Submitted by TreatThompson t3_10ixf03 in GetMotivated
When I was a kid, I had no choice but to notice all the amazing in everyday life.
It would call out to me, flailing its arms around. Boring, bland, and dry didn’t exist.
Annie Dillard’s story captures this well:
>When she was six, she would hide pennies outside for strangers to find.
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>She would put them along sidewalks and mark down “SURPRISE AHEAD.”
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>Getting lost in it all filled her with joy. And thinking about someone finding her gift got her excited.
That childlike joy and wonder is often lost on me. I don’t look for the miraculous in the mundane anymore.
As a kid, I would have my mind blown watching a bird build its nest. Or get put in a daze spotting the first star at night.
The sad part is that none of these wonders and joys ever disappeared.
It’s not like the world gets less interesting. I just got less interested.
The truth is, everything is interesting. I’m surrounded by the miraculous. Nothing is mundane.
It just takes looking closer. Life’s unremarkable when I glance over everything.
I want to let the simple things blow my mind and crack a smile again.
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I share ideas from great thinkers so we can stand on the shoulders of giants, instead of figuring life out alone
_sagittarivs t1_j5h80ai wrote
There's a concept called Shōshin in Zen philosophy, seemingly related to this childlike joy and wonder; it talks of letting go of preconceptions and for people to become open and eager, as a beginner would be.
Becoming adults we tend to see things in a different light from children would; we would see things as how we think of them, with our past experiences, rather than for what they are.
So with shōshin, normal, usual, mundane things or events can even seem to be wonderful, new and interesting. It's not that difficult to change a little of one's mindset bit by bit, and things will start to change in a bigger scale.