living with radical honesty

I’ve always found a lot of benefit in open, honest communication. This was a really nice article that highlights the advantages and definitely something worth attempting…

Living With Radical Honesty, Brad Blanton

Monday, July 28, 2008 5:30 AM

I learned that the primary cause of most human stress, the primary cause of most conflict between couples and the primary cause of most both psychological and physical illness is being trapped in your mind and removed from your experience. What keeps you trapped in your mind and removed from your experience is lying and we all lie […] all the time. We’re taught systematically to lie, to pretend, to maintain a pretense because we’re taught that who we are is our performance. Our schools teach us to lie, our parents teach us to lie. We’re all suffering from mistaken identity.

We think that who we are is our reputation, what the teacher thinks of us, what kind of grades we make, what kind of job we have. We’re constantly spinning our presentation of self, which is a constant process of lying and being trapped in the anticipation of imagining about what other people might think. Our actual identity is as a present tense noticing being. I’m someone sitting here talking on the telephone right now and you’re sitting there talking on the telephone and writing or doing whatever you’re doing. That’s your current identity and this is my current identity and when you start identifying with your current present-tense identity you discover all kinds of things about life that you can’t even see or notice when you’re trapped in the spin doctoring machine of your mind. So radical honesty is about delivering yourself from that constant worrisome preoccupation of, “Oh my god. How am I doing? How am I doing? How am I doing? How am I doing?” Then you can pay attention to what’s going on in your body and in the world and even pay attention to what’s going on in your mind. […]

Just look at what you notice in front of you right now, your environment, wherever you are in an office or wherever it is. Noticing is an entirely different function than thinking and what we do all the time is that we confuse thinking with noticing. When we think something we act as though it has the same validity as something that we see. I’ve got a bumper sticker on my truck that says, “Don’t believe everything you think.” It’s like your thinking just goes on and on and on and on.

–Brad Blanton, Center For Radical Honesty

~ Charityfocus.org

Comments

2 responses to “living with radical honesty”

  1. preethi Avatar

    After I read it on Charity focus…i was thinking of publishing it on my blog too..The last line of not believing everything you think is amazing..Mind is like an programmable device which keeps running the moment we wake up…I was trying to practice radical honesty and it was so difficult to see all the lies I was telling myself and others..

  2. praneshachar Avatar
    praneshachar

    true to the core. people i.e all of us take recourse to lie at sometime or the other for whatever reason it is real picture of what is happening in real like and most of the time it is influenced by reel life truth is bitter but in the long run it pays. to be honest is very difficult but start to be so try in a small way then you realise which is better and what is more dear to your heart. once you do that lot of peace sets in and your thinking process will get activated on this once focus is on you can do it. yes what I say is not easy but one must slowly come our of their mindset then u can do it you can achieve it too at least in majority of the cases.
    sanjay great and simply great thanks for sharing it here for people like us who does not read everything that is the benefit of blogging u get so many things by visiting your blog thanks once again

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