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Drama
is a Choice
by Alan Cohen, Haiku, HI
My lawnmower repairman is an Australian guy who I enjoy for his attitude
as much as his skill. One day when I arrived at his shop after closing
time, I apologized for keeping him after hours. Thats okay,
mate, he told me. No dramas.
No dramas. Thats one of the best affirmations Ive ever heard.
In America we say, No problem. No dramas is the
next level one we might all do well to aspire to.
The notion of drama is built on multi-layered illusions. First,
there are bad guys who are trying to get a good guy. This assumes the
presence or reality of evil which has power over good. If a higher power
is truly higher, this cannot be so. Either God is present and all powerful,
or not. If evil is illusion, is the truth of good not stronger?
Next, drama assumes a victim position of the protagonist. Someone stronger
is trying to hurt someone weaker, and the weaker one has to struggle to
overcome the stronger evil. Surely you have come to recognize, at least
at a possibility level, that you are not a victim; that there is a direct
relationship between your thoughts and your creations; that you are the
source of your experience, and no matter what errors you have made, at
any given moment you can shift your thoughts and retool your destiny.
Heaven does not have a cheap seat section for whiners.
Finally, a drama suggests doubt or tension about the outcome. Will the
bad guys win, or can the underdog triumph? A Course in Miracles tells
us that the word challenge is meaningless to a spiritual master,
since challenge implies a doubt about the outcome. One of
the Courses lessons is A happy outcome to all things is sure.
Drama is not a fact; it is an interpretation. Two different people could
look upon the same situation, and one could see a frightening drama, while
the other sees a great opportunity. A shoe salesman was dispatched to
Africa in the early 1900s to open up a new territory for his company.
A month later the home office received a telegram: Disaster! Disaster!
These people do not wear shoes. Bring me home immediately!
Several months later another shoe company sent their rep to Africa. They,
too, received a telegram: Opportunity! Opportunity! These people
do not wear shoes. Triple production immediately!
Have you ever noticed that people who have a lot of dramas in their life
always have a lot of drama? And people who have a moderate amount of dramas
always have a moderate amount of drama? And those who have little drama
always have little drama? Is this because of astrology, genetics, or fate?
Or could each group be creating dramas--or their absence--by their thoughts,
willingness, and interpretation of events?
Drama can be an addiction. Some people grow accustomed to a certain amount
of drama, and if their drama level falls below a certain threshold, they
find something to create a drama around, to bring their adrenaline level
back up to speed. By contrast, people with few dramas seem to know how
to backpeddle and cut back on drama if it exceeds their comfort level.
I do not mean to demean your difficulties or suggest that you adopt a
Mr. Spock-like non-feeling nature. In our human adventure, we all face
illusions instigated by fear. I am simply suggesting that you may increase
your effectiveness and peace by questioning the reality of the dramas
that distract you from your purpose or joy.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, author of the perennially popular book, The
Power of Positive Thinking, suggests that successful people use a method
we could all learn from: Respond to emergencies in a casual manner. Should
you perceive an emergency, do what you need to do, but do it from a place
of calm assurance that this will get handled. Dont fake it
til you make it. Instead, faith it til you make
it.
In the 1980s I joined several citizen diplomacy missions to the
(then) Soviet Union. We were inspired by President Eisenhowers statement
that One day the people of the world will want peace so much that
the governments will have to get out of their way and give it to them.
We went to build bridges of trust and understanding with the Russian people.
And it worked.
On one of our trips we had a banquet at our hotel, where we invited a
few of our Soviet friends to join us. We had given some of them gifts
of friendship. This was, however, verboten by the then-ominous KGB. A
tense moment came when a KGB man infiltrated our gathering, chastised
a young Russian man for accepting gifts, and removed the packages from
his arms. To my amazement, a fellow in our group walked up to the KGB
guy, took them back, and gave them back to the fellow. The KGB man backed
off and walked away.
I saw this scenario as a phenomenal lesson in the confidence in outcome
that sincere intention brings. When you know who you are and what you
are here to do, you recognize that there is no power that can stop you.
You do not have to fight anyone or anything. Just stand in truth, where
drama has no claim over love, and dissipates into a greater ocean of well-being.
Alan Cohen is the author of many popular inspirational books, including
the best-selling The Dragon Doesnt Live Here Anymore
and Why Your Life Sucks and What You can do about It. Join
Alan this August 2127 in Fiji for a life-changing Mastery Training.
For information on this program or to receive Alans daily inspirational
quote and monthly newsletter, visit www.alancohen.com,
email info@alancohen.com,
or phone 1-800-568-3079.
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