Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Daily Om: Finding Our Life's Work


A good Daily Om today. However, I wonder if we all have a "life's work." As I evolve as a person, what I see as my purpose in life also evolves. When I was younger, I was a poet. Recently, I have been a writer and personal trainer. In a few years, I will be working as a therapist.

In the more personal realm, I have always been about acquiring knowledge and trying to see patterns and connections. But this doesn't pay the bills, and maybe, as suggested below, it isn't supposed to.

I don't know. It's interesting to ponder how the things we are passionate about help to define our meaning and purpose. If we can find a way to make a living from these things, so much the better.
Feeling Our Life
Finding Our Life’s Work

Sometimes it takes us the better part of a lifetime to discover our life’s work, even though we may have been doing it our whole lives without necessarily realizing it. Our life’s work is not always what we do to make money, although we often think it should be, and sometimes this way of thinking prevents us from seeing clearly what it is. It may be the work of having children, caring for them, and running a household. The way we know our life’s work is by how we feel when we are doing it.

When we are doing our life’s work, we feel an uncanny sense of ease and alignment. This doesn’t mean that the work is always easy, and it doesn’t mean that it’s the only work we have to do; it just means that there is a conviction deep inside us that tells us we are in tune with our innermost self. When we are engaged in our life’s work, our bodies feel more alive, because our energy is devoted to a cause that, in turn, feeds us. We may be tired after engaging in our life’s work, but we are almost never depleted. We feel grounded in the world, knowing that we belong here and have something important to offer.

When we are deeply unhappy, depressed, or subject to one illness after another, this may be due to a sense of disconnection from our life’s work. At times like these, finding the work we are meant to do is an essential act of healing. Most of us remember a time when we felt fully engaged in some act of work, service or creativity, and it is here that we may rediscover the work we are meant to do now. On the other hand, it may be time to explore what inspires us through volunteering, taking a class, going back to school, or just doing whatever it is we long to try. We all have callings, and when we find them, we owe it to ourselves to nurture and protect them, because while they may or may not be our livelihood, they are the keys to our wellbeing.

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