Unstoppable
I was looking recently at why some things I wanted to do were easy and just happened and others were not moving forward at all or felt hard.
When I began to delve deeper into this, I noticed that not all of the things I was calling "easy and just happened" were quick or necessarily something I already knew how to do. There was no way to tell from the outside that I considered something easy. Some of these items would be called hard by others or taking a long time and so must be hard.
When I looked at what I was calling hard, I noticed that these things were not inherently hard or even taking a long time. Some of them were things I had done previously and had done relatively easily previously. Huh. Why weren't they moving along now? Why did I think they were hard?
Just that. I thought it.
Some things I had a lot of habitual thinking or just plain thinking about and some things I didn't.
And it has nothing to do with the actual thing I wanted to get done. The content may have seemed relevant. In none of the cases it was. I was literally just making up that something was easy and something else was hard.
The items that got done the smoothest and most "magically" were the things that I didn't have any thinking around at all. I didn't categorize them in any way and just unthinkingly got them done.
Once I noticed that I was generating all that thinking and all that judgement and all that content, even though some of it looked important, I was able to come at the tasks and projects that weren't moving along with fresh new beingness. Those projects started moving along again. And stopped again.
And unstopped again.
Becoming unstoppable is a process of noticing that we are stopping ourselves with thinking about something.
In the quiet of who we are at our core we can listen for the next action.
And from the stillness of being, do it.