Detachment and the Impossible

Date: January 16th, 2009

Category: Inspiration

I received a large number of e-mails in response to my two articles on the impossible dream, and many of the comments prompted me to go into the subject a bit further. Primarily, I want to emphasize that when you’re in a seemingly impossible situation, one of the most important but least understood tools you can employ to turn things around is detachment.

There are many things from which you can detach yourself, and one of the most important is the habit of judging people, actions, and circumstances as being right or wrong, good or bad. As Deepak Chopra says in The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, when you are constantly classifying, labeling, and evaluating, you “create a lot of turbulence in your internal dialogue.” The more internal bickering that takes place, the less time and room (in your mind) you have for constructive thinking.

Worry, irrelevant thoughts, and fears only add to this internal bickering. All of these are abstracts from which you should make a conscious effort to detach yourself. Even more important is the necessity to detach yourself from needing the approval of others. When you are attached to peer approval, you tend to make bad decisions.

Then there is the pain and discomfort of your present situation. The more you struggle against the unpleasant circumstances of the moment, the more time and energy you waste. It’s okay to want things to get better down the road, but don’t waste time and energy wishing things were different than they are right now.

Accepting your present situation means detaching yourself from the pain it is causing you. Philosophically, you should learn to accept pain as a normal part of life. Which means, paradoxically, that the best way to eliminate pain is to not try to eliminate it. The more you fight pain, the more it is likely to persist.

Above all, learn to detach yourself from specific results. Practice the art of being flexible. Understand that circumstances constantly change and that things rarely work out precisely as planned. The results you end up with may be much different from the results you were after, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they will be less satisfying. If you are too attached to a specific result, it shuts down your creativity.

Your mind-set should be: “I won’t die if things don’t work out as planned, so I’ll just step back and let the Cosmic Ether work things out.” As with peer approval, when you are too attached to a specific result, you have a tendency to force decisions, and forced decisions are most often bad decisions.

All this doesn’t mean you should permanently resign yourself to the circumstances of your currently bad situation. Nor does it mean that you should give up your desire or intention for a specific result. What you should give up is your attachment to that result. Or, as Chopra puts it, you should “accept the present and intend the future.”

When you become adept at detachment — from pain, from evaluating and classifying everything that crosses your path, from precise results — it gives you the time, energy, and mental clarity to focus on the single most important activity for overcoming an impossibly bad situation: exploiting opportunities.

What opportunities? The opportunities that are part and parcel of every “impossible” situation. Based on personal experience, I am convinced that the greatest opportunities lie in the eye of the storm — at the very center of your worst problems.

Use your will to detach yourself from your impossible situation and, instead, spend your time cultivating the opportunities it has brought into your life — keeping in mind that such opportunities may be heavily camouflaged.

Thus, achieving sainthood is not the motivation for becoming detached. The only sound motivation for becoming detached is rational self-interest — the realization that if you keep your mind as clear as possible, you will have more time and clarity to concentrate on exploiting new opportunities.

4 Responses to “Detachment and the Impossible”

  1. animal -artist Says:

    Learning how to become detached from one’s life is a counter intuitive exercise. I know one of the largest obstacles to my own success was to learn how to get myself (little self) out of my own way!

    Fortunately there are many good sources of books and methods to help learn the skills. The most direct method I have found so far is EFT. This method actually will give you results in minutes! Really! I have tried it on everything from “fear of cities” to weight loss.

    Best of all the how-to manual is a free download!

    Caution! Do NOT click on this website or learn this method unless you really want to make some positive changes because there is no going back to the old you.

  2. rmeyer Says:

    Robert,

    I actually heard that some Objectivists were planning to hold a “necktie” party for you. Then you had to go and spoil it all by mentioning rational self-interest in your final sentence.

    I’m sure you have put some of them in a state of confusion with your metaphysical speculations. No, wait a minute. There is no such thing as a confused Objectivist. You can’t become confused relying on reason only—can you?

    Anyway, your ideas about detachment are valid. Personally, I’ve always called it non-attachment. Many people don’t realize that the more you think about your negative situations the more negative circumstances you attract. You know—the thing I feared most has come upon me.

    I believe there is an effective three-step method for attracting what you desire.

    1. Meditate and visualize on what it is you desire. See the results you want to accomplish
    2. Become detached from it. Let it go. Send it to the Universal Source.
    3. Take positive actions to accomplish your desire.

    Unfortunately, most people are hazy about their goals and desires. They constantly worry about everything under the sun. And they wish and hope instead of taking concerted action.

    I agree with Deepak Chopra about how people create turbulence with their inner dialogue. Carlos Castaneda says that “stopping your inner dialogue” is the key to learning how to act with purpose.

    Robert A. Meyer

  3. fritzvdm Says:

    Yes, I agree, but detachment is a long time coming. You need a certain maturity and belief in the Universe’s amiability first. Detachment does not come from raging me-me-me self-interest. It comes from survival self interest as was shown in the Airbus disaster, or rather, averted disaster, in the Hudson river today. Or maybe yesterday in your place.

  4. jfeka Says:

    This is remarkable!

    Hardly 5 minutes ago I decided to take a detached position from a frustrating situation in which I’ve been embroiled and now I read this.

    I won’t go into detail about the situation because part of my fresh approach has been a committment to immediately suspend any new action on my part (including telling others about it) until the other party at least has a chance to respond.

    I don’t know yet how this detatchment will affect the outcome, but, for the moment I feel greatly relieved — it’s like taking a deep breath of fresh, cool air — and am hopeful that an agreeable resolution will result.

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