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Eckhart Tolle…writes about Time

by Rick Baker
On Jan 13, 2011
A month ago, one of the LinkedIn groups asked a question ‘What is time?”. That started an exchange of thoughts. One fellow mentioned Eckhart Tolle would have views about Time. I said I would write to him to check it out firsthand. So, I wrote to Eckhart Tolle to ask him to explain his views of Time.
 
I let him know I had read some of his books and I knew he had commented on Time and I was interested in a summary of his views.
 
I have not, as yet, received Eckhart Tolle’s response.
 
However, my sister gave me a copy of his 2005 book titled ‘A New Earth, Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose’.
 
In that book, Eckhart Tolle writes about Time.
 
Here are some excerpts:
 
At the section titled ‘The Paradox of Time’…
 
‘The space of Now is confused with what happens in that space. The confusion of the present moment with content gives rise not only to the illusion of time, but also the illusion of ego.’
 
Note: Time is an illusion…Eckhart Tolle has written that more than once.
 
That captures a piece of his view of Time.
 
At the next section titled ‘Eliminating Time’...
 
“Time, that is to say, past and future, is what the false mind-made self, the ego, lives on, and time is in your mind. It isn’t something that has an objective existence “out there”. It is a mind-structure needed for sensory perception, indispensable for practical purposes, but the greatest hindrance to knowing yourself. Time is the horizontal dimension of life, the surface layer of reality. Then there is the vertical dimension of depth, accessible to you only through the portal of the present moment.
 
So instead of adding time to yourself, remove time.”
 
Eckhart Tolle then goes on to talk about two types of time: clock time and psychological time.
 
That is another piece of his view of Time.
 
Provocative…
 
Footnote:
A link to Eckhart Tolle http://www.eckharttolle.com/home

Tags:

Beyond Business | I'm too busy! - I don't have time!

Sales Tweet #127

by Rick Baker
On Jan 11, 2011
Sales Tweet #127 The optimist may be as wrong as the pessimist...but the optimist has more fun.
 
The Thinking Behind the Sales Tweet
Just don’t let the optimism get outside the bounds of realism.

Tags:

Beyond Business | Thought Tweets

About Time

by Rick Baker
On Jan 6, 2011
I don’t have enough time to do that!
 
How often do you say that? How often do you think that?
 
Do you ever question whether or not that is true?
 
I have been thinking about Time quite a bit lately.
 
I started thinking about Time a couple of months ago when, one after another, I heard a number of people say they did not have time to do this or to do that. It expanded when a friend asked me if I had read anything by the [Canadian] author Eckhart Tolle1. It expanded more when the people in the LinkedIn group called Positive Thinkers started to exchange ideas about Time.
 
While this was going on I wrote Thought Posts expressing an opinion Successful people have more time2. Some people argued this was absolutely impossible. Other people said they agreed with the view. And, the LinkedIn group discussion of Time continues. And, I wrote and asked Eckhart Tolle if he would share his thoughts about Time. I know, in one of his CDs, he said “Time is an illusion”. Perhaps, that’s enough said?
 
Eckhart Tolle teaches the Power of Now and the Art of Presence:
  • We only have the present.
  • When the present passes, it becomes the past...and it is gone. It is at best a memory.
  • The future is not guaranteed to any of us. If it arrives then it arrives as the next piece of ‘the present’.
 
So, I am about ready to set aside the question “What is Time?” Although, before I do that I will restate my views:
  • Time is an organizing-tool designed by Man.
  • Time is an introductory effort at measuring the incomprehensible [universe].
Setting aside the definition of Time, most people would agree each of us has ‘the present’. And, during our lives we have a string of pieces of ‘the present’. As each piece of ‘the present’ passes it becomes the past. As the next piece of ‘the present’ arrives it ceases to be the future. We do not know how many pieces of ‘the present’ will come to us. All we know for sure is we have ‘the present’.
 
We can succeed if we make the best use of the present. Successful people have 2 good habits:
  1. They do better at defining what success means to them
  2. They make the better use of the present
I continue to think successful people have more time.
 
Footnotes:
  1. I have now listened to several Eckhart Tolle audio books. A link to .Eckhart Tolle
  2. Successful people have more time links Successful People Have More Time and About Time

Stephen Covey - The 8th Habit

by Rick Baker
On Jan 5, 2011
Here is a table I created after reading Stephen R. Covey’s The 8th Habit.
 
The 8th HABIT - Stephen Covey
 
WHOLE PERSON
4 NEEDS
4 INTELLEGENCES / CAPACITIES
4 ATTRIBUTES
VOICE
VALUES / MANIFESTATIONS
MIND
To learn
Mental Intelligence (IQ)
Vision
Talent (Disciplined Focus)
desire, dreams, hopes, goals, plans, imagination... sense of self, destiny, mission, role in life, purpose and meaning
BODY
To live
Physical Intelligence (PQ)
Discipline
Need ("See" Meeting Needs)
define and accept reality, subordinating today's pleasure for a greater longer-term good
HEART
To Love
Emotional Intelligence (EQ)
Passion
Passion (Love To Do)
optimism, excitement, emotional connections, determination
SPIRIT
To Leave a Legacy
Spiritual Intelligence (SQ)
Conscience
Conscience (Do What's Right)
fairness, honesty, respect, contribution
 
Footnote:

Tags:

Beyond Business | Emotions & Feelings @ Work | Put Your Best Brain Forward

The value of not thinking

by Rick Baker
On Dec 15, 2010
If you can stop thinking then you can give your brain a rest.
 
That will provide some significant benefit, particularly when you are under stress.
 
Here are a couple of suggestions about the Value of not thinking:
  • If we are not thinking then we have managed to turn off the mental noise that consumes and wastes much of our brainpower. Freeing up some brainpower…that’s a good thing.
  • If we are not thinking then we are more capable of being selective about our next thought choices. Our next thought choices can be better concentrated on a single topic. That is a thing of genius. And, our next thought choices can be more positive: it is easier to set negative thoughts aside by not thinking for a time rather than trying to replace a negative thought with a positive thought. That is a practical step toward the area known as positive mental attitude.
For most people, it is not easy to stop thinking.
 
It takes practice.

Tags:

Beyond Business | Put Your Best Brain Forward

Feel good, look good, be good

by Rick Baker
On Dec 9, 2010
We have defined Integrity.
 
Definition of Integrity
  1. When you know your Personal Values and
  2. When you can express your Personal Values in writing [showing how you think the think] and
  3. When you can and do talk with others about your Personal Values [talk the talk] and
  4. When your actions are consistent with your Personal Values [walk the walk] and
  5. When you acknowledge your think-talk-walk errors and strive to not repeat them
            …then you have Integrity
 
That definition of Integrity is ‘personal’: each person is the judge of his/her own Integrity. When we created the definition we intentionally avoided including judgmental things such as ‘honesty’, ‘probity’, etc. Our definition of Integrity is about do the pieces hold together rather than what is [morally] right or wrong.
 
Normal people know right from wrong.
 
Yes – there is a range. At the centre there is common ground.
 
Regardless, normal people know when they are doing right and they know when they are doing wrong.
 
Dr. David J. Lieberman states our mind consists of 3 parts:
  • The Body…this part of the mind causes us to do what feels good
  • The Ego…this part of the mind causes us to do what looks good
  • The Soul…this part of the mind causes us to do what is good
That simple summary captures normal people know right from wrong.
 
That does not mean we always do what we know is right. As an example: sometimes self-esteem is low and ego takes over, causing us to do what makes us look good rather than what we know is right. Other times our desire for short-term pleasure trumps the right thing to do.

When we do wrong – when people of high Integrity do wrong – we find ourselves at Point 5 of the Integrity definition.
 
So - people possessing high Integrity do not need us to act as their judge: they are self-regulating.

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.