Control feels like safety. When you are in control of your job, your family, your life or anything really, it is like you can do whatever you want.
So, letting go of control sounds almost irresponsible
as it gives structure, predictability and the comforting illusion that, if we
manage everything carefully enough, nothing will fall apart. And yet, life has
a subtle way of reminding us that control, when taken too far, becomes tension.
Much of the pressure does not come from what happens,
but from the constant effort to make things happen our way: to control
outcomes, people, timing, emotions - even ourselves. This kind of control narrows
our perception of life and it demands constant vigilance, leaving little room
for luck or fate.
Letting go of control does not mean giving up. It does
not mean passivity, indifference or lack of responsibility. It means
recognizing the limits of external control and shifting attention inward.
This is the point when self-control quietly enters as
the real solution.
Self-control is not about suppression or rigidity as
many would think. It is the ability to choose a response instead of reacting
automatically. It is the strength to pause, to observe what is happening inside
and to act from clarity rather than impulse. When self-control is present,
there is no need to control others or circumstances.
Ironically, the more self-control grows, the less
external control is required and that takes us to a situation in which emotions
are acknowledged before being unleashed, saving many relationships in the process.
Self-control helps us to face situations without the hunger to dominate them.
Letting go of control, then, is not a loss of power,
but its refinement. Power moves from the outside to the inside, from force to
awareness, from fear to steadiness, from shouting to a deep resilience.
Next time you feel being in control is making you
stressed, just go deeply within, meditate, contemplate or just reflect for a
few moments. Feel the control you have on yourself. Let go of the control in
the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment