© David Staume 2006
Don't think about your faults
We are all works in progress, so having weaknesses or destructive behaviours
that we struggle to control or eliminate is part of being human. These could be annoying personal habits that lurk near the surface
and wait for us to let our guard down, or they could be serious self-destructive flaws.
We’re talking here about things like
procrastination, intolerance, being overly critical … or perhaps having a weakness for doughnuts. It could be alcoholism, a violent
temper, depression, racial prejudice, an addiction to coffee, or to sex, or a fascination with bright lights, spinning wheels and
the promise of a jackpot.
Conventional wisdom says that if we want to eliminate negative character traits we have to prod them,
poke them, dig deep into them, analyze them, understand them, and spend years on the couch trying to find out where they come from.
To what extent are they nature? To what extent are they nurture? We must know our enemies before we can defeat them!
But conventional
wisdom is wrong. This is not good philosophy. It’s ineffective, if not counterproductive, and it’s expensive! Fortunately, there is
a better approach, and it is two-fold. First, we should ignore our faults – we shouldn’t think about them at all. And second, we should
concentrate on developing the opposite virtue.
When we try to eliminate something from our character that’s causing us heartache,
we are focusing on something that has – almost by definition – become a significant part of us. You may have heard the saying that
nature abhors a vacuum, because it always rushes in to fill every available space. Well eliminating your faults creates a vacuum,
and nature – in her consistency – will always rush in to fill it. The path of least resistance is for nature to fill the gap with
what was there before, with the result that we find ourselves back to where we started.
Imagine a garden-bed full of weeds. If
we weed it and leave the earth bare, the weeds will come back. But if we plant some daisies there, the daisies will keep the weeds
away. Similarly, if we weed out our faults and plant nothing in their place, we’re doomed. Plant the opposite virtue, however, and
our faults will go for good.
To get to the root cause of a weakness or negative trait can take years – that is, if we get there
at all. All that effort, and it’s not even necessary. Do we really need to know how the weeds got into our garden to be able to pull
them out? Do we need to know where a trait comes from to be able to eliminate it? It could help stop the trait coming back, but planting
the opposite virtue does the same, and does it much better.
Another reason for ignoring our faults and concentrating instead
on the opposite virtue, relates to the power and mechanism of thought. Thought seems to empower whatever it’s directed toward. It’s
a powerful tool – a wonderful one if we know what we’re doing, but a dangerous one if we don’t. If we imagine ourselves having a particular
quality, we’re well on our way to having it, for what we think, we are likely to become. Agonize over our excesses, though, and we will
probably never be rid of them. Dwell on our faults, and we will probably only exacerbate them. Berate ourselves for our weaknesses,
and we will probably only increase their capacity to enslave us.
If you want to eliminate negative personality traits, my advice
is don’t brood over them. Don’t think about them. To get the immense power of thought on your side, you have to concentrate on developing
the virtue opposite to the fault or weakness that you are now, hopefully, going to ignore, due to my sage advice. So if your weakness
is that you take everything to excess, ignore it. Instead, concentrate on and imagine yourself as being moderate in all things. If
your weakness is that you bristle at the slightest annoyance, ignore it, and instead, concentrate on and imagine yourself as being
calm and tolerant. If your weakness is sex, doughnuts, cocaine, or tobacco, ignore it, and instead concentrate on and imagine yourself
as being independent and strong, because whatever you turn your mind to, realization will tend to follow.
Who wants to spend
years getting to know their faults, and at the end of it all still having them? Yes, yes, I know, lots of people probably, but you
and I don’t have to be one of them! I think that planting daisies is less work, more fun, and much more effective!
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