feel lighter, the soul feels released…the whole of me is grateful! Blessings~Laura

  • Linda says:

    Thank you, Tara, for answering what was in your head, instead of the nice, palatable, pat response because your wisdom validates, clarifies, and strengthens. I have been coming to the realization that the strongest way to navigate this “dark night of the soul” I’ve been moving through for the past many years is to choose to see it as a lesson for my soul, instead of random unluckiness. One of your true strengths is being a voice for the collective conscious. Thank you for the comfort you bring to “the circle” by honoring your inner wisdom. xo

  • Gvantsa says:

    I loved this Tara. I thought it was beautifully written and communicated an important message. Sending love to you.

  • Monnique says:

    Thank you so much for this, Tara. It was the EXACT message I needed to read today. I have been struggling to work with and understand the polarities, but from my ego’s perspective as opposed to my soul’s. As I continue to grow in faith and trust in myself, it is becoming more natural for me to look for and towards the lessons as challenges unfold. I do not ask my ego to step aside. Instead I ask my ego to partner with my soul so I can continue to navigate through the curriculum of my soul’s plan in this lifetime with peace and learning. You are a gift. I look forward to joining your next Playing Big program 🙂

  • sowjanya says:

    I love what was shared today, It brought tears to my eyes and compelled me to write a coment at the end. I am in transition now after a very big loss in a business ventue. I have a day job too which I need to do to pay the bills. I alternate between feeling courageous for atleast trying a business and failing instead of never atempting it, but also the moneteraty loss makes me feel like a failure. I will try and see if I can approach it from the angle of the soul as to what the business expereince did for me.

  • Julia says:

    Thank you for this, I have been grappling with this question since the sudden loss of my son 2 years ago in a year marked by many losses. As I looked back at the story of my life I realize that death has been a marker in my life yet I have always somehow felt loved and cared for. How to step forward in a true direction is I think my next question?

  • “A good life is a life in which your soul learns what it came here to learn.” I’m so glad you said what was in your head. This resonates with me much more than any of the ‘cool’ alternatives. I think true love and service can only come out of learning what we came here learn. Thank you! xx

  • taryn says:

    Such a wise, insightful post Tara! You have such a talent to translate your deep insights into visual, digestible advice. Love the two room analogy. We all need a room of one’s own — that will be the soul’s one for me.

  • Alyssa says:

    This brings such clarity to my experience of seeing a current situation in my life from two very different perspectives, and feeling very confused about which perspective is the most valid. Thank you for following your gut and first impulse on that question. This perspective diffuses a difficult situation in my life, making it less charged and full of blame, in some ways I can also see many reasons to be grateful for it already. Though sometimes I see things a bit too much from the soul perspective sometimes, not seeing or allowing myself to feel angry at unethical behavior or injustices… But I’m also realizing it’s not my job to make sure others are accountable for their actions from the soul perspective. That seems to elegantly take care of itself. So thankyou.

  • WOW! Tara, I have to say that this is one of the most profound and insightful post that I’ve received from you. It resonates with me so strongly that I feel I must read it daily for the next 7 days to reap the fullness of it for the blossoming of my soul. Your question, “What is my Soul Here to Learn?” will certainly be one that I pose to others so that they too can experience the shift that occurs from embracing this question with their individual truth. Thank you for sharing your light so that we are encouraged to do the same.

  • Michelle says:

    You are so right this shift allows us to experience difficult situations without the difficulty. The first time I felt peace after my grandpa died, it was when I remembered that none of us are here to stay anyway—and from stepping back to that bigger picture (rather than resisting the reality and striving to make it something else) it’s easier to see how shockingly beautiful his life was.

  • Veronica says:

    Thank you Tara for the beautiful analogy. It really spoke to me (and my soul) and gave me a tool to clarify how I am being in the world.
    Looking back is fine as long as you are looking from the present and realising what lessons you have learnt.

  • Tanvi says:

    Beautiful ideas. The ability to step back and notice the patterns is so crucial to our own growth.

  • Hillary says:

    Hi Tara,

    I have been searching for a definition of the ego vs non-ego (soul) for a while now, and this one is just so, so beautiful and clear.

    Thank you for your bravery, your willingness to explore and, of course, for sharing.

  • Meg Mosley says:

    Brilliant! Thank you for sharing this.

  • Kelli says:

    Amen.

  • Selena says:

    Thank you for this wisdom Tara. I’ve added this message to my daily calendar to help REMIND me to view EVERYTHING from the perspective of my Soul’s experience. After it’s all said and done, that’s really what this Life-Trip is all about.

  • Motshewa says:

    I really appreciated this message, thank you Tara. While trying to invision both doors I realized the need to slow down and to become present. Without you taking the time to ‘take a step back’ from that experience, it becomes difficult to assess it and enter the right door.

  • Maria says:

    Thank you for honouring your truth by giving your real response to the question. If you hadn’t, the world would not have gained anything new – but already see how many people these words are resonating with :-). You have been an inspiration for me in listening to and believing in my inner voice. Thanks so much for staying true to yourself.

  • Ingrid says:

    Thank you, Tara. I can relate so much to this experience, and what really is a good life. Your wisdom came to me in just the right time. In my rough soul-lessons to learn it helps seeing other souls doing the same thing. And you put it out very beautifully and with great clarity.

  • Dan says:

    Such a great message. I think patience comes from the soul room;anxiety from the ego room.

  • Martina says:

    Thank you so much Tara for sharing your thoughts on this powerful topic. I love the way you talk about it – to always try to go into every situation with the intent to learn, to listen to the message behind it, no matter how hard the situation might seem. If we all decide to enter the room of the soul we would see things more as challenges rather than problems. We would rather focus on the positives of a situation rather than the negatives. And we would grow stronger every single time. Thanks again!

  • cecile says:

    Beautiful Transformation Tara- the soul perspective brought Continued Hope and Confidence against all odds. The greatest happiness is to transform ones’s feelings into Action. our soul is the master of our inner self, we only have to stop, think,and listen to that still soft voice that’s speaking to us. Thanks Tara for the wonderful, positive, powerful message of growing to understanding and knowing ourself

  • tiarra lucaa says:

    I love her!

  • Val says:

    So that was it ! Everything makes more sense now thanks to you Tara. I am now, today, able to see what my ego has just gone through from my soul’s perspective. Brillant ! You’ve made my day ! Thank you for sharing this wise vision.

  • sophia says:

    It is all about living in Higher Purpose, not just from the personality’s perspective.
    Broad Vision.

    Thank you Tara

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