“What comes next? The answer is: we never know. No matter how smart we are, how carefully we have planned, or how much data we have gathered, we are still only mortals who can never control the future. We live in the now, in the eternally changing series of spaces we call the present. The now is where we shine. In the now we can have an impact, be creative, shape reality, build relationships that can withstand change. What happens tomorrow may always be a surprise, but what happens today can still feel our presence. In fact, we are the artists of the now. We can turn a moment into a memory, a glance into a promise, an idea into a vision that will last forever.”
—Bishop Steven Charleston Daily Facebook Page.
I think I became aware of the gift of living in the present moment in the 1980s when I bought Spencer Johnson’s eighty-page book, The Precious Present, as a Christmas present for my husband and decided to read it first. It is a practical parable of a man living in our fast-paced world, trying to find meaning and peace, opening the most precious of presents. Later I would read two more of Johnson’s books: The One Minute Manager and Who Moved My Cheese? during my self-help period as I was attempting to cope with the demands of a busy pediatric radiology practice. I learned especially about observing and catching people doing the right thing and acknowledging it. We can only accomplish this if we are living in the now instead of worrying about the past or the future or being absorbed by our own problems.
Then I was reminded again of the power of living in the present when I read in C. S. Lewis’ Screwtape Letters that God meets us only in the present moment. “The Present is the point at which time touches eternity.” This is where God lives in our lives. God is not in the past or the future, but here to greet us in the present.
How do we stay in the present moment? Anthony de Mello in his book Sadhana teaches us that living in our body and not living only out of our head keeps us grounded. Spending time in nature connects us to the present. Being with children keeps us in the present, for that is where they live.
Living in the “now” can be our gift to ourselves, to God, and to all we will meet in this new year. as we pray each day for our planet, our country and our government in this next decade.
Joanna . joannaseibert.com