Tag: Personal Development

I Tried to Outrun Peace — Then Life Grounded Me

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The Endless Chase for Relief

The faster you run from discomfort, the quicker it tends to catch us. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve sped through something in my life trying to escape the discomfort I was feeling, always thinking I could find peace and solace in the next moment … trying to outrun those uncomfortable feelings.

I thought that by changing something, doing a new task, meeting a new person, going to a new place, the pain would go away and I’d feel at peace. I’ll admit, for a brief moment, while the dopamine penetrated the brain and the novelty was still fresh, it worked …

Until it didn’t.

And it never lasted.

Why We Never Catch Our Own Tails

This is a loop so many of us get caught in. Not only are we chasing our tails, but we’re twisting ourselves into exhaustion, possibly even burning out our nervous systems in the process. The real reason this happens? We don’t give ourselves the time or space to fully experience the now. So instead, we keep searching for future “nows,” hoping one of them will finally feel different.

Speed Isn’t the Answer — Stillness Is

But here’s the irony — going faster doesn’t make anything better. In fact, slowing down, dramatically slowing down, is what actually gives you access to something deeper.

The silence and the moments of stillness — these are where your authentic self speaks to you. When you take your foot off the accelerator, you start seeing more things along the way and you get to discover a landscape you had no idea was there.

Having flown as a medevac helicopter pilot for nearly ten years, while on final approach to a highway or some non-airport environment, it was only in going slow, while deliberately and methodically descending into the landing zone, that we could fully absorb our surroundings, and safely put the helicopter onto the ground.

View from inside a medevac helicopter after landing on Route 80 in New Jersey, showing emergency vehicles and traffic stopped ahead. Helicopter instruments are visible in the foreground, emphasizing the precision required for a safe landing.
View from inside the Medevac helicopter, just having landed Route 80 in New Jersey — Rushing was not an option. Slowing down was the only way to absorb the full picture. Photo taken by Author

Think about traveling down a residential road at 120 miles per hour versus a gentle walk around the block. You’re surely not going to catch your neighbor playing catch with his five year old son — and the boy’s priceless look when he catches the ball! Your mind can only process so much information at once, so if you’re always focused on the next thing, and your afterburners are on, everything — just — looks — like — a — blurrrrr.

The Illusion of Progress

Flying jets across the world, I’ve seen more sunrises from 45,000 feet than I can count. I’ve left behind countries, relationships, and entire lives at a moment’s notice. But the one thing I could never escape? Myself.

Cockpit view from a jet in flight, with the sun rising over a sea of clouds. The sunlight beams across the horizon, creating a peaceful yet powerful scene.
Sometimes, the best way to see clearly is to rise above the noise. Slowing down isn’t stopping — it’s gaining perspective. Photo by the author

I remember a time in my life constantly shifting between projects, relationships, even cities. Each new beginning felt like a rush. I thought that this time, things would be different. But I couldn’t escape the same familiar energy, the same discomfort I was desperately trying to outrun.

It wasn’t until I forced myself to slow down and even stop — literally and figuratively — that I realized I had been running from myself the whole time.

What If Discomfort Isn’t the Enemy?

And this isn’t just a personal problem. This is cultural programming. We’re taught that movement equals progress. That stillness is wasted time. That discomfort is something to fix, not something to listen to.

But what if the discomfort isn’t the enemy? What if, instead of trying to push past it, we let it tell us what it needs to say?

The Breakthrough: Stopping to Listen

The irony of chasing your tail is that you never catch it — because it’s attached to you.

And just like that tail, the discomfort moves with you, because it’s coming from within. No matter where you go, no matter what new thing you throw yourself into, it stays right there.

So, instead of trying to escape, what if you just paused?

Next time you feel that urge to move on to something new, whether it’s checking your phone, starting a new project, or making drastic life changes, simply stop! Take three long deep breaths and ask yourself:

What feeling inside of me is making me feel uneasy or uncomfortable?

Just name it. No fixing, no analyzing — just notice it.

You may be surprised at what happens when you stop reacting and simply witness it. Will the discomfort completely fade away? Probably not — but it will likely lose some of its grip on you and eventually fade like a distant memory.

Pausing and and witnessing your emotions creates space between stimulus and response. This practice allows us to focus with intention as opposed to just reacting. It’s this level of awareness that we can discover something profound about our capacity to focus.

The Power of Focus

As a nature photographer, I have always admired the Bald Eagle. The irony is in order to get a pristine photo of the eagle, you have to mimic its behavior — and this is sitting patiently, in peace, until the perfect moment arises. It doesn’t rush. It doesn’t chase blindly. It waits, with discipline and determination. Then, with laser precision, it dives, with unwavering confidence, its talons skimming the water, and more times than not, it comes up with its prize. Intentional focus means holding steady until the perfect instant to act — and when it comes, the effort feels seamless.

The moment of triumph — water cascading, talons locked, wings lifting into flight. The reward for unwavering patience and focus. Photo by the author

The Hidden Power of Deliberate Pace

What I’ve discovered in my own journey is that slowing down doesn’t actually slow your progress — it transforms it. When you move deliberately and with intention, you begin to notice the spaces between things. Your higher self starts receiving information and putting pieces together that you might have otherwise ignored.

In those magical pauses, whether through meditation, walking, or just vegging, you allow your mind to start forging connections that were not apparent to you before. Imagine staring at the night sky and seeing amazing constellations as opposed to just individual specs of light. The stars were always there; you just couldn’t see the pattern until you slowed down and gave your mind the time it needed.

For quite a few years now, I have embraced a meditation practice that has given me more answers and a reprieve from the constant motion my mind had been so engulfed in. I remember having a very challenging technical problem with a company I was working with. After the meditation was over, the solution became crystal clear. The answer emerged from the stillness and from what many people call “the higher self”.

That pause — that sacred gap between thoughts — is where true insight lives. When you finally stop the endless chase, you may suddenly see your entire situation differently. Not because the situation has changed, but because you’ve changed how you’re looking at it.

The Finish Line Is Just an Illusion

So step out of the chase. Allow yourself to be rather than in constant motion.

Experience the “now” fully, rather than grasping at future “nows” that don’t exist yet. If you’re able to truly integrate this one shift, it can completely change the way you experience reality.

Because here’s the truth:

The present moment is all there ever is and it’s so much richer than you may imagine.

The finish line you’re racing toward? It will keep getting further away.

The peace you seek always feels just out of reach. But what if it was never lost — just overlooked? This practice will show you that peace has been here all along, in the stillness, in the space between your thoughts, in every breath you take.

Stop Running. Start Being.

Your tail will still be there. But maybe, just maybe, you’ll realize it was never the thing you needed to catch in the first place.

So, what about you? Ever found yourself racing from a feeling you couldn’t outrun — only to realize it’s part of you? I’d love to hear your story! Drop a comment below to keep the conversation going. Follow me for more on unraveling behavior, decoding the mind, and living authentically in a world that never slows down.

https://medium.com/illumination/i-ran-myself-ragged-chasing-my-tail-then-i-realized-this-9a63fb0cd2b1

Why Your Impatience Is Sabotaging Your Success

It took three days of sitting motionless on a freezing rock to capture this stunning eagle. What made this possible wasn’t just endurance but my willingness to accept reality exactly as it unfolded. I had to abandon preconceived notions about when and how the eagle would appear. Had my ego filtered out signals — the weather patterns, the eagle’s distant calls, the movement of other wildlife — I would have missed the shot entirely. Patience required me to process all information, not just what supported my desired timeline.

These are often tell-tale signs of impatience hidden in plain sight.

  • Anger
  • Control
  • Frustration
  • Idealism
  • Irritation

According to Buddhism, patience is wholeheartedly accepting a situation for what it is. Anger, its opposite, is when we reject reality and demand it be something else.

Conventional wisdom says that at its core, impatience stems from a lack of control — and often hides a subtle form of anger, cloaked in a polite mask — but I think there’s a lot more to it.

Ponder this: Have you met someone who always seems to be impatient and angry that things are not going his or her way? Consider that you invest your time, energy, money, words, and other things into an outcome — that’s to say, you would like a certain outcome. You want your efforts to pay off and expect something because you believe you “put in adequate effort”.

When that outcome doesn’t happen, you may feel that you were slighted or treated unfairly. It’s like installing a security system to keep out burglars — only for a bear to walk right in. Or paying a 5-year-old to guard the perimeter and being shocked when chaos ensues. Sometime,s our expectations are not aligned with likely outcomes, yet our naivety may lead us astray.

How Do You Fix This?

First, just sit there and observe.

While I’m a big fan of living in the present, there’s value in briefly revisiting the past to examine our patterns.

Ask yourself:

  • How often do I invest time and effort
  • expect a certain outcome …
  • And end up completely let down?

If that cycle sounds familiar, here’s the follow-up:

Am I consistently overestimating the likelihood of the outcome I want?

Am I filtering feedback because it conflicts with what I hope to be true?

Do I feel blindsided, even though there were signs all along?

Here’s the truth: the ego often believes outcomes are guaranteed by effort or belief alonebut beliefs are not a down payment on destiny.

When reality doesn’t deliver, frustration and impatience set in — not because the result was unjust, but because our internal blueprint for how things should have gone was not honored.

Is this optimism, entitlement, or just the ego trying to assert its voice over things that it cannot control or command?

Some people call this a black cloud — others argue there are variables missed, situations not thought through adequately, or just too much left to chance.

Effort is in our hands; results often are not — It’s in this gap, between doing and receiving, where patience is either born or broken.

Addressing the Pattern of Self-Deception

We all deceive ourselves from time to time thinking that “oh, it will be okay”. No, certain times it won’t be. In fact, our ego often believes we deserve a pristine outcome “just because” and it ignores data, critical data, which points to an outcome that is not aligned with reality.

If you look closely, you’ll find that when people have strong beliefs about something, their brain purposely filters out information to the contrary so that the ego can continue identifying with that belief — the ego sees contrary information as a threat!

Photo by Deniz Altindas on Unsplash

The Reticular Activating System (RAS): Your Brain’s Gatekeeper

That’s a pretty fancy word, but this is where the cold, hard truth reveals itself! The reticular activating system (RAS) is a part of the brain that is the gatekeeper and filters what it believes is “important”.

The problem?

The ego may hijack the RAS and prioritize information not based on what is objectively true but on what aligns with your existing beliefs, biases, and ego-driven sense of identity.

Put simply, your ego hijacks the RAS and filters out information which would provide truth, and instead only allows in information that will prevent the ego from being wrong.

Let’s break it down:

  1. The ego hijacks the part of your brain that filters reality.
  2. The ego does not want to be wounded and needs to cling to an image.
  3. It filters out truth to preserve identity.
  4. It deceives to avoid being wrong.
  5. It piles on distortion when the truth hurts.

It can be interrupted! It cannot be unasked!

The Ego doesn’t want clarity — it wants confirmation

And until we consciously step in, question our stories, welcome discomfort, and tolerate the vulnerability of not knowing — we stay trapped in illusions we call “truth.”

Circling Back to Patience

How does this relate to patience?

  1. You will receive feedback from the environment
  2. The feedback will help you determine whether the effort you put in aligns with a likely outcome
  3. If your ego has hijacked your RAS, then you may not be properly weighing the information you are receiving from your environment, and confirmation-bias may be kicking in.

Patience is tied to expectations.

When we set them wisely — without ego-filtered bias — we prepare ourselves for outcomes grounded in reality

What If The Ego Does More to Create Impatience?

The ego is also responsible for anxiety and much of fear in life. If you read one of my previous articles, I Tried to Outrun Peace, then Life Grounded Me , I wrote about how we are constantly trying to escape discomfort by rushing through an experience to move onto the next.

When we rush through something, whether it’s a conversation, a book, or even a life decision, we deprive our brain of the time it needs to fully process, integrate, and contextualize the bigger picture. As a result, the brain latches onto bits and pieces that it identifies, discarding critical information that paints a more realistic picture.

Final Thoughts

  1. The ego is very handy at filtering out information that helps paint the real picture of what’s happening in your environment and what you should expect. If a piece of information does not align with your world view or your conception of yourself, your ego will dismiss information to the contrary and build a facade or house of cards.
  2. Once you build this shaky foundation, you’ll find that most of your expectations will not be met, and you’ll be upset that things didn’t go the way your ego wanted them to go.
  3. You may attempt to play the victim card and seek sympathy from others or even yourself to raise dopamine levels in the brain to make up for the fact that things didn’t go the way you expected — or wanted — them to go.
  4. Your conscious will resist reality by way of “impatience” — not accepting your lack of control or outcome that didn’t align with your desires.
  5. This pattern will repeat over and over until you lean into the discomfort of reality not aligning with your ego and / or world view.

The power of choice is also the power of discernment. Use it wisely. Know the ego’s playbook so you can break the cycle and reclaim your peace.

https://medium.com/illumination/why-your-impatience-is-sabotaging-your-success-4efeeabb6a94

How Suffering Can Actually Be Your Doorway to Wisdom and Peace

As a teenage EMT during my college days, I vividly recall hearing the loud sound of my pager at 4AM waking me up from a dead sleep — responding to an automobile accident or someone having a heart attack. Barely awake, I’d grab my keys and drive as fast as I could to the Rescue Squad building, knowing full well that by the time I got back from the emergency, I’d have no time to sleep — not a good recipe for an engineering school student.

Me as a volunteer EMT in my college days
One of the earliest places I met suffering face-to-face. Photo of the author, taken by a fellow EMT.

Those sleepless nights responding to emergencies taught me something incredibly profound about suffering that I’ve carried through my adult life: that our relationship with pain often matters more than the pain itself.

In this article, I’ll explore how the ego — that well-meaning but misguided protector — can turn necessary pain into unnecessary suffering. And how we can begin to reframe our difficulties not as punishments to endure, but as doorways to wisdom.

What if the very thing we resist… is actually our greatest teacher?

Far too often, we ask: “Why must we suffer?” Or even, “Why must we suffer for so long?”

Do we ever ask, “What lesson am I to learn from this?”. Or better yet, how many actually say, “Wow, this is great that I’m suffering!”. Crazy, huh? And through this article, I’m going to offer a different perspective that may shift your interpretation of suffering to more of a gift than a burden. Let’s reframe how we look at suffering through a few different lenses:

Perspective: It reminds us of how precious our human existence is and how we often forget how good most things really are — It’s like the Greek saying

“The man complained about his feet hurting until he saw someone with no legs”

Resolve and Faith: Having faith, in spite of suffering, builds an even stronger bond/connection with the divine. When you believe that your path will involve suffering, it then becomes your attitude and understanding of the interconnectedness of things that helps you integrate and understand the process of suffering and what lessons it has to teach us.

A better understanding of the Ego / Lower Self: The emotional and mental effects of suffering are exacerbated by the ego because it personalizes pain, resists surrender, and attaches meaning to suffering in a way that actually intensifies it. Let’s dive into this a bit more:

A bit more about the Ego and its Narratives:

The ego — it’s that persistent, uninvited guest in your mental space, whispering doubts, fears, and endless “what-ifs.” At its core, the ego evolved to protect us, keeping us safe in a complex world. But like an overzealous bodyguard, it doesn’t always know when to step back. Instead, it takes charge, often at the expense of peace, creativity, and authentic living.

Think of the ego as an overprotective friend who tries to help but ends up turning everything into a soap opera. Its intentions may be good, but its execution? Not so much. These may sound familiar — here are some of the ego’s greatest hits:

“I’m a victim and this always happens to me”
The ego/lower-self dives so deep into the suffering that it makes it part of its self-narrative. Instead of seeing pain as a passing experience, the ego proclaims, “I’m a victim” or “this always happens to me”, reinforcing suffering as an identity rather than an experience.

“Resisting Suffering”
The ego also tries to resist suffering as much as possible because it hates surrender. In fact, in trying to control what is uncontrollable, it leads to frustration and hence prolonged suffering. The more you resist reality, the more intense suffering becomes.

“Why Me”
The ego will compare your state of misery to your previous state OR to others’ and not-so-gently remind you “Why me and not them?” or “This isn’t fair”. It also judges whether the experience is good or bad — this makes it even more difficult to move on and move through the suffering.

“The Storyteller”
The ego gets a Pulitzer Prize for storytelling. “If I had only done things differently” or “I shouldn’t have to go through this by myself”. While seeking help or consolation is healthy, when it turns into calls for sympathy, it may actually help perpetuate the pain.

“I’m not going anywhere”
And here’s the kicker. When you finally get to the realization of the involvement of the ego in suffering, the ego starts to fear dissolving. It cannot imagine not existing — the ego panics for its survival by intensifying suffering rather than allowing itself to take a back seat and let the higher-self run the show.

“Suffering is the way the ego reminds you it exists”

The Hidden Gifts of Suffering

The irony? Suffering can be a doorway and path to freedom when it’s no longer seen through the eyes of the ego. When we start to dissolve the ego, suffering can then lead to wisdom, self-love, and inner peace.

Just as I learned during those sleepless nights as an EMT, suffering pushed me beyond my perceived limits. It taught me that what seemed unbearable in the moment actually created space for growth I couldn’t have imagined. The question isn’t whether we’ll suffer, but how we’ll respond when we do.

Ask yourself: What suffering am I experiencing right now that might actually be my doorway to greater wisdom? Perhaps the first step is simply recognizing when your ego has seized the narrative — because only then can you begin to gently loosen its grip. Perhaps if we change the way we look at suffering and ask ourselves, “What lesson is this suffering trying to teach me?”, we might begin to see suffering more as a gift rather than a burden.

Looking back in History

Another useful practice I find is to write down the last 2–3 times I have suffered in the past and recall:

  1. How it finally resolved
  2. What lessons I learned
  3. Was my reaction to it healthy

If you don’t keep a journal, this retrospective processing can be powerful in seeing how things played out against your greatest fears.

Suffering does not have to be a punishment

It can be more of an invitation.

It is a catalyst to help us grow and surrender so that we can see beyond what the ego wants or allows us to see. Shift the question from “Why am I suffering” to “What is this trying to teach me”, thus allowing suffering to be a teacher and guide rather than a punishment, guiding us towards resilience, wisdom, and a far deeper connection to the divine.

Photo by Phạm Chung 🇻🇳 on Unsplash

Just as I eventually came to see those 4AM emergency calls as more than just sleep deprivation — but rather as profound moments of human connection and growth — our suffering often reveals its purpose only in retrospect. So the next time you find yourself in a trench of suffering, pause.

Instead of resisting, take a breath, and ask —

What if this is a doorway to something greater?

Step through.

You might just be surprised by what you find.

If you enjoyed this insight, consider following me on Medium for more stories on personal growth

https://medium.com/illumination/how-suffering-can-actually-be-your-doorway-to-wisdom-and-peace-e12fdbf7b4c5

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