Personal Growth - Sunny side up
by Megha Bajaj

Megha bajaj is above everything else a seaker. At time
she tries to find herself through words. At other times,
she attempts to understand herself by being with childern.
contact:megha83@hotmail.com
A pristine white chart paper. A single black speck of dirt on one side. Chances are, the human eye will first see the black spot rather than admire the expanse of white, which is untouched.
A beautiful face with radiant skin. A single acne mark. Chances are, the girl to whom the face belongs complains about the little blemish each day instead of feeling gratitude for what is already right.
A wonderful relationship. So many beautiful memories. A single acrimonious
quarrel. Perhaps you have actually considered ending the relationship
for just that.
When I asked myself some years ago, why I was often so miserable, the answer
stunned me. I had expected some complex, deep, karmic revelation. It wasn’t.
It was simple. Since childhood, I had trained myself to look at what is wrong,
and not at that which was right.
If I got nine out of ten in a spelling test, instead of celebrating the nine
rights, I complained about the one wrong. If I had three good friends in
class, and there was one girl who didn’t like me, I focused my entire energy on
that girl. I did not know at that time that wherever goes attention, wherever
goes energy, there goes life.
I would never appreciate what I was doing right, rather I would keep
focusing on the wrong, and not realising the profound law of life,
wherever goes attention, wherever goes energy, there goes life. Every part of my
body was functioning perfectly – just a slight disorder in the right ear, and
instead of stopping, and thanking life for a beautiful body, I would complain
and focus on the little aching part. Little wonder, my entire body had started
giving way just a few months ago.
There are hundreds of books on the
laws of attractions and scores of gurus
who speak of only, and only, focusing
on the right. And yet, it has taken a lot
of time for this intellectual understanding
of the law of life to become a part
of my DNA. Perhaps because the training
of focusing on what is wrong began
with so many of us as kids itself. In all
probability, when you were blissfully
playing in a room full of adults, no one
so much as glanced towards you, but
the moment you opened your mouth
wide and howled or cried, you were
immediately the centre of attraction.
Such experiences repeated in and out
perhaps trained your subconscious,
like they did mine, to believe that if
you need attention you need to be in
pain, or be unhealthy, or be unhappy.
Thank God, I now realise that life is
perfect because it is, and not because it
fits my definition of perfect. I am able
to find something to be happy about by
looking for what is right, even on the
worst of days. I am able to feel healthy,
even if just one part of my body is not
functioning to its best capacity. I am
able to look for something to appreciate
in almost everyone. And abundance
is unfolding into my life. Moreover, I
am just waiting – to watch more magic
unfold. The mantra is simple, wherever
I go, whoever I meet, whatever I do, I
will ask myself, what’s right? .
See more articles on Personal Growth at: http://www.lifepositive.com/articles/PersonalGrowth
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