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Have you ever
thought that giving your life to what you do best might help you feel the weight
of the years much less? It sounds implausible, but if you think about it, we are
all special. All of us have something to pass on to others, so that the best of
us lives on. Even if we don't think we have them, all of us can discover and
utilize our unique talents, skills, aptitudes, and character-whether we are 35
or 65– to make a life-enriching difference. Even if we are not Mother Teresa or
Albert Einstein, we may well be an extraordinary partner, parent, grandparent,
or friend, without really knowing it. Or we may be that artist or teacher who
can ignite the spark of enthusiasm and adventure in those who will be here after
we are gone. Shakespeare lays down the challenge as he says,

 

Look in the
mirror and tell the face thou viewest

Now is the time
that face should form another.

 

If you are
interested not just in the undirected path of life, but in consciously leaving a
legacy that will enrich lives you touch, here are four ways you can start right
away:

 

 1)   
Reflect on what about you should be shared and passed on: there is
a Japanese saying that whatever we do, we should think how it will affect people
ten generations later. When Bill and Melinda Gates made the change from profit
to charitable giving, they found the world needed not just their wealth; it
needed their own time and care, to place the resources exactly where they would
make a long term difference. Most of us aren't blessed with such wealth, but the
process is the same. Think about it: whether it is qualities we possess or work
we perform, how can we devote more time and attention to furthering the best in
us, rather than frittering our precious energy on what will not matter, when we
are no more?  My grandpa went through this reflection process when he retired
and realized his real gift was his carpentry skills. He set about spending every
spare minute giving freely to his community, where the door he crafted or window
he replaced brings him lovingly to mind even today. Whether you write, act,
paint, garden, do childcare work or political organizing, think as you create
just how what you do may reach out into the future.

2)   
Spend concentrated time with your kids and grandkids: society
today gives us the message that material success trumps family bonds. But in
leaving a legacy, it's the people closest who are most likely to remember us. I
am not just talking about saving for your kids' college fund or providing amply
for grandkids in your will, important as these are. We are remembered with much
more fondness if we show the young our deepest love and closest attention. This
usually entails hard choices, because all of us feel strapped for time. You may
have to make hard choices like refusing to serve on a key committee, and instead
be there for your granddaughter's soccer season, or to help your son rehearse
lines for his play. Our kids need us, more even than their peers, and more than
they need great achievements in school or sports. This means being there for
them from the very beginning. The love you give so freely will not just bring
you continually to mind; the best part of you will live on in them.

3)   
Be free in sharing as you work: many people have impressive things
to show for the time they have spent improving their skills. You may have
started a now flourishing company, become a leading craftsperson or artist, or
helped the less fortunate through charitable work. But many such successful
people know just what to do to succeed but don't share very much. Trouble is, if
you alone know your style of accomplishment, you will be a solo act, which will
end with you. Even if it slows you down and changes your style, let others in.
Whether you are a CEO or a painter, bring others aboard as you work and try to
share your secrets with them. They will then have a lot more personal stake in
the outcome, and when they work successfully in the future, they will think of
you and continue what you have started.

4)   
 Delve into the heart of all: When you ponder where
best to put your time and attention, give greatest value to what fits into a
greater scheme, bigger than all of us. To do this, I find a spiritual practice
helpful. Meditation, for instance, slows down the feverish pace of thought and
allows an arrow's entryway into a consciousness that is not just us, but
everyone. If we attempt every day to bathe in that greater source of life and
support, we will understand better just where to route all possible action into
what will build our legacy. It may be the trees you plant; the art you paint,
sculpt, write, or build; or the minds you enrich. And paradoxically, our own
aging matters less when we pour ourselves into people and things that will in
their own way continue us. If we search out just what will and put our efforts
there, we will not only see how our face can leave an everlasting imprint– we
may also not even realize we are growing old.


 


About the Author:


 


Dr. Stephen Ruppenthal
is the author of  
The
Path of Direct Awakening: Passages for Meditation
.
He is also the co-author of Eknath Easwaran's edition of The Dhammapada
and the author of Keats and Zen. He has taught meditation and courses on
Han Shan at UC Berkeley and San Francisco State University. Dr. Ruppenthal is an
international workshop leader in passage meditation and in courses for those
looking for end of life spiritual care and for the spiritual step component of
twelve step programs. Visit Stephen's work at  
www.directawakenings.com.

 

 

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