Life is a journey. When you think you got it you find out you are still missing pieces. You don’t realize you’re missing anything until you get there. One experience connects to the next and what you learn from it takes you to the next experience, until the end. It’s like building a skyscraper - one brick at a time. You build the first level before the second, and the second before the third, and so on.
From the moment you are born into this world, and even before, you begin to develop the tools that are needed to cope with life’s harsh environment. The first coping behavior you learn is trust and mistrust, followed by autonomy and then how to explore and discover new things. The outcome to each building block develops the behaviors that you come to see in adults. What you learned in your early development phase paved the road to who you are today.
Countless motivational speakers, life coaches and authors such as Eckhart Tolle and celebrities like Oprah Winfrey, speak about self-awareness. Self-acceptance to strengths and weaknesses, likes and dislikes. It is to live a life with no judgment to what is. This state of being is a difficult state to arrive to but not impossible. Only a small percentage of the population is self-aware, but the rest can be taught if there is a desire to learn. Unfortunately, to live a life with awareness means learning the most difficult and sometimes the most painful lessons life has to offer. It is a scary place to go to but well worth the journey for those whom dare.
The journey never ends and when it does life will seize to exist, as you know it. You only stand to gain from being self-aware. If life is the never-ending journey until the end, then all that is left for you to do to continue on with your journey is lay the building blocks - one block at a time all the way to the end.
When you have many unanswered questions that you are not aware of, yet, you will find it difficult to not judge or to have racing thoughts of what will come next. To learn to live in the moment and to accept reality for what it is, you must fill your skyscraper holes with your building blocks. Unanswered questions leave holes in your skyscraper. Too many unanswered question and your skyscraper could collapse.
Why do you believe the next person you meet will give you the love you are searching for? Why am I going from one person to the next searching for the perfect love, what am I searching for?
Why do you believe the next purchase you make will make you feel better? How long do you feel better for? Why do I believe if I buy something it will make me feel better? What am I searching for?
Why do you believe if he or she would just tell you the truth everything would be better? Even if they do tell you the truth you wouldn’t believe them anyway… Why do I doubt what people say?
When you add social factors like culture and sexuality to each developmental phase, the questions now take on a new meaning based on your life experience.
Bruno LoGreco Life Coach & Mentor

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