Advice?

If we come to someone and ask advice, and then do not take it because we don’t like the answer, it’s often because we wanted approval and not advice.

We can, of course, gain from advice, books, podcasts, coaching, courses if we are stuck, but most often we are looking for approval or validation rather than advice or a way of putting off taking the action we already know will solve the problem.

However, if we only consume them and never actually try them or act upon them faithfully then we won’t advance, we will stay stuck in our perceived problem.

Every challenge in life has a solution and we need to be responsible for being a path finder and not being a person who only wants instructions that we don’t follow because we either don’t really have a challenge, other than what the mind has invented, or we actually are too fearful to find a solution to it.

We have the answer, but we seek approval from others for our proposed solution under the smokescreen of advice.

So many people seek advice and then never act on it.

Unsolicited advice is never well received or useful, it is actually the advisors ego and their own stories that causes them to vent under the disguise of advising.

We never like being told when all we wanted was to be listened too. We didn’t ask for the opinion but the other person’s ego and autobiographical perspective caused them to offer ‘advice’ which really translates to ‘look at me I know’ behaviour. It’s not genuine heartfelt care, it’s actually about them and not you.

If we seek advice and don’t use it that’s ok too, we do not have to agree with the adviser. But when we seek advice and don’t like the answer, that’s not the fault of the adviser.

We all need help at times and we all need advice and as long as that is what you are seeking and not looking for approval, then advice is a good option when we are stuck on our path-finding mission.

Advice works when we are truthful with ourselves as that is what we really want.

Magical toadstools

Seeing the world around us is important as it allows us to step out of our thinking mind and into the moment. When walking to work, or to the shops or walking the dog, if we leave our phone in our pocket or at home and then choose to look up or sideways, or even stop and take a moment to appreciate the background that is there all the time, we then step into the conscious moment.

Normally, we would walk head down, often staring at our phones or just stuck in our thoughts, and we then miss the amazing that is in every single moment that we view as ordinary.

Today, when walking in the forest with the dog I came across the amazing toadstool pictured above, a magical thing of beauty that is nature. I stopped and observed it, wondering at its amazing beauty, like something from a fairytale.

There a magical ‘toadstools’ contained in the background of every moment of our entire life and when we see them we realise that we have stopped thinking and we are just being.