Good Now!
Participant: Am I responsible for what happens in my life?
This is one of the areas of greatest confusion for the spiritual seeker.
The belief that is present, that has been learned and programmed, that is probably embedded in the DNA, that has been there through lifetimes and through civilizations is that your choices and actions make the difference in your life. The teaching is that you are responsible. You are to decide what you want in life – what you want to do, how you want to be – and then you put that into action. Let's just be open for a moment to that actually being possible, that is that you decide what you want and then manifest it in the world. If that were the case, would you create unhappiness, conflict, or pain? Would there be war or poverty? The answer to those questions is quite obvious. People don't plan and wish for such things. They likely have other things in mind when choosing futures and making plans.
So, if you are responsible, if your thoughts and desires create what happens, how can such conflicting results be explained? I can see two ways that attempts might be made to justify these results. One is to decide that you must not be very talented at creating what you want, that somehow you allow disparate thoughts or actions to creep in that are not aligned with what you really want. Secondly, perhaps, you simply don't have that power; you have simply been programmed to believe that you do or at least that you should possess such abilities. If we look at failure to realize your goals as a weakness on your part, it begs the question of whether that failure is your intention. Is it your plan to fail? Or do you simply notice that the lack of success happens and blame yourself or, perhaps, others? Logically, it makes more sense to assume that you do not have the power to control your world. The mind might argue that sometimes you make a plan and things happen nearly as you wanted them to. Does that happen every time? Ask yourself honestly if it even happens most of the time. If your response to this question is in the affirmative, then keep working your magic. For the rest of you there must be something else going on here.
Participant: Some spiritual teachings say that you can listen to one of two voices, the voice of ego or the voice of Spirit. Am I responsible for that choice?
This opens us up to many questions. One of those is that if you listen to and act from the voice you have identified as Spirit, or God or love – will things work out as you hope they will?
Participant: Not necessarily. And I wonder if this is really what God wants. Can it really be the will of God if it feels so uncomfortable to me?
You have stated a second question. How do you know what the voice of God is saying? How can you be sure it is not that wily ego voice?
Participant: It's not possible to be sure.
Once again you are in a position where you are the one seemingly making this choice and you therefore feel responsible for the outcome. Did you listen to the right voice, and, even if you did, are you still responsible for the result? Or can you now blame God if you guessed right, but things didn't work out as you hoped they would?
Participant: I have no clue what God's will or plan is. That doesn't seem possible. Maybe when things come to some sort of crisis we surrender and realize we just aren't able to choose what should be.
One thing that often happens when you choose and take responsibility for that choice is that if things work out the way you hoped they would, you pat yourself on the back and think you have done a good job. If things don't work out in what you consider to be a satisfactory way, you then blame yourself. You decide you didn't do a good enough job. Or you blame others or God for this failure. And, as we suggested earlier, this lack of positive results is much more likely to be the result you experience. So you spend most of your time with a sense of failure and guilt, or in a place of victimhood and anger. What if what happens is not determined by your choice and action, that you are not responsible for it? If that is the case, there is no reason for self-congratulations or for blame. You are not responsible.
Participant: That can be a relief!
It can be a tremendous relief. Now let's look at the mechanics of what goes on. When you have convinced yourself or have been programmed to believe that you are responsible for your decisions, that they determine what happens, your mind focuses totally on these choices. It leaves out the ten thousand other variables that are a part of what is...
The Illusion of Responsibility
Say that you make the choice to attend a spiritual group. Your intention for doing this was to awaken to the truth of yourself. You believe that you had the power to make that choice. But let's look more deeply at this choice, to really investigate it. How did you become aware of the opportunity to attend this event? Maybe you heard about it from a friend or saw a poster or heard about it online. Did you have the intention to find out about this meeting? Was that planned? No, it just happened. You are not responsible for creating this opportunity...
We could identify what believes it is in control and is responsible as the ego mind. But it isn't in control. All these other factors exist along with the ego mind. As a pointer we could say that everything in the universe is interconnected. The ego thinks that it did something and therefore a result occurred, but there were ten thousand things happening at the same time. All contributed to what happened. There is never a single cause, nor a single effect, but a ripple, a constant movement, an interconnectedness of everything. We could call that the Oneness. We could call it Divinity. We could call it Not-Twoness. We could call it God...
Letting Go of Control
When you stop feeling responsible, perhaps humbleness emerges, along with trust that what is happening is as it should be. Resistance fades when you stop blaming or trying to control outcomes. The awakening process begins when you accept that you aren’t running the show and that neither you nor others have any real power. No amount of effort will ever allow you to take control.
Awareness may lead to less suffering, but choices are likely to increase it. Letting go is not apathy—it is surrender to what is. Pain may still appear, but suffering dissolves when you cease to believe that you are the cause. There is no past or future to manage, only this moment—this now.
Freedom in Surrender
Take your hand off the wheel. It is not, and has never been, directly connected to the driveshaft. You can do much worse than accepting the hand you are dealt and playing it to the hilt. There is no guilt and no blame. You are not responsible for the good or the bad. Things are as they are, and this is perfection. Gratitude arises naturally when you release the illusion of control.
Good Now!
Sanhia / Spirit
























