Be here now. In this moment. It's the only one you have

Woman cuddling dog, sitting on mountain top staring into the distance
We wish it were Friday already. We wish it were summer still. We wish it were 5pm. We wish it were holidays. We wish it were lunchtime. We wish it were Friday again. We wish we were in Fiji. We wish we were in a house of our own. We wish we were older. We wish we were young again. We wish we were married. We wish we were single. We wish our kids were at school. We wish our kids were babies again. We wish it were Friday again.
We always wish we were in some place, or some moment, other than where we are.
Why do we do that? 

In wishing we were elsewhere, we’re saying to the Universe that what we have is not good enough. But actually, what we have and what we are right now is EVERYTHING. 
It's OK to want more and strive for more - and you absolutely should - but the challenge is to not get so heavily invested in where you want to go that you forget to celebrate  today.
I love this quote from Buddha: "There are only two days of the year that nothing can be done. One is called yesterday and the other is called tomorrow. So today is the right day to love, believe, do and mostly live." 
The struggle to be fully present in the moment, and really making the most of what I have, is a constant theme in my life. I have a very busy mind that’s often consumed with worrying about the future or replaying the past. Neither of these is conducive to being right here, right now. The result is that I am often so immersed in the coming attractions that I miss the full experience of the feature. 
Image by @stealtimeback via Instagram
When I was travelling recently, I realised how much calmer I felt, because I was completely immersed in what was right in front of my eyes. This ability to tune out of the pointless (and often damaging) chatter in my mind and into everything around me is something I want to strengthen in my everyday life. When I stop to appreciate the awesomnity* of my life, it’s like putting a pin in the balloon of my worries, and simultaneously lighting a rocket under my life-satisfaction levels. That’s because I am acutely aware that I have everything I need right now, and that every element of my life is perfectly imperfect. This moment is enough. 
Recently I saw a very moving TED talk by poet Robin Morgan and it really highlighted the beautiful experience of being fully present. Robin, who has Parkinson’s disease, has written some incredibly powerful poems about the process of watching her body slow down. One of the pieces that touched me most is called This Dark Hour. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

***
This Dark Hour
Late summer, 4 A.M. The rain slows to a stop, dripping still from the broad leaves of blue hostas unseen in the garden’s dark. Barefoot, careful on the slick slate slabs, I need no light, I know the way, stoop by the mint bed, scoop a fistful of moist earth, then grope for a chair, spread a shawl, and sit, breathing in the wet green August air.
This is the small, still hour before the newspaper lands in the vestibule like a grenade, the phone shrills, the computer screen blinks and glares awake.
There is this hour: poem in my head, soil in my hand: unnamable fullness. This hour, when blood of my blood bone of bone, child grown to manhood now – stranger, intimate, not distant but apart – lies safe, off dreaming melodies while love sleeps, safe, in his arms.
To have come to this place, lived to this moment: immeasurable lightness. The density of black starts to blur umber. Tentative, a cardinal’s coloratura, then the mourning dove’s elegy. Sable glimmers toward grey; objects emerge, trailing shadows; night ages toward day. The city stirs.
There will be other dawns, nights, gaudy noons. Likely, I’ll lose my way. There will be stumbling, falling, cursing the dark. Whatever comes, there was this hour when nothing mattered, all was unbearably dear.
And when I’m done with daylights, should those who loved me grieve too long a while, let them remember that I had this hour – this dark, perfect hour – and smile.

***

*This is a real word. Don’t you dare google it.


Hello? Yes, I have a problem. Thank you, bye

I had to spend most of my weekend without internet or mobile access, and it was HORRIBLE. This is not the most significant event of my weekend – it was a beautiful getaway with friends to a country house about two hours north of Sydney, in the Hunter Valley wine region – but this struggle with switching off is what I want to talk about here.

Friends on phones, ignoring each other

At first I welcomed the opportunity to distance myself from the outside world and settle into the stillness. That lasted about half an hour. The only thing that settled was a feeling of restlessness into my bones. At the heart of it: fear of missing out (I think the kids call this FOMO), fear of boredom and fear of being alone with my thoughts, in case I would be confronted by something I didn’t want to deal with. I suspect this latter reason is at play in many modern-life distractions: everything from excessive food and alcohol intake to dead-end relationships.  

Luckily – or unluckily, depending on your perspective – someone mentioned they’d received a good signal in the driveway. Rejoice! From here I was able to check in on the blog, do my daily angel card posts (which appear on the home page, and on my Instagram @onegroundedangel). You can probably guess what happened. Once I had taken care of those tasks I found myself checking Facebook, Twitter, the weather, the cricket score (I don’t even like cricket!), the weather (yes, again), various news sites, my five email accounts… No longer was I relaxing, enjoying my friends’ company and breathing in the fresh country air, I was engaging with people and situations elsewhere. Not being present. Not being with my friends. Not being here, in this moment, the only moment that is real. What a waste.

By distancing myself from the group (no one else seemed to have a problem staying away from the internet) and standing very still (internet coverage was patchy) on a gravel driveway by myself, what I was essentially saying was that I care more about the lives of people in other cities, other countries – most of whom I don’t actually know – than I do about the people who had been sitting next to me, spending time with me in the here and now.  

Recently researchers at the University of Missouri in the US identified a trend called iPhone separation anxiety. Although not a clinically recognised disorder, this term does describe what appears to be a growing problem – our inability, or reluctance, to switch off. You see it in restaurants when couples don’t even talk to each other  they’re too busy on their phones. In this study, participants reported anxiety and poor cognitive functioning when separated from their iPhones.

This, coupled with the events of the weekend, have spurred me to do a study of my own. Starting from tonight, I’m switching off all social media for a week. I’ve done this before, and really felt the benefits, so I’m confident I can follow through. I’ll still log in to do my daily angel card reading and will update the blog, but that’s it. It’s time to remind myself that my life exists in the here and now, and not on a tiny screen.


God help me. 
The beautiful spot where I spent my weekend.