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Wake Up: A Guide to Living Your Life Consciously

A life lived of choice is a life of conscious action. A life lived of chance is a life of unconscious creation.
- Neale Donald Walsch

As much as possible, I try to live my life by bringing to my consciousness what is bubbling up from my unconsciousness.

I try to clear the fog through which we often drift, to see where I’m going, to make conscious choices instead of automatic ones.

Do you ever have a feeling that you’re drifting through life, and not going where you want to go? Or that you don’t know how you got where you are today?

Living consciously is about taking control of your life, about thinking about your decisions rather than making them without thought, about having a life that we want rather than settling for the one that befalls us.

If you’re drifting through life, or feel out of control, or don’t know how you got here … deciding to live consciously could be the single most important thing you do.

Are you living unconsciously now?
Ask yourself the following questions … if you find yourself saying yes to many of them, you might want to consider trying conscious living:

1. Are you in a job that you fell into rather than the job you want?

2. Are you doing things that are given to you rather than what you love to do?

3. Are you spending your time doing busy work rather than what you want to do with your days?

4. Do you wish you could spend more time with loved ones?

5. Do you find yourself overweight because you’ve been eating the food you’ve been eating for years and stuck in a rut of not exercising?

6. Do you find yourself living from paycheck to paycheck or in debt, not knowing where your money goes?

7. Do you find yourself wasting your time doing things that aren’t important rather than focusing on completing the things that are very important?

8. Do you go through your days not thinking about what you want out of life and how to get it?

If you answered “no” to all of these questions, you’re probably already living consciously, and you don’t need this article at all. For those who would like to live more consciously, read on.

How to Live Life Consciously
It’s not something you can change overnight. Living consciously is a lifestyle, a skill, an art. It’s not something you do just once, but a habit that you can form for the rest of your life.

But it is deceptively simple: Be conscious, and think about, everything you do. Make conscious choices rather than doing things without thinkings. That’s all.

It sounds simple, but it’s amazing how few people actually do this, and it’s amazing how easy it is to live life on autopilot, and just do what we always do because that’s what we’re used to doing. And it’s easier that way, even if our lives are difficult.

It’s not easy to changes our lives, to break out of our routines, to begin to live the lives we want.

It takes willful effort, energy and constant vigilance to think about our choices … all of them.

Here are some key tips that have worked for me:

1. Make reflecting on your life a regular routine. Whether you keep a journal, or make reflecting on your day part of your evening routine, or have a weekly session where you review your life or take some time away from the office to reflect on everything … it’s important that you give things some thought. Regularly.

2. At least once a year, set or review your life’s goals. What do you want to do in life? What is important to you? What do you want your life to be like? And how will you get there? Write it down, and keep it somewhere you will see it often, and take action.

3. Also review your relationships. The people we love are among the most important things in our lives, if not the only important things. You need to think about your relationships. Do you spend enough time with them? Do you show your appreciation for them? Is there a way you can improve your relationship? Do you need to forgive or apologize about anything? Are there barriers that can be removed? Communication that can be improved? Also review your relationships with others, such as co-workers.

4. Consider your impact on the world. How does what you do, what you consume, and how you live, impact the environment? How does it impact poor people in Third World countries? How does it impact the poor, the powerless, the voiceless? How does it impact your community? Your life has an impact, whether you think about it or not. Being conscious of how your decisions affect others is important.

5. Consider the real costs of each purchase. We often buy things without really thinking about what we’re doing or what they really cost. Sure, it’s just $30 … no problem, right? But that $30 might represent several hours of your life … hours that you’ll never get back. Do you really want to spend your life earning money for trivial purchases? Is that what you want to do with your life? Worth some thought, I think. Read Your Money or Your Life for more.

6. Consider the real costs of the things in your life. Our lives are filled with stuff … our houses, our offices … and beyond just the cost of buying the stuff, this stuff takes a toll on us. The stuff in our life must be arranged, cleaned, moved, taken with us when we move … it takes up the space in our life, it is visual stress. Later, we’ll have to get rid of it, sort through all of it, take time to throw it away or recycle it or donate it. If having the stuff is not worth all of that, then get rid of it.

7. Review how you spend your time. Until we do a time audit, and keep a log of our day, even if it’s just for one or two days, we don’t really know how we spend our time. And if we do audit our time, it can be very surprising. And if we know how we’re spending our time now, we can make conscious decisions to change how we spend our time in the future. For computer-based time tracking, try Rescue Time.

8. Explore yourself. Not in a dirty way. Take some time to think about what kind of person you are. What your values are. Whether you live your life according to those values. How you treat people. How you treat yourself. Think about this: what do you want people to say about you when you die? Read more: The Key to Dying Happy.

Do you live a life of consciousness? Do you have any tips for doing so? Share in the comments, or continue the discussion in the Zen Habits forums.

If you liked this article, please bookmark it on del.icio.us or vote for it on Digg. I’d appreciate it. :)

Comments (53)

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Lyman from Creating a Better Life Says:

December 6th, 2007, 21:20 pm

Great tips, Leo… for me, a regular insight meditation practice has helped tremendously in seeing things as they are, and added to my ability to do the things you list. It’s also a great compliment to reflection - one looks at where you are, and one explores how you got there.

Thanks again!

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Tina Su - Think Simple Now Says:

December 6th, 2007, 22:13 pm

I tend to drift between living life consciously and getting ‘lost’ in the fog again. As you mentioned, it really does not happen overnight, I’ve tried to shift my behaviors completely overnight before, and it’s worked for about 3 days before I bounced back instantly to the other extreme. So, gradual change and creating new habits one at a time is a better practice for long term sustainability.

I’ve found meditation or meditative practices (like being mindful in everything that you do, ie. dishes, walking) to really help in becoming more aware and conscientious.
If anyone’s interested, I wrote an article awhile ago on Meditation 101: How to Start that you might find helpful.

Beautiful article leo!

– Tina

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Albert | UrbanMonk.Net Says:

December 6th, 2007, 22:45 pm

Hey Leo, I agree with Tina above - mindfulness is one of the most powerful things ever. Just watching your own mind, and after a while you’ll see the unconscious beliefs and attitudes and desires and fears, all that silliness, that is guiding your every action.

And you’ll discover how little control you have over your self. But the good thing is, the moment you make that realisation, you begin to break out of the prison…

Cheers,
Albert | UrbanMonk.Net
Modern personal development, entwined with ancient spirituality.

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aisha Says:

December 6th, 2007, 23:24 pm

Long time reader, first time commenter :)

GREAT article. It really affected me. May I please quote you in a post of my own sometime next week? I will link to your post ofcourse.

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Leo Says:

December 6th, 2007, 23:33 pm

Thanks for the thoughtful comments, everyone! I agree with Tina as well.

@aisha: Thanks for commenting! I’m glad you found the post to be useful or inspiring in some way. You are *more* than welcome to quote from my posts at any time, and a link is *always* appreciated. :)

That offer, of course, to link to me, applies to everyone who has a blog. ;)

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Jonathan Fields Says:

December 6th, 2007, 23:42 pm

Great article, Leo.

To #1, I would add, keep a gratitude journal.

Keep a small moleskin pad next to your bed and every morning, before you even get up, write down 5 things, even the the simplest ones, that you are grateful for. It makes a huge change in the presence and consciousness you bring to the rest of the day.

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pavs Says:

December 7th, 2007, 1:56 am

Leo this is a great piece of thoughtful writing. I can very much relate to this. I think your quality of posts have gone up a couple of notch. It was always good. It’s even better now. Maybe it has something to do with you posting less often now.

I am living my life in a state of apathy for quite some time now. I remember not so long ago I used to have plans, dreams of achieving things that I can only laugh about today. I can’t quite understand what it is, or why I dont care about life as much anymore. I think, this post of your might help me get myself together.

Thanks for another wonderful article.
pavs

ps, I was in guam for more that a year in 2000. Beautiful place, beautiful people.

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Victoria E Says:

December 7th, 2007, 1:58 am

Truly fantastic post, Leo. :)

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Dandelion Says:

December 7th, 2007, 3:17 am

Thanks!
I sometimes feel like Jack Sparow: I have a compass that shows the direction to anything I would really want, but the compass is completely puzzled because I actually don’t know what I really want. I have so many competing interests that I can barely focus and I am displeased by the results of each and every of them …

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Migo Says:

December 7th, 2007, 5:16 am

Thanks Leo,

This is really an amazing wake up call and a perspective. Just in time when I needed most. Your post are really uplifting!

I just got another blow from life’s ring. But with this I was able to think and change my thoughts of empowering one rather than distress.

Thanks!

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Lodewijkvdb Says:

December 7th, 2007, 5:20 am

Great article Leo!

This is a path that I’m on for quite some years now, and as Tina says: it’s about gradual change. But it’s a gradual change that picks up speed as you go along. Things get easier and happen faster the more you’re doing it consciously.

And the gratitude journal is a great tip Jonathan! I do irregular gratitude moments, but I don’t write them down. Making it a daily habit would certainly brighten up my days. And when it’s hard you have a big list of things to cheer you up! Thanks :)

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cellie Says:

December 7th, 2007, 5:23 am

Thoughts like this have been swirling around in my mind (and being put into practice) lately. I got a bit lost after finishing up grad school since I know that living consciously is (should be) a part of me. But some ideas on how to reconnect, as mentioned, giving of your time or self to others .And scaling back on things in your life that are not really that important to you but that you do (or act in a manner) perhaps because of others. And getting back to living more simply, fewer things to tie you down, leaves more money and time to think and give of yourself.

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Bex Says:

December 7th, 2007, 6:44 am

I liked this article except for one little thing.
Self exploration isn’t dirty. It’s something everybody experiments with & I know you were probably only trying to be humorous.
Be careful though, words can often affect us more than we know.
Sorry to be the ‘Party Pooper’…

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Kenneth Says:

December 7th, 2007, 7:04 am

Appreciate our loves one is important. One of my friend just past away few days ago cause of stroke. It was so sudden and out of expectation from everyone of us, she seems so happy in the carnival before the day she fell unconcious.

The relationship with your love one are the best gift from the heaven. Appreciate it and love them as much as you can. Don’t get regret forever after you have no chance to do it.

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Leo Says:

December 7th, 2007, 8:21 am

Thanks for sharing the great comments, guys!

@Bex: Yeah, I was just trying to add a little humor. I don’t always succeed. :) I agree that self-exploration is a healthy thing, no matter how you do it.

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Alex Ion Says:

December 7th, 2007, 9:21 am

And just like Muhammad said when he added the article you could add number #9 that would say “don’t spend too much time online”.

A funny informative article. Thanks Leo

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Joe Says:

December 7th, 2007, 9:31 am

Another great post!

You’re spot on that the way to achieve this is deceptively simple. Like Lao-tzu said, “The Great Way is Easy, but people choose the side paths”.

I usually use that quote as my screen saver - if nothing else it reminds me to get into the moment and really think about what I need to do next (or if I even need to be on the PC at all!)…

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Bronson Says:

December 7th, 2007, 10:33 am

One of my favorite sayings is “We were never bored because we were never boring.” Great tips, and as always, ZH takes it to the next level.

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Mark Says:

December 7th, 2007, 10:33 am

Hey Leo ~

With respect to “#4. Consider your impact on the world” I have spent quite a bit of time lately pondering that thought.

Sometimes we feel like we, as individuals, can’t really do much to help. However, as a small gesture of trying I have decided to make every Friday on my site “Humanitarian Fridays.” As the name suggests, every Friday I will write about a humanitarian or social cause to try and raise some awareness (and do my own little part).

If there are like-minded bloggers out there who would like to participate we could even collaborate on specific causes that we would like to highlight.

I have just posted the first article in the series entitled, Five Things You Should Know About the Crisis in Darfur and if you have the time please have a read.

Kind regards,
Mark

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Miss Gisele from myBeautyMatch.com Says:

December 7th, 2007, 11:22 am

Leo,

One of the principles that I learned from my meditation techniques is that meditation is the ultimate way of “being conscious”.

I’d say that meditation has been the most fundamental change in my life. I would not give that up for anything in the world.

I also learnt that most people live in total unconsciousness because sometimes it makes like much easier to handle.

When you think about it, being conscious involves actually being awake to your decisions and actually taking 100% responsibility for your decisions and their outcome.

Most people would most likely not be able to move forward in their lives if they really faced the fact that their life is a reflection of a series of decisions they made. I believe it would scare a lot of people.

Meditation changes your brain wave and you get to the point where hiding your head in the sand like an ostridge bird is simply no longer a viable option.

The eight points you present are essential in creating the kind of life that will fulfill us.

This is a great post for all of us to reflect upon during this coming weekend and this is an excellent post to reflect upon during the holidays when most of us will slow down our pace and take the time to review the year that has just passed.

Gisele
http://www.mybeautymatch.com

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passerby Says:

December 7th, 2007, 11:45 am

Ahem.

Conscious living is a result of mindfulness which is a result of living in the present. No past. No future. Fully focused, engrossed in the present moment.

While one is engaged in an action at any moment, one can observe one’s actions and the corresponding thoughts at the moment of the action, not before, not after. (One is always engaged in action, the least being breathing).

Practising to live in the present is zen.

One can try a simple action to understand the true meaning of the above, by holding a balancing posture for as long as one can without discomfort. For example, standing on one leg. Or keeping a target on the cross hair. Or similar, where body & mind are forced to remain in present at every moment, one drifting thought, balance lost. When one becomes adept it, where’s the question of drifting?

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Gene Says:

December 7th, 2007, 12:13 pm

Perhaps the most important step one can take toward achieving consciousness is to find a philosophy that has reality as its basic axiom. The only philosophy that I have found that has this foundation is Objectivism. It is an imperative in this philosophy that you live in the real world and you always think.

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Jim Says:

December 7th, 2007, 12:41 pm

Although desires are unintentional, we still feel like we can make a conscious choice, even though such choices are decided by the anticipation of their effects on our feelings, or by what we feel is important at the time.
So its as if feelings in being central to our choices coordinate our behaviour, whether that’s by anticipating how our actions will cause use to feel into the future, or anticipating the length of time we have left to react. The point being that if the brain can already anticipate, hesitate, and change its reactions, based on the interaction of feelings alone, then there’s no need for free will, or conscious choice. So although the brain might refine the processes that lead to our actions by anticipating consequences they are still no more deliberate than our unintentional desires, just more refined.

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Jim Schaffrath Says:

December 7th, 2007, 12:45 pm

The so called “success coaches” have been preaching this stuff for years.
Tapping in to that level of spiritual enregy, that we all possess, is the difference between those that are contentedly at peace as those that strive day to day for things that only add weight to their chains.
The Secret video making the rounds now talks about it at length. Call it God, call it the “Great Consciousness”, a wellspring of energy and peace is available.
Discipline has always been my method of tapping in. Daily prayer, a daily mantra, daily meditation, incorporating the Seven Habits of successful people appears to me the methodology to bring the consciousness to the surface. The discipline of making it a daily function is necessary to keep you tapped in.

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Dave Says:

December 7th, 2007, 13:06 pm

Talking about the path
is not walking the path.
Thinking about living
is not living.

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Shawna R. B. Atteberry Says:

December 7th, 2007, 13:30 pm

Thank you Leo. I needed these reminders with my husband’s illness and the craziness of the holiday season. I’m very much on autopilot these days. I really need to get back to journaling; that is the best way for me to live consciously: write it down. I also need to get back to de-cluttering.

I recently bought Zen To Done, and I am really enjoying it. I am finding the GTD system easier to handle as I go through ZTD. Mission accomplished. :)

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Jim Schaffrath Says:

December 7th, 2007, 13:33 pm

THE STREET SLANG SO COMMON THESE DAYS, APPLIES TO DAVE’S REMARK AND IS ONE OF MY MANTRAS;
TALKIN’ THE TALK IS NOT WALKIN’ THE WALK!
WE ALL WANT PEACE, BUT FEW ARE REALLY WILLING TO REST AND MEDITATE LONG ENOUGH TO ALLOW IT TO HAPPEN.
HUMANS WEREN’T WIRED TO PRESS AS HARD AS WE PRESS. ERGO, HEART ATTACKS AND STRESS RELATED DISEASE IS WHAT IS KILLING US.
ITS NOT EASY, JUST SIMPLE!

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TomK Says:

December 7th, 2007, 13:42 pm

I was very suicidal when a psychedelic mushroom trip moved me from your first list to your second one.

I find a small-medium dose of psychedelic mushrooms every three months clears out the cobwebs and keeps me focused. If you aren’t doing what you should be doing Jesus, Buddha, and their 3 eyed lawn elves will let you know that. If you need healing of some psychic wound, or to let go of old pain, jesus can help you and if you need to resolve an existential crisis, which may be causing procrastination or ambivalence about achieving your goals, buddha is your man. If you need creativity, the lawn elves can peel back the fabric of reality and expose the horror of existence, the ultimate insanity of which will make the regular insanity of pretending life is something more than a series of increasingly desperate attempts at ignoring the fact that we are going to wither and die, are cursed to know we are going to die and are completely powerless to do anything about it more bearable. In light of this, old patterns are released, enabling creativity and self reflection.

Studies bear this out. Psilocybin has been shown to induce life altering changes that persist over time (years later, most theology students who dosed during a good friday mass still marked it as one of the most important and transformative experiences in their lives). It is also being used on late stage cancer patients experiencing anxiety about death, to good results. My twist is that resolving your anxiety about death before you are dying enables you to lead a more authentic, what you call conscious, life before you die.

It might not be wise to try and take mushrooms in our current political climate (it is certainly unwise to take them if you pick them yourself and haven’t studied mycology, or buy them from someone who hasn’t), but anyone interested in this stuff should be following this fascinating research for insight into the mechanisms of the change it can induce, if nothing else.

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Glen Hubbell Says:

December 7th, 2007, 13:46 pm

For me, conscious living is about acting directly upon the world rather than re-acting to events or social agendas.

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zero255zero Says:

December 7th, 2007, 14:54 pm

I think I need to review how I spend my time. I often find myself wasting time, by doing things I can’t even recall.

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Terri Holley Says:

December 7th, 2007, 15:07 pm

I have always lived consciously but recently became aware that this was naturally a way of life for me. I think we all practice conscious living on some level. Becoming keenly aware of when I practice consciousness creates momentum to live mindfully. Tina Su mentioned that she sometimes gets lost in the “fog”. I think that noticing that you are in the “fog” is indicative of there being some degree of consciousness. What we create from a certain state of mind are the real gifts of conscious living. Also, creating a life vision, as opposed to setting life goals, helps me remain in the realm of consciousness. And asking myself the very simple yet loaded question “What is it I really want?” continues to be life changing and allows me gauge where I am on the map of life. The resullts have been smarter choices, better decisions and the elimination of second guessing.

“Where there is no vision, the people will parish”

Proverbs 29:18

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Anon Says:

December 7th, 2007, 15:07 pm

There is nothing Zen or mindful about this list. In fact it’s quite the opposite.

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Anne Says:

December 7th, 2007, 15:32 pm

Thank you, Leo. Living consciously has helped my life tremendously. And jonathon’s idea about a gratitude journal is something I don’t so often enough but I really enjoy reading over later. That will be a habit for another week, I think :>

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etavitom Says:

December 7th, 2007, 15:33 pm

thanks for the wisdom… another profound posting leo!

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Carole Says:

December 7th, 2007, 16:10 pm

Hi Leo,

Thank you for a fabulous article.

For me living consciously is when the voice on the inside is more important than what is being thrown at me from the outside.

Expanding our awareness is simply our willingness to step into the unknown to learn and appreciate more about ourselves.

Peace, love and chocolate

Carole

http://www.thehealthylivinglounge.com

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Evan Hadkins Says:

December 7th, 2007, 19:59 pm

I guess what I’m going to say may sound contrarian, but I don’t think it is.

I think becoming aware of what we aren’t aware of (our “subconscious”) can be very helpful. Our anxiety or fear can alert us to danger. Our lift of mood can let us know what we need.

I’m saying that our unconscious/subconscious is very valuable when we become aware of it.

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Bronson Says:

December 7th, 2007, 20:15 pm

Thoughts become things, Chris T.

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nikto Says:

December 8th, 2007, 1:28 am

One of the greatest sources of pain in my life has been my failure to realize that most people don’t live very consciously. Deliberation at this scale comes naturally to me. I’m hyperethical, hyperrational, always thinking about the consequences of my actions, always prioritizing and finding better schema. When I am very lonely or sad I can lose momentum, but it always returns later to bite me in the butt.

For most of my adolescence I couldn’t figure out why people behaved as they did; I figured adults had made some separate peace with the world that I was too dumb to see. (My mom encouraged this belief.) In my early 20s a therapist said I gave people more credit than they deserve. Suddenly the world makes much more sense.

I realize I sound sanctimonious. I’m sorry. This post is a little alienating for me, because it seems so obvious.

The way you describe unconscious living reminds me very much of Sartre’s notion of bad faith.

I agree with Bex that “dirty” was a poor choice, even for a joke.

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Liara Covert Says:

December 8th, 2007, 2:16 am

Its humbling and enlightening to realize that we control our own reactions and behaviors and whether or not we will act to raise our awareness. It is also a valuable lesson to learn that other people are not necessarily on our wavelength. To realize you are your own person and don’t influence the reactions of others is itself empowering.

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Groove Momma Says:

December 8th, 2007, 11:38 am

I recently found your blog and truly enjoy all the gems of insight you provide. Thank you!

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Lyman from Creating a Better Life Says:

December 8th, 2007, 13:14 pm

Just so you know, Leo… at least one of us (me) laughed out loud at your play on words.

Stay dirty :).

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Steve Nguyen Says:

December 8th, 2007, 16:39 pm

Thanks for this article Leo. The topic of living life consciously affects me emotionally and personally as someone who got lost while in college, stumbled his way into and out of law school, and eventually finding his way out of the “fog.”

Since 1997, after being dismissed from law school, I have made it my mission to live life to the fullest by achieving good emotional health and being my best.

Ten years ago, while working my way back through college towards grad school, a great and kind friend gave me a small photo artwork with these words: “You Will Because You Can.”

Today, this mantra is my mission and my life. It has helped me to stop drifting through life, stop blaming my circumstances on others, regain control of my life, and start making conscious, realistic, and achievable goals.

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John Rocheleau - Artist Says:

December 8th, 2007, 17:17 pm

I have lived in both extremes; consciously from the spirit, and unconsciously — driven by the ego.

Learning to hear your inner voice, and learning to discriminate between your lower and higher selves is vital in living consciously.

We often need a method to help us determine the true from the false, so we can make better conscious choices. Some options are: meditation, fitness and exercise, tai chi, yoga, and chi gung. Well, that’s just a sampling, but they are worth looking into.

Nothing of substance comes from a void. We need to exercise discipline to live consciously. The level discipline is directly related to the level of consciousness we aspire to.

And it is worth every effort we put into that direction.

Cheers,
John

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Jeff Pickett Says:

December 9th, 2007, 0:31 am

Leo-
I have to admit I have passed from the conscious to the unconscious from time to time. Somewhere in between I look around at how far I’ve come or would like to go and what would or should I have changed. But I look at what I have - 2 beautiful girls that love their dad - and I wouldn’t want to change a thing. The past is the past, but certainly looking forward - living life consciously is the goal.

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Susan Says:

December 10th, 2007, 0:00 am

I guess I’ll just keep asking this until somebody answers me: is there any way I can read this sites blog entries by month instead of by category? Thanks.

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Maria Says:

December 10th, 2007, 3:31 am

Hi Leo,

You articles on “Key boosting self confidence”, “Key to living consciously” and the “Key to having a clean desk” have all resonated very well with me. I have printed off the lists and they will reside by my (soon to be clear) on the wall so I have my guide to functioning at a higher level by me all the time.

I am going through a divorce and the unbearable stress makes living calmly difficult, especially when the divorce is acrimonious and there is a child involved.
Your points are so close to my heart as I have used this opportunity of change to improve myself and move forward as a better person. Sometimes though the fog of emotion leads me to slug around. I lost my career during my marriage and so I am trying to start all over again. With the help of the lists that I have printed I feel better equipped to start every day well. Changing just a little each day for the better.
Thank you for sharing these most useful pointers for us all to be free.
Best regards,
Maria

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Lodewijkvdb Says:

December 10th, 2007, 6:05 am

@Susan: It’s a “hack” but you can use the address bar. If you type in: http://zenhabits.net/2007/09/
then you get the posts of september, in a similar fashion as the frontpage (5 posts (excerpts), newest first, link to older posts below). I can see no other way…

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hlegius Says:

December 10th, 2007, 6:44 am

Hello!
Great article! It’s really fantastic =)
You managed to change my perception about somethings… now I’ll try to put yours tips into practice!

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Kelly Rigby Says:

December 10th, 2007, 19:53 pm

So many great points here so I’ll just add what works for me. I have been actively trying to live with conscious choice for almost 9 years now, and like Tina I find my ability to do that fluctuates. However, I figure that this is all part of the journey of life. Sometimes you’re flowing with the changes and other times life hits a raw nerve in you, you get scared and curl into a tight ball and REACT unconsciously to EVERYTHING. The main thing is to be kind and forgiving to yourself and get back on the path.

For me the path involves:
- daily meditation to turn off my persistent internal dialogue
- asking myself every day “What do I want in life?”
- journaling my fears, the niggly things on my attention, and my hopes and dreams so I can empty my head space, relax and chart how I’m going
- giving thanks every night for all that I have and singling out what has made me happiest that day
- staying present. The only important thing is how I feel TODAY, what I want TODAY. This is a tricky one but I think gratitude and meditation make it easier. It also helps to chase the JOY in your life. Do what makes you happy. The happier you are, the happier you will make those around you and the better wife, husband, parent, worker, boss, friend and family member you will be
- give yourself permission to say “I don’t know” or “I need more time”. So often we drift out of present time and into worry-ville because we obsess over what might happen or we try to solve a ‘problem’ that we don’t have an answer to yet. You don’t have to have everything figured out today. TRUST that life will sort things out in due course and your only job is to ENJOY TODAY. This will always set you up for and even BETTER TOMORROW.

Great post. Living consciously is truly the key to happiness!

Kelly

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psychic readings Says:

December 11th, 2007, 9:14 am

These are some really great tips!

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kaela_b Says:

December 25th, 2007, 21:50 pm

Thanks for the great post - i’m finding myself agreeing with too many of your questions about unconscious living :( - but was also interested in the quote you chose to head up the article - because it seems to be linking up creativity with unconsciousness and chance. It seems that there has to be a place for this too in any balanced life because often its the chance, unexpected things which can take you out of a rut and send you off in a whole new direction.

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Chris Hansen Says:

January 2nd, 2008, 0:45 am

Says it all.

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Alfa King Says:

January 6th, 2008, 12:53 pm

Great tips to start a new year. Many people live in what I’d call “false consciousness” and they never try to get out of it.

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