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Adversity Prescription...Inhale Faith Regularly
By: Charlene M. Proctor, Ph.D.
Being a social scientist, I have been trained to find comfort in numbers,
although I am equally dependent upon faith. In research, if we set a certain
standard and can measure whether an idea or a result exists, then we have a
construct for at least a theory. In fact, we just might have the basis for a
belief.
Just last week, I gained further insight on this concept, when I took both my
sons out to dinner at our favorite local sushi restaurant. At thirteen and
eleven years of age, I was amazed at their worldview, probably as a result of
some coursework they’ve been exposed to on the subject of world religions.
Jason, a critical thinker at thirteen, told me that society feels the need to
construct belief systems – and there is not necessarily any proof behind such
beliefs. He argued that humans have a natural need to do this in order to
explain what cannot be explained. Without proof, he said, why should he
subscribe to anything he can’t see, especially God? I was further alarmed when
Vaughn chimed in, putting in his two cents about why he’s just not sure there is
a God, Goddess, or a higher power for that matter. I have never forced them to
believe anything because beliefs are something we construct as a result of our
own life experiences. Their life experience will be totally different than mine.
Although I can offer a foundation and continually teach them how spirit
infiltrates our every move, I can’t fill in the blanks for them. That, they must
do on their own.
Not to be rattled off my wise, mother-track, I realized the boys are just
beginning to question the world at large. They also have a limited view because
they have experienced minimal adversity, failure, loss and grief in life – some,
but not enough to know how important it is to believe there is a reason for it.
By the time we are 40, our adversity resumé is quite long – we’ve got a vast
inventory under our belts in multiple categories. We need to believe and depend
upon reasons we can’t fully explain – life seems to lead us that way in order to
cope.
As we continued to have a spontaneous discussion about belief systems, I
realized that, at their tender ages, they have already been indoctrinated into
the comfort level a Cartesian viewpoint provides – if we don’t see it, it
doesn’t exist. How did this happen, I wondered? Do our children have so much
difficulty in believing and having faith because somehow physical evidence must
confirm the constructs of parental belief systems? Or do they simply feel
unblemished by life’s circumstances and secure enough not to feel the need to
rely on faith?
I spent the rest of my wakame salad and miso soup time explaining that just
because we don’t see something doesn’t mean it’s not there. We know love exists,
even though we cannot see it. What would the world be like without love? Well
then, they replied, then let’s conduct some focus groups and find out what
percentage of people believe in love and see if it’s statistically significant.
Finding love, or proving the existence of love, by taking a poll first? We’ve
done a very good job, I silently thought, of indoctrinating our kids into a
world replete with an over-estimated value of proof.
Overall, I think we need a little less science and a lot more faith, especially
when it comes to the subject of life’s adversity. Granted, faith sometimes does
not give us the level of certainty we want to accept bad circumstances. It’d be
awfully nice if we’d get a progress report at the day’s end that explained just
what the heck was going on. Some days we get an unusually large dose of the
nasties. But the last I checked, nobody was getting any statistical feedback in
terms our soul journey g.p.a. Our scores, in terms of our progress, are greatly
determined by our own self-evaluations. The ‘knowing why’ of life’s
circumstances can’t necessarily be part of the formula because if we knew
everything, the reason for everything, there would be no point in the dance. We
all agree - there doesn’t seem to be any consolation in not knowing. And as a
researcher, it does go against my nature to come up empty handed in the knowing
category - not knowing, after a really good analysis, just doesn’t seem
acceptable. Seems like we missed something along the way or left our part of the
equation. Is it a lack of insight?
It’s because we don’t always cast our net wide enough about our spiritual
development. Perhaps we evolve into faith because we can’t make meaning without
it after enough living has gone by. Proof soothes mainly because most of us are
limited to our five senses –which serve as our conceptual parameters. Although
some are gifted to extend past those limitations in distant realms, or have had
extraordinary psychic experiences that defy current logic, the rest of us need
pure faith to keep us on track. Never diminish the value of faith. You’ll find
less energy spent on asking ‘why’ and surrender to the ‘not knowing’ more
readily. Find a way to develop unshakable faith in the Divine – it’s a
participative partnership based upon trust you’ll need.
About The Author
Charlene M. Proctor, Ph.D., author of Let Your Goddess Grow! 7 Spiritual Lessons
on Female Power and Positive Thinking and The Women’s Book of Empowerment: 323
Affirmations that Change Everyday Problems into Moments of Potential (2005)
provides guidance through everyday complexity with female imagery and positive
thinking. Focusing on the Divine Self, and setting a mental equivalent to
institute positive change on earth, has always provided the infrastructure to
Charlene’s work as a researcher and simulation architect. She is deeply
committed to helping others along their soul journey. Please visit
www.thegoddessnetwork.net
and register for her many self-help and inspirational programs, which include
The Divine Woman, a free monthly newsletter!
tgn@thegoddessnetwork.net
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