Monday 18 August 2014

How Planning Less Can Set You Free

By Ben Craib

“Life is a process of becoming. A combination of states we have to go through. Where people fail is that they wish to elect a state and remain in it. This is a kind of death.” ~Anais Nin
Normally my girlfriend and I have a routine for Saturday mornings:
She goes to yoga at eleven AM and then heads into Central London to do a small amount of shopping, and perhaps visit a museum. I might get up, do some writing in the morning, tidy the flat, and then take a dance class at 1PM. These are routines we enjoy, or at least enjoy most of the time.
Last Saturday we spontaneously decided to do none of that.
Instead, we went for a walk along a local canal towards central London. It was a mild, hazy morning, with calm water, seagulls, ducks, joggers, quiet, and sun.
We left the canal and visited some inner city churches and their second hand markets, offering cheap coffee and large, silent spaces.
We finished by visiting two different specialty coffee shops. At the end we sat in the second and best, with sun streaming in through the windows, feeling calm and content.
As opposed to our normal Saturdays, there was a natural flow to the morning—perhaps better described as an evolution.
Every decision was spontaneous. Every decision felt natural. Every moment was savored.
I could have spent an hour planning our “intimate time” down to the last degree—but would it have contained the joy and peace that naturally flowed that day?
This is increasingly how I am practicing living my life: with a minimum of routines and plans, allowing the present moment to dictate the future.
I try to stay in touch with the process of becoming. In doing this:
·       Decisions come from a deeper, more natural place.
·       Life feels harmonious.
·       You cling less to plans and routines.
·       When circumstances do change, you are better prepared to face them because you do not cling to a desire of how things should be.
·       You open yourself up to infinite possibilities.
I don’t want to knock routines completely. They can bring richness, happiness, and comfort. For example, I cherish my early morning coffee grinding.
But clinging on too tightly to routines can be counterproductive because:
·       When something strays from our routine we suffer.
·       We create routines and make plans to impose some certainty on the future. The future is always uncertain. Therefore, by clinging onto routines we are always setting ourselves up for a fall.
·       Routines can be negative as well as positive. By blindly following them we can cause ourselves damage.
·       We close ourselves off to fulfilling and exciting possibilities. We can think we are happy living in a certain way, but really we are ignorant of the alternatives.
By clinging onto your routines you can, as Anais Nin says, you elect a state and remain in it, and close yourself off to growth, evolution, and change.
Think about your routines and the way you make plans. How many of your plans actually work out how you planned? How many of your routines do you go through blindly and mechanically?
Yesterday, did you have a plan, and did something unexpected happen?
How many of your major life events—jobs, relationships—have come out of the blue? How many times have you allocated an hour to go shopping, and then taken three, or allocated three hours to go and buy something, and then taken one?
If you are an obsessive planner, try a test: tomorrow, look at your plan, and then at the end of the day see if it worked out.
By becoming aware just how uncertain even the most planned lives are, we can let go of our need to control, learn to be soft, and move with the shifting events.

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