This is my 2013 update on this particular post. As I've
indicated earlier, I’ve been on a personal quest to live freer and happier all
my life. But, for the last four and a half years, at this writing, it’s become
the main focus of my life. I’ve learned much during this period. I guess I
could say I’ve minimally “earned” another masters degree and, possibly, a PhD
in Living Free. The path has been interesting, exciting, challenging and,
often, difficult and, sometimes, painful. We live in a very complicated world,
it has become more difficult since the last time I updated this post and I dare
say that it will only become more complicated in the future.
In The Beginning . . .
Fifty to sixty years ago, when I was a youngster and a young
adolescent, life was pretty peaceful, relatively speaking. I was born just
before World War II ended and the following year the Baby Boomer Generation
began. It was a time when the economy began to boom as a result of the war
effort finally ending the Great Depression. There were programs like the GI
Bill to assist service men and women returning from the war to gain education
and to buy homes they could have never afforded before the war. The job market
was expanding as technology began a rapid developmental period.
Then we had the Korean War followed by the Vietnam War
that I participated in as an active member of the U.S. Air Force (and as a
result of the Selective Service System draft). Faster and faster our world was
getting smaller and smaller and becoming a more and more global society. The
U.S. became the wealthiest nation in the world and one of the few Super Powers,
ultimately to become the only surviving Super Power. Change was constant and
rapid. Technology accelerated the changes by leaps and bounds.
Somehow, I became a non-conformist. No! I was not a
“hippie” or “beatnik.” But, I was an entrepreneur and entrepreneurs are, by
their very nature, non-conformists. We don’t see things as they are. We see
things as they can be with the innovations each of us adds to a capitalistic
society. I became a “serial entrepreneur,” always restless and always looking
for new ways to do things that moved business and society ahead. Early in my
business career I bought into the idea that it was the small businesses that
would lead the world by embracing new technologies. My chosen field was
electronic media and more specifically, the growing recording and video
production industries.
I began my interest in electronic media when I was about
11 or 12 years old starting with photography (actually, a graphic-visual medium
at that time, now an electronic medium), then discovering short-wave radio,
becoming a licensed amateur radio operator just after my 14th birthday and
going on to found both the amateur radio club and the on-campus broadcast radio
station at my undergraduate college. I discovered the recording and sound
industries during the first month of my freshman year at Montclair State
College (now, a university) in Montclair, New Jersey. What a ride my life has
been since that time.
But, here’s the rub. I went into business to secure my own
freedom and happiness and, ultimately, created my own form of enslavement. As I
went through the four years of my Air Force enlistment, I met my future wife. I
began to conform more and more to the traditional values that most people
embraced and, in so doing, gave up more and more of my personal freedom and,
with it, much of the happiness I was seeking.
Please! Do not misconstrue my meaning. We still lived a
fairly non-conforming lifestyle in many ways and there were many wonderful,
happy times. My son was born and became the most important accomplishment of my
life. He became an intelligent, capable, productive and FREE member of our
society. But, I had set aside many, if not most, of my personal ideals and
philosophies of personal freedom and happiness.
A Lifetime Later . . .
It was not until I reached my early 60’s that I realized
just how much. During all those years there was a continual gnawing feeling deep
inside that kept telling me that I had sold myself out and traded many of my
ideals, values and dreams for more traditional values and standards. I had
relinquished my free spirit, freedom and happiness for a self-imposed
imprisonment as a “wage slave.” I had conformed to how “they” (those who chose
to live a traditional and conforming lifestyle) thought I should live my life.
Of course, I made that choice freely.
Enter The 12 Steps
I identified and have been developing a 12-step approach
to living free as I’ve been reinventing myself and traveling on my quest to
regain my own freedom and happiness. Sure, 12 step programs are popular for
many things beginning with the Alcoholics Anonymous program. Bill W. and Dr.
Bob first introduced the AA 12 Step program in 1939. Millions have benefited
and the movement has spawned numerous 12 step programs addressing many other
addictions and compulsions.
My Living Free 12-step program is designed to help anyone
who feels trapped or imprisoned by their own thinking and is not as happy as
they want to be. It helps you make choices to break away from whatever you feel
is holding you back from attaining all the freedom you desire, however you
define living free for yourself. Living free should, as a natural consequence,
result in a happier, fulfilled life.
12 Steps For Living Free
Here, then, are my 12 Steps. In this post I list the
Steps and provide a brief description
of each step. Each Step has a link connecting to more detailed information and
implementation for each step.
Step 1. Dreams and Reality – You begin by facing
your reality as it is today. You grew up dreaming about your perfect life –
where you’d live, a lifestyle, who you’d marry, a family, what you would do
(occupationally or professionally) to support yourself and your family, your
adventures, travels and so on. Dreams always evolve as you grow and experience
life. What happened? Life happened, that's what. What is wrong and right about
your current life? You know that you’re not truly happy and you never seem to
have time to do the things you want to do. This is where you find yourself
asking the question, “Is this all there is?” It’s time to take your dreams out
of that dark closet, blow off the dust and revisit them.
Step 2. Self-discovering – Once you come to the
realization and have accepted that all is not as you feel it should be, then
you can begin exploring what you and your life are all about. This is where you
will find the roots of your discontent, unhappiness and lack of personal
freedom.
Step 3. Taking a Personal Inventory Part I & Part II – It’s time to take an assessment of your
personal assets. This doesn’t mean just your tangible assets, however. It means
going back through your life. What are your core beliefs? What did you learn
from your parents, teachers, religious experiences (if any), and what are your
professional/occupational, educational and training experiences? Who is your
family? Who are your friends? Depending on your age, this inventory could
become a very long list.
Step 4. Simplifying Part I & Part II – Life is complex. The average
person (and family) has to juggle all the complexities of daily domestic,
professional and social life including where you live, relationships with
family and friends, raising children if you have any, the complexities of whatever
your vocation or profession places upon you, health issues, finances, local,
state and federal rules, laws and politics, the economy and the list goes on.
The more we have and attempt to do, the more complicated and clouded our lives
become. Simplifying our lives contributes significantly to achieving personal
freedom and, ultimately, happiness. Simplifying can be done fairly quickly if
it is undertaken in numerous small incremental steps evaluating what is
important and not important in your life as you progress.
Step 5. Downsizing – If you were fortunate enough
to be born and grow up in the United States, no matter what strata of society
you come from, you have accumulated “STUFF!” Stuff can take several forms. It
can be tangible stuff like furniture, books, CD’s, vinyl records, old clothes,
etc. It can also be mental/psychological/emotional stuff (often referred to as
“baggage”) like lost friendships, painful memories, unrealized hopes, etc. It’s
time to let go of this “stuff” and get out of the “Stuff Warehousing
Business."
Step 6. Economizing – This is a serious and vitally
important step. You have to evaluate your relationship with money, investments,
debt and what you really need, financially, to live free and happy. If you are
in debt you are not free. You will likely be very surprised by the outcome of
this step.
Step 7. Avocations & Vocations – Do what you
love and the money will follow. Maybe you’ve heard this before. Living free is
not about having the highest paying job or career you can have. When you work
for money you’re very inclined to become a “wage slave.” Finding YOUR best
Avocation (as opposed to a vocation or occupation) means discovering something
that you love doing and would do for free except . . . people will actually pay
you. Thus, you can earn the income you need to sustain your Living Free
lifestyle while doing something you really love to do.
Step 8. Relationships – Your relationships
contribute a lot to how you define yourself. Very good relationships are
supportive, encouraging, non-judgmental and collaborative. Relationships that
do not provide these qualities are very often toxic relationships and will
drain you physically, mentally and emotionally - and many times, financially.
This is true of professional and personal - platonic, romantic and familial
relationships. In order for you to be free you have to eliminate all toxic
relationships and develop positive, mutually beneficial, supportive and
collaborative relationships.
Step 9. Making Amends – No one, and this includes
you, goes through life without being hurt and hurting others. Most often these
hurtful events are not done maliciously and often without knowledge that you or
the other party has been harboring these painful feelings. To be truly free you
must first and foremost forgive yourself for being human and making mistakes.
Then you must forgive those who have, in some way, wronged or hurt you. And,
equally important, you must seek to make amends with anyone you may have
knowingly or unknowingly hurt. They may or may not forgive you. If they don’t
forgive you it is their burden to bear. You have made your amends and are free
of any further guilt. You can’t be free and carry lifelong guilt on your
shoulders.
Step 10. Giving – What will you give? You’ve probably
heard that you must give to receive. In Biblical terms it was stated that, “as
ye sow, so shall ye reap.” Giving of yourself, whether financially, other
tangible items such as food/clothes/shelter to someone in need or giving of
your time are all ways of giving. You will gain freedom, happiness and
fulfillment from this simple action.
Step 11. Spirituality – This is not about God or
any specific religious belief system. And this is not some “New Age”
philosophy. This is simply about your connection with nature, the universe and
a greater intelligence and truth then you can comprehend. You may choose to
identify your spirituality by any of various names like God, Jehovah, Yahweh,
Allah, Jesus, Vishnu, Buddha or any of a number of other religious and
spiritual belief systems. You may choose to connect through nature. Even many
atheists display forms of spirituality, though they may not recognize it as
such. How you connect with others and with nature is part of spirituality and
that connection helps make living free possible.
Step 12. Creating Your Life List (aka a Bucket
List) – It’s never too early to create a Life List. Like everyone else, you
were born with a “terminal disease” called “Life.” The vast majority of human
beings don’t know when the end of their lives will actually come. So, why,
then, are you putting off creating a Life List of all the things YOU want to
experience and accomplish for yourself before you leave this world? As
far as we know, we only get one time around in this life on Earth. Life and
everything about it is a miraculous gift and we don't get a dress rehearsal.
So, what are you waiting for? Retirement? It may never come. It’s time to
create your personal Life List and take every opportunity to experience and
complete the items on your Life List - BEGINNING NOW!
These are my 12 Steps for Living Free. There are, of
course, other facets of the human experience that also contribute to our
freedom, happiness, well being and fulfillment, but they can all be
incorporated into one of these twelve steps. I’ve defined and explained these
12 steps in more detail in other posts. The title of each of the 12 steps is a
link to the detailed post on that particular step. I hope they will help you
define living free for your life . . . the Greatest Gift you’ve
been given.
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