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Surrender requires being brave enough to follow the invisible into the unknown Incognito Experiment 11

Surrender requires being brave enough to follow the invisible into the unknown Incognito Experiment 11

Chapter 16: Follow the Invisible into the Unknown

Chapter 17: First Job Interview

Surrender— what a magical and powerful word, it often gives rise to thoughts of weakness and cowardice. In my case, surrender requires me to have the courage to follow the invisible into the unknown, and that's what I'm doing.

Surrender does not make me clear in the direction of my own walking, nor do I know where it leads me, but it does make me aware of the most basic thing, that is, my personal likes and dislikes do not guide my life. By letting go of the control of those powerful forces over me, I let an even more powerful force guide my life, and that is life itself.

Through this phase of growth, I understand that surrender is accomplished through two very different steps: first you have to let go of the personal likes and dislikes that come from within and in your brain; then, with the clear thinking that arises from the first step, you just have to look at what the current situation requires you to do.

If you are no longer swayed by personal likes and dislikes, then how will you act? Following deeper guidance will take your life in a different direction than your likes and dislikes lead. This is the clearest explanation I can make for the experiment of surrender, which has become the foundation of my spiritual and secular life.

You can't think about anything about the class before you enter the classroom. I hope that when I first walk into the classroom, my brain is completely empty. I wanted the experience of writing a paper entirely by inspiration last time, walking into the classroom and seeing what would happen.

The deeper you go during meditation, the slower your breathing becomes until finally your breathing stops naturally. I don't know how long I can hold my suffocation, but I'll go back to ventilation.

Teacher Schein said that the ultimate freedom is to look at our lives like reading a novel, the script has been written, just wait for it to happen, surrender to the flow of life, leave yourself to the universe to operate, and accept this perfect fate. While playing the role of the character, while being your own movie audience, the emotions that arise in your heart are stripped away from the story, just pure original experience, emotions will become the background music of life, there is no good or bad distinction.

The book "Surrender Experiment" perfectly explains this teaching, if you still have some confusion about how to live in a "response mode", how to do nothing and do nothing, please read or listen to this book carefully, Mike Singer used his own experience to make a wonderful presentation of "perfect fatalism". In every present moment, regardless of the likes and dislikes of the mind, everything at hand is done for the sake of the universe, and it is lived with a sense of sacredness and total devotion.

Mike Singer, author of "The Submission Experiment", uses his own personal experience to tell the journey of surrender from a hermit to a CEO of a public company, letting go and letting life take the helm.

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