“Wherever you go, go with all your heart,” so Confucius said
some 2500 years ago, and his wisdom still holds true.
But how often do we heed it? How often do we go about our
lives, our loves, our work, our friendships, our families, with all our heart?
This Valentine’s Day, what if you approached all of your
life with all your heart? What if, even better, you didn’t reserve the precious
gift of all your heart for your significant other, but gave it freely,
willingly, to every aspect of your life?
I look at my dogs, my beloved animal companions, and whether
they are eating, sleeping, chasing a leaf, riding in the car or snuggling by my
side, they put all their heart into it. They are 100% engaged, enthusiastic,
eager about whatever it is. How our lives would change if we would follow their
example, their instinctive joy.
I know that there are moments when I feel myself listening,
really listening, to a friend not just with my ears, but with my whole being,
and somehow the interaction becomes charged with meaning, a depth it didn’t
have before. There are moments when I lose myself in my work, in the most
positive sense of the word, when the connection between the work and me is so
strong, so powerful, that I surprise myself with what I’ve achieved. It’s not
that I’ve suddenly turned super-star brilliant. Oh, no, I’m still the same old
me, warts and all, but for a moment, when I put all my heart into that project,
that piece of work, magic happens.
When you put all your heart into something, you set aside
all doubts, all fears. More than that, you momentarily forget them, because you
are so engaged, so present with the experience that there’s no room for
self-questioning, self-doubt. You’re too busy focusing with laser-like
intensity on whoever or whatever is in front of you. In those “all your heart”
moments, you are confident without thinking about it, you are courageous
without asking yourself if you could be brave, you are the best of who you are naturally,
without effort, without strain.
I say “moments” advisedly, because putting all your heart
into something or an interaction with someone takes intense focus. It takes
being present with every fiber of your being, which frankly, isn’t the easiest
thing to maintain. How dogs do it all the time, I have no idea. But what I do
know is that one moment added to another moment and to another results in a
span of time that can increase with practice. As with anything else you want to
get good at, commitment, practice and persistence are the key.
Unless, of course, you’re a dog. Then, oh lucky you, you
were just born with it!
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