• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Julian Kaufmann

EMPOWERING PEOPLE TO LIVE AND LOVE, FULLY

  • Home
  • About
  • Let Go Let It Flow
  • The Power of Presence
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

When Life Explodes Not Unfolds

August 1, 2017 By Julian Kaufmann

The Creative Process, Life, Can Be Explosive

Lately, I have been contemplating how life evolves.

While navel gazing, I have been contrasting the life I observe around me with spiritual constructs that I hear and often read about. In particular, the notion of life unfolding seems to be contrary to what I am seeing at the moment. Juxtaposed to still waters running deep; I see roiling waves buffeting about.

New thought teaches how the gentle spirit will be manifesting and that life can simply be a matter of allowing the unfolding to occur.  Yet what we experience in life can be turbulent and terrifying.

Consider Esther Hicks’ saccharine advice:
Everything is unfolding perfectly. And as you relax and find ease in your attitude of trust, knowing that Well-Being is your birth-right, amazing things will happen. Things the likes of which you have not seen before.

The idea of life unfolding conjures up the image of a gentle, flowing river. A sea of universal consciousness meandering along, with everything, including you and me, evolving in divine order. With enough perspective and viewing life from afar, the gentle light flickers like that light from a supernova dying star.

The reality is that at point-blank range, life can be incredibly violent and chaotic. Shit happens to us, around us, and to those we love.

On a physical level, our best understanding of the universe entails a big-bang.  Tremendous amounts of energy were released in an explosive burst of mind-boggling proportion. The big-bang is, in essence, an explosion not an unfolding. We are living after our universe blew up and our life is often punctuated by explosive events of varying kinds.

When I hear that word unfolding, I think of neatly packed towels or linens. Words matter to me and I find myself struggling to accept a concept when there is observable, physical evidence to the contrary.  So I want to unpack the concept of life unfolding.

Life is not a neatly packed origami puzzle, but rather like a bomb.  We can be humming along and then our world is abruptly and fundamentally changed. A loved one can suddenly die without any provocation. Perhaps you lose your job, your health or your lover. These are not gentle flowing events. Our life can appear fluid but it is in fact binary. There is a great discontinuity that bookends our experience here on earth.  We are manifest (born) and then we are unmanifest (we die).

You thought God was an architect, now you know
He’s something like a pipe bomb ready to blow – Jason Isbell, 24-Frames

Volatility is a measure of the changing nature of things.  Ultimately we need to learn how to accept the nature of things in whatever words or practices can help us.  Personally, I think that we are better served by embracing the unpredictable nature of life, including the explosions.  This recognition of life’s preciousness and finite experience may help us to enjoy it more until we can not.

Everything is blowing up perfectly

Beautiful things can and do emerge from the destructive process. Some of the most beautiful sunsets I have seen in my life immediately followed hurricanes that tore through Florida when I lived there. The key is to survive the storm.

Accept the unexpected. Roll with the changes and learn to live and love the volatility.

 

Filed Under: Acceptance, Flow Tagged With: Acceptance, Jason Isbell, New Thought, Unfolding

Maybe It's All Good

November 6, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

61725622 - storm eye concept
I See You!

Hey, I just met you,
And this is crazy,
But here’s my number,
So call me, maybe!
Carly Rae Jepsen – Call Me Maybe

Maybe Carly Rae’s song has nothing to do with this post. Maybe?

There is a classic Zen story about an old farmer who had worked his crops for many years. One day his horse ran away. Upon hearing the news, the farmer’s neighbors came to visit. “Such bad luck,” they said sympathetically about his horse running away.

“Maybe,” the farmer replied.

The next morning the horse returned, bringing with it three other wild horses. “How wonderful,” the neighbors exclaimed now that the farmer had more horses.

“Maybe,” replied the old man.

The following day, his son tried to ride one of the untamed horses, was thrown, and broke his leg. The neighbors again came to offer their sympathy on his misfortune.

“Maybe,” answered the farmer.

The day after, military officials came to the village to draft young men into the army. Seeing that the son’s leg was broken, they passed him by. The neighbors congratulated the farmer on how well things had turned out.

“Maybe,” said the farmer.

Man is born, man lives, and man dies
And it’s all vanity.
And that’s about the way it is in the merry-go-round
Cake – Thrills

Polarizing change lies at the heart of life. The sun rises and then it sets. Light gives way to night. Sometimes life’s unfolding can be violent and chaotic.

Many times events occur to us that are beyond our control. Often we ascribe judgments to events which can leave us either prideful when things go well or in despair when things go bad.

But we can find calm in the storm by adopting a higher perspective. We can be in the stillness, practicing equanimity like the farmer in the Zen story.

We can go with the flow of life and allow it.

What other choice do we have? After all, we are the awareness that watches all of this unfold.

Maybe, just maybe we can love it.

Namaste

p.s. Please share this with anyone you think may benefit from a slight change in perception and perspective.

p.p.s.: If you would like some practice on how to appreciate more of what is, please sign up for my FREE  10-Day Tune-Up on thankfulness and gratitude.

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Acceptance, grateful Tagged With: Equanimity, Flow, Let Go, Maybe, Thankfulness, Zen

Songs of Change

August 2, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

four seasons in the treetops
four seasons in the treetops

2,600 years ago Heraclitus was credited with an important maxim for us as we try to live our life. He said, “The only constant in life is change.”

Still centuries later we often try in vain to turn back the advance of time, fighting a losing battle. Plastic surgery and all sorts of elixirs promise us the fountain of youth. How we want to hold onto youthful beauty.

Trying to mask over our outward appearance we can become oblivious to the changing nature of life. We can become lulled into complacency as each day, while unique, begins to blend into the next. We get up, we work, we come home, and we go to bed and repeat again tomorrow.

Then we are blindsided, taken aback when some dramatic change occurs in our life. For example, we exclaim how could this happen when a loved one leaves us – even though at some level we all know that our time here is limited.

Change can occur subtly and almost imperceptibly but it is occurring nonetheless. Perhaps this is why when I went to a 33-year high school reunion, everyone else had aged while I still felt the same.  In reality, I am sure my friends saw the same passage of time reflected in me as I saw in them.

While the outer me has gone through visible aging, the real me, the inner me, – my soul, my consciousness, my awareness, my witness, my watcher, whatever you call the higher-self, has been observing and taking part in this evolving, flowing life since I became manifest nearly 50-years ago.

I have become quite comfortable with change and this level of comfort began by processing that change is the very nature of life itself. Rather than being swept along by the winds of change, I learned I could allow them to blow through me.

The sooner we make peace with the reality of the impermanence of things, the sooner we can transcend all the strife and reside in a place of peace of contentment.

To this end here are a few songs about change that have some valuable information as well as being great tunes to listen to:

Turn! Turn! Turn! – The Byrds
Turn! Turn ! Turn!

To everything (turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose, under heaven

Based on the book of Ecclesiastes 3 in the Bible, this song beautifully captures and describes the ebb and flow of life.

Changes – David Bowie
Changes
Ch-ch-ch-ch-Changes (Turn and face the strange)
Turn and face the strain

Change can be uncomfortable, but we can’t run from it. We should instead be open and accepting to the strange new that results from change. We can instead allow it to occur. Rather than resisting the strain of change, we can go with the pull of the change and go for a ride. When facing the strain, instead of pulling against it, we are not opposing the energy of the change itself. We conserve energy when we go with the Flow rather than when we oppose it.

Don’t Change – INXS
Don’t Change
Don’t change a thing for me

I have always liked this song. The chorus line that says “Don’t change a thing for me”, conveys that we should accept others where they are in their life without judgment. Live and let live.

Across The Universe – The Beatles
Across The Universe

My favorite of the songs about change is Across The Universe. To me, this song conveys the sublime truth of our connection with God.

Pools of sorrow, waves of joy are drifting through my opened mind
Possessing and caressing me
Jai Guru Deva OM
 Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world
Nothing’s gonna change my world

Nothing can change your world when you are the change itself.

Om

 

Filed Under: Acceptance Tagged With: Change, Resistance, Seasons

Doubting Thomas and Judgmental Julian

March 28, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

23194115_l

“Don’t be such a doubting Thomas.”

As a child I often heard that expression but never really knew its origin and deeper meaning until much later in my life. My grandmother would sometimes say this to me to help boost my confidence in times of self-doubt. She would exclaim, ”Believe in yourself and what you can do. Don’t be such a doubting Thomas.” I am grateful for her love and support. She helped instilled in me a quite confidence and a faith in my ultimate power when I expressed doubts in myself.

In case you’re not familiar of the story of Thomas and his doubts, it is told in the Bible. Thomas was a disciple who at times was rather reluctant follower of Jesus. After witnessing Jesus die, Thomas refused to believe the other disciples who told him of his resurrection. Thomas said he would only believe if he could touch Jesus and put his fingers through the holes in Jesus; body that came from his crucifixion. Later in the story, Jesus finds Thomas in a room after entering through a locked door and had Thomas put his hands into his side and told him to “Stop doubting and believe.” Thomas exclaims “My lord and my God.” Jesus then tells Thomas, “Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”

“Cause I gotta have faith” –George Michael

Like Thomas I sometimes need to see things in order to believe.

I rationalize this empirical need of mind by stating that I am a man and men are supposed to be logical and less feeling. (The corollary – women are supposed to be more feeling). Further strengthening my logical muscle, I studied and practiced electrical engineering. The stereotype of an engineer is a geeky, almost cyborg like analyzing problem solving machine. Lastly I came of age in the late 1980’s, the era of conspicuous consumption. Status and the pursuit and attainment of wealth were the names of the game. Life was a competition and money the score.

While the logical part of my brain helped me navigate certain challenges of life, it is the intuitive faith based aspects that allow me to thrive. If you know my story, you know I eventually returned home to God not solely relying on my mind. Today I acknowledge the wonderful, dual-nature of our both our minds and bodies. It was not an easy journey for me but one that I hope bysharing with you makes your travels easier.

We need to have faith and believe without seeing. This is one of the many paradoxes we have in this life. Once I let go of my need to know and control everything, life became so much freer. Let Go Let if Flow was born out of that realization of faith. If you would like to learn more about how to regulate Flow in your life, please sign up for my Free Course – Flow 101

Critical Thinking vs. Thinking Critically

The name Thomas is derived from a Greek-word meaning twin.

Our minds are like conjoined twins – both rational and intuitive inhabiting the same space. We are guided by unconscious thoughts and motivations, yet have the ability to exercise free will and create the life

Our reptile brain is designed to keep us safe and to ultimately ensure that our species lives on. As a result of this we have pre-loaded, negative bias in which we place more importance on negative information than positive information.

We are hardwired to make judgments and place more value to negative information.

The first step to making any improvement is to first acknowledge and be aware of the condition.

The practice of meditation is a good way to observe the quality and quantity of your thoughts. Once you realize that you are not your thoughts you can simply observe the nature of them and in the process you nurture a calmness and equanimity.

There goes the judge

As for being judgmental, I found Will Bowen’s  A Complaint Free World: How to Stop Complaining and Start Enjoying the Life You Always Wanted and his 21-day challenge to be an effective way to become aware of the nature of your thoughts. Bowen, a former unity minister wrote the book to help his congregation and the book went on to be a phenomenon. Part of the book is to practice going 21-days without complaining. You measure your progress by wearing a purple bracelet on your wrist and each time you complain, the progress resets and you transfer the purple bracelet over to the other wrist. It sounds simple, but the 21-day challenge was and is still difficult for me. Bowen states, “Complaining never attracts what you want; it perpetuates what you do not want.” Adding that the way to prosperity is to be grateful for what we currently have and that we can’t complain and be grateful at the same time.

Thank you! Amen.

Filed Under: Acceptance, complaining, grateful, judgment

7-Minutes in Heaven – keys to the kingdom

March 21, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

closet-426388_1280
consciousness closet?

When you were a kid did you ever play the game 7-minutes in Heaven?

If you don’t know about the game it is one in which two people, in my day a boy and a girl, go into a closet and spend 7-minutes “getting to know each other.”

While the two of you were in the closet someone on the outside was a timekeeper and was responsible for letting you know when your time was up with your closet-mate and when it was time for you to leave.

The 7-minutes in the closet usually consisted of some heavy petting, kissing and hugging etc., at least that is the way we played it. Sometimes you might just talk with the other person if there was no chemistry or neither one had a strong enough urge to make the first move.

There was something very liberating about being confined in a dark closet for me back then. I was aware that I could not be seen so I was less self-conscious about how awkward I was actually feeling. Closing the closet door disconnected me from my ego and allowed me to be freer.

Speaking of closing doors and disconnecting from your ego, the Bible says:

But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen – Matthew 6:6

Prayer is a sacred time for connecting with God and I find shutting myself off from the outside world often facilitates it. When I pray I close the door to the outside world and find refuge in the stillness.

Unfortunately spending time alone with your thoughts in a quite place can be a scary thing for some of us. As a result many people try to distract themselves constantly to avoid their own closet of silence.

Like prayer, meditation encourages us to disconnect from the outside world and enter a place a peace.

Benefits of meditation [i]include:

  • Reducing Stress
  • Improving concentration
  • Encouraging a healthy lifestyle
  • Increasing self-awareness
  • Increasing happiness
  • Increasing acceptance
  • Slowing aging

I confess that meditation is a difficult practice for me but one that has improved the quality of my life. Currently I set a countdown timer for 7-minutes and let go of my thoughts and focus on my breath.

Hence the new adult version of the 7-minutes in heaven game is played whenever and wherever you can close the door to the outside world and instead spend some quality time with you and your thoughts.

Please try it out and let me know what you think. Also try out the METTA mediation technique for more of a group experience –  Metta Mondays

Meanwhile enjoy the silence!

[i] Holmes, Lindsay. “8 Ways Meditation Can Improve Your Life.” The Huffington Post. TheHuffingtonPost.com, n.d. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.

 

 

Filed Under: Acceptance, Daily Habbits, Meditation

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Go to Next Page »
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Copyright CoCo Holdings, Inc.© 2025