Why Vultures Lie in Wait, and Deepak Chopra’s Law of Least Effort
I grew up believing that STRIVING towards goals and feeling DRIVEN in one’s passions were necessary components of success. They can also be exhausting components of success.
Deepak Chopra, in his book The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, talks about the Law of Least Effort. “Nature’s intelligence functions with effortless ease…this is the principle of least action, of no resistance.”
But what of all those long tedious hours of writing and rewriting? What of all the hours spent networking, following up leads, peaking under every stone for missed opportunities?
The carrion-eating vultures I encounter on early-morning hikes got me to thinking that maybe Deepak Chopra is right. “Grass doesn’t try to grow, it just grows,” he tells us. “Birds don’t try to fly, they fly.”
Vultures are “least effort” opportunists, willing to watch and wait, poking their bald red heads into putrefying places and coming up with enough to feed themselves and their not-too-picky young. Patient enough to wait—yet dedicated enough to spend long hours in the sky, catching updraft after updraft.
Vultures are also creatures of habit. The vultures that live on my home mountain wake up early, fly to their favorite granite outcropping, and patiently wait for the sun to rise so that they can dry the dew from their wing feathers. This patient ritual pays homage to the sun. They stand still as statues, slowly spreading their 6-foot expanse of wing, looking prayerful as the sun’s warmth sinks into their bones.
But stories don’t write themselves. Writers can’t just sit and wait. So what can we learn from Deepak’s Law of Least Effort?
“Think of your physical body as a device for controlling energy,” Chopra writes, “it can generate, store, and expend energy.”
Maybe the vultures aren’t just drying the dew from their wings, maybe they’re storing sun power. Have you ever arisen early in the morning and gone outside with a book you’ve been meaning to read for years finally tucked under your arm? Basked in its warmth for an hour or two, soaking up every beautifully described scene, every graceful turn of phrase?
When we SIT WITH ANOTHER AUTHOR’S WORK, fully present, still as a statue, we are gathering up the energy we will need to write our own story. Think of every beautiful book you’ve ever read as energy stored within you, patiently waiting to be reshaped into a new story, a new truth. Gratitude for the work of others releases this stored energy and allows it to flow almost effortlessly into our work.
Dedicate at least ten minutes a day to standing in awe of what someone else has written. Feel the fullness it brings. Then spread your wings and get out there and find your stories.
Soaring is an important part of scavenging, and dedication to one’s goals is not the same as exhaustive striving or feeling driven. Dedication is more like prayer, a product of the heart, not the head.
Comments
I also like the idea of reading with gratitude to nurture the feeling of our writing as part of a lineage. That helps to calm our ego, and thus our fears.
Janet Riehl
www.riehlife.com
Chris
http://cc-chronicles.blogspot.com
Stef Goebel
That is how to live life - with daily renewal.
See you in a week!!!
This is what life is about – a daily renewal.
I will see you in just a few days! I can’t wait for next week -
Tracy
Beautifully said! I, too, have had the experience of feeling that every other author's book was an energy gift to me. I have also come to appreciate how important it is to take in the energy of others--their words, their ideas, their physical presence. Humans seem to be closed systems when not open to the energy of others and that energy surely, surely sparks magic. The law of leas effort works, in part, because of that.
Some years ago, when career coaching was still part of my path and before my own book on career (Living the Dream--A Guidebook for Job Seekers and Career Explorers)came out, I gave endless copies of The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success to clients because I believed it was the best thing out there on career (at least until my own book hit the streets). Chopra didn't write it with that specifically in mind, but those Universal Principles work in every area of life.
Melanie MUlhall
http://www.melaniemulhall.wordpress.com
I think what you are talking about is finding our own unique rhythm and flow and living it.
I too spend precious time reading and those times fill me with inspiration to continue writing.
Thanks for the beautiful reminder that not all of us grub and crawl to the next level, that it is possible to soar on a current of mountain air.
Cindy Morris, msw
Priestess Entrepreneur
http://PriestessEntrepreneur.com/blog
It is my belief that life becomes easier and more fulfilling when we are doing what we are meant to do (feasting on carrion, in the vultures' case!).
And now I feel less guilty about diving into a good book and getting lost in anothers' words! Usually reading feels like a guilty pleasure for me; now I can recast it as a way to get recharged and inspired to to live -and tell- my own stories....
lorilyn
The whoosh of "ah" accompanying this comment is me exhaling. A wonderful physical reaction. The pictures were amazing as well.
Thank you.
Christine
And I love that you chose the vulture, who is like Pele or like Shiva, who takes the things that no longer thrum with life, uses them to sustain other life, and at the same time keeps the "garbage" from piling up.
Thank you!
I know that where the vultures are nothing goes to waste - not even the tiny body of a baby coyote hit by a vehicle and left in the road to die. My husband found him - already dead - and put him off the road and into the desert. I'm sure he made a full meal for more than one vulture - my only consolation to an otherwise totally cruel and wasteful death. Could there be a story here? A story about birth and death, a story about man's ceaseless and careless cruelty toward nature, a story of the opportunistic vulture who simply waits patiently for a meal to appear - no feeling, no compassion, no empathy. The vulture "just is".
Lindy (AZ)
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Page
http://cc-chronicles.blogspot.com
Alice Liles
www.brightlightsmuleshoe.blogspot
Christy Heady
www.christyheady.blogspot.com