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Nothing Was Wasted

By September 25, 2014 13 Comments

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In Tuesday’s post, I wrote about how almost all of us resist our callings. We deny them, we try to rationalize them away, we avoid them out of fear.

That has certainly been true in my life. There were years for me of not doing the things I most love to do – writing, dance, being creative, being on stage. There were years of not answering the call to do the kind of work I do now.

I had an instinct to say something in Tuesday’s post about why that’s alright, why it’s really alright that we miss out on our callings for years – painful though it is – but I couldn’t quite find succinct words for what I wanted to say.

What kept popping up into my heart and mind were these words, “That’s okay, because life is long,” or even – more provocatively – “That’s okay, that’s why life is long.”

Huh? Where did that come from, another part of my mind asked back. I got a little intimidated about writing that – because life isn’t long for everyone and because it’s more than a little bold to declare why you think life is long. My inner critic got a little worried about what would happen if I wrote those words.

But they’ve stayed with me, especially after I read some responses to Tuesday’s post, like from Corina, who wrote, “I now realize that I missed several callings because I was letting the noise of the outside world drown out my own inner voice.”

Yes. I think that’s the story for all of us.

Somehow, it seems, straying from our callings is a part of what we all do in this life. We leave who we really are. And then we find our way back home again.

Most of us will get many years to do this.  Life is giving, forgiving, and grants us time to learn the lessons that push us to make the return.

I suppose why that matters to talk about is that it allows us to each see our own journeys as okay, even as beautiful. It allows us to see the lost time as an essential part of the picture – and by that I mean the time we were lost, not time that was lost – because no moment is ever wasted.

For me, the lost years are so important. They made me more grateful for these years. They taught me what it feels like to stem the river inside of me – and why doing that won’t really ever work for me – too much sadness and bitterness comes as a result. The lost years taught me a lot about who I really am and how that part of me won’t die out – even if I ignore it. The lost years also were what allowed me to learn some important things about how we find our own way back home.

Every  moment of playing small contributes to the fire to play big. Every day spent separated from our callings contributes to the eventual devotion with which we’ll pursue them, and the gratitude we’ll have for them.

Sometimes there are tears of sadness, of grief that we need to cry for the lost years, and what we put ourselves through during them. But know this: those years were not wasted.

Love,

Tara

Join the discussion 13 Comments

  • nicole says:

    Thanks

    I needed that… sitting with the reality that life is really short for many.. too short in fact like for the young girls and women in Iraq right now… I keep pondering the quote from Mary Oliver
    “What will you do with this one precious life?” and while I don’t know the answers asking the question through out my life has been and continues to be beautiful.. may it be so for all girls and women one day..

  • Big comfortable sigh… and, thank you. This is a message so many are waiting to hear. Every step counts, even the backwards and sideways ones!

  • Kim says:

    I really resonate with this post, Tara, as a perpetual late bloomer. It took until my 50’s before really pursuing my deepest callings (gulp), and sometimes I wonder what might have happened had I started earlier. Yet, that dismisses everything I did – all of which contributed to what I’m doing now. I’m so glad that you wrote what you did at the end – feel the sadness yet know that nothing is wasted.

  • Stephanie says:

    Every time I read your posts, I think to myself, how did Tara get to be so wise at such a young age? And then I think, I just love that young woman! This latest post has spoken to me in a big, big way. I have done all of those things you mention. I have been busy working, raising kids, managing a marriage (of 35 years!) and putting off the things that I yearn to do – to be an artist – to really learn the skill of painting – to write – I used to, I can’t get started now. Soon I will be retiring and I am really, really excited for that. I’m thinking about it a lot and what I will do and trying to start some of it now, so that I don’t keep putting it off. I love your premise that nothing was wasted. It makes me more thankful, grateful, and more anxious to get on with it – my life. And, I have pre-ordered your book from my local bookstore. Can’t wait! Thank you, Tara

  • Lindsey says:

    “Every moment of playing small contributes to the fire to play big.” Yes, Tara! Thank you so much for this wise, well-lived reminder. They journey and the obstacles are all part of the path; I suppose some days we see that more clearly than others. And the diversions truly do make strong wind for fanning the flames of the fire that eternally burns within.

  • Peggy says:

    Like Lindsey, i love that line “Every moment of playing small contributes to the fire to play big.” It is so important to understand. There are no mistakes here. Everything is grist for the mill. The old paradigm (out of which we are quickly all emerging) sees things in straight lines… we progress… or we are failing / not evolved/spiritual/worthy…enough. The Feminine that is deepening in us in some juicy ways, shows us it is all in service. And if we can simply (not always easily!) shift our attention from trying to separate ourselves from what looks off purpose, to having a relationship with everything that arises, then, ah then, we are really stepping into our BIGness.

  • Lindsey says:

    Love this, Peg. Especially the connection to the Divine Feminine, and seeing our outer lives as the manifestation of inner sacred space and connection.

  • valerie says:

    OMG! Those were my mother’s exact words when I apologized to her for “wasting my time and my parents’ money” when I dropped out of college after my first year – a long time ago. Although it made me feel better, I never really forgave myself – and after all these years, I’m still working on forgiveness for that and wasting other opportunities and moving on – even with my Mom’s continued support and that of my husband and brother. After reading your article, I am done with excuses. Time to get up again and work on those dreams – so what if I’m now in my 50s?!?! Thank you, Tara!

  • Thank you, I love this idea of nothing wasted in our lives! Life is not linear. Even if hypothetically I made all the “right” choices in my life (we know there is no such thing,) there was always a speed bump or detour and the aftermath that I didn’t anticipated. I am shaped by my choices (even what I had for breakfast today,) but I refuse to beat myself up for those choices. I just make another choice based on my best thinking and feeling on my way.

  • Eva says:

    Thank you. Tears of relief. So, so beautiful and true.

  • I LOVE this, Tara. Such a generous, forgiving and validating lens through which we can look at ourselves and what has led us to this moment. Empowering, too! Glad you shared it. xoE

  • Steph says:

    I am learning this exact lesson for myself right now. I spent a lot of years not experiencing my life, my love or my destiny and I see that without all that time “lost” I would not have the passion and drive to reach the heights I am capable of. I am determined to live full-out now because of all the years of deprivation. It all works out in the end, if we let life have its way with us– and by that I mean we follow the pull of our heart and our spirit.

    Thank you for the confirmation. It fills my heart with love, joy and hope. xo

  • […] a calling. This can change through life, as Tara Sophia Mohr has talked about in her blog post, Nothing Was Wasted. I also heard Wayne Dwyer talk on a PBS special about having past lives and thought, "Uh-oh, he […]

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