Seneca on the Importance of Focus
"To be everywhere is to be nowhere." ~ Seneca from Letters from a Stoic
Love the fact that was said by a guy who lived 2,000 years ago. (Apparently multi-tasking/over-working has been around for awhile.
There are obviously a lot of ways we can look at this: from the frenzied pace we tend to live running from one activity to another to the constant juggling of projects in a never-ending loop of trying to do way more than possible and/or necessary. So, I'll ask: are you being "everywhere" and therefore "nowhere"? How can you slow down and experience the Power of Now?
Another thought comes to mind: Ken Wilber, the modern Integral Philosopher (see Notes), talks about the fact that we have what he calls "multiple lines of development" in our lives--from the spiritual line of development to the intellectual, creative, physical, social, family, moral, etc. Obviously, we want to push all of our lines forward but Wilber likes to say, "Don't be a metaphyscial glutton."
Don't try to develop ALL your lines at once. Slow down, pick a line or two to work on and FOCUS. In other words, "To be everywhere is to be nowhere."
"To be everywhere is to be nowhere." ~ Seneca from Letters from a Stoic
Love the fact that was said by a guy who lived 2,000 years ago. (Apparently multi-tasking/over-working has been around for awhile.
There are obviously a lot of ways we can look at this: from the frenzied pace we tend to live running from one activity to another to the constant juggling of projects in a never-ending loop of trying to do way more than possible and/or necessary. So, I'll ask: are you being "everywhere" and therefore "nowhere"? How can you slow down and experience the Power of Now?
Another thought comes to mind: Ken Wilber, the modern Integral Philosopher (see Notes), talks about the fact that we have what he calls "multiple lines of development" in our lives--from the spiritual line of development to the intellectual, creative, physical, social, family, moral, etc. Obviously, we want to push all of our lines forward but Wilber likes to say, "Don't be a metaphyscial glutton."
Don't try to develop ALL your lines at once. Slow down, pick a line or two to work on and FOCUS. In other words, "To be everywhere is to be nowhere."