study

‘An unexamined life is not worth living.’

– Socrates

Honestly examining our lives brings us face-to-face with the limitations of ‘our own best thinking’. A significant glitch with inquiring into what makes life meaningful, is that more often than not what we believe will do so, turns out not to.

If our own best thinking does not help us discover what makes life meaningful, only the act of living itself, can do so. And, how we decide to live may be either hit or miss. Are we really capable of figuring it all out by ourselves, in one lifetime of a mere 80 years if we’re lucky?

Anyone who studies the accounts of lives, ideas and traditions that have gone before us, cannot help but notice that those who wrote them did not exist in a vacuum. They deeply considered and digested the ideas and lives of others who had gone before them.

What we read is not simply ‘information’; it has the power to shape us to the core. All traditions of personal transformation acknowledged the necessity of both ‘the library’ and ‘the laboratory’. What and how we study is ‘experimented on’ and digested by actual life in the World. Who we become is shaped in the space between.