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Joe

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Viewing 15 posts - 91 through 105 (of 147 total)
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  • in reply to: the law of attraction – my thoughts #98737
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    My current dream or fantasy is to move out of my parents house and travel, as I have told you before. This is something I have really thought about for the past few years – something I wish I would have been more enthusiastic about years ago. In order to do that, I’m going to need to save up some money or try to score another teaching job in another country – seems doable, the only thing that is holding me back is the money situation. Why do I want to travel? Why did I even start becoming obsessed with the law of attraction at 19 in the first place? Escapism, probably. I just want to move away and escape from my life at home. There is nothing keeping me here – not close with my family, no personal relationships or commitments to hold me back, not many friends to speak of. But I am also aware of how tough it is to live in another country on your own when you barely speak the language because I’ve done that before.

    Another dream is to be self-sufficient – I’m well aware that the idea of financial security is a complete myth but I just want to be able to earn my own money – enough to get by and then some.

    Another dream is to carry on making my illustrations and handmade books – I’m well aware that being an artist is difficult in this day and age and it is very difficult to find work in this industry. I’m well aware that there might be times in my life where my art things will have to be put on the back-burner. Maybe I would love to write as well but again, the industry is pretty darn saturated with illustrators and writers.

    I’m not going to lie, sometimes I do have fantasies about being a rock star but this will never happen (I can’t even play a musical instrument for starters, except for the triangle).

    If any of those things are going to happen, I need to work at them and put effort into these things – something I’ve been telling myself over the past few months – whether or not I succeed at these things isn’t important, what is important is I just try. They are not going to appear out of the ether all by themselves.

    As for the final dream, I want to reach a point where I feel like I can be at peace with myself and everybody else I know. Year of Joe is still happening but there are still the odd ugly moments.

    Do you think these dreams are doable, Anita? Or am I just indulging in some silly wanderlust fantasy I have when I stare at the ceiling wishing to be anywhere else but here? Am I chasing another rainbow, putting all of my hopes into these things?

    Joe

    in reply to: the law of attraction – my thoughts #98722
    Joe
    Participant

    Hi Barry! Thankyou for your insight, I was really interested in your post. I was glad to read about you turning your life around πŸ˜€

    With regards to the ‘full of crap’ comment – I try and see the crap as lessons to be learned and obstacles to be overcome (I have said countless times before, I’m a sucker for punishment and I have this pathological need to learn the hard way!) I used to be scared and deeply fearful of ‘the crap’ because that would mean attracting more crap and having to let go of the silver thread I was hanging from (metaphorically speaking). I wanted to be safe, I wanted to be full of hope, I didn’t want to give in to the crap. Having to give up this hope I had (even if it was false hope) would mean I would end up with nothing (this was from a really dark, rocky patch in my life from a few years ago, my anxiety problems were at their worst and I thought I was going off the rails). This false hope, this false ‘positive thinking’ was a mental crutch for me, a construct I was trying to maintain in my mind and I didn’t think I would be able to cope without it.

    ‘The Crap’. Haha, almost sounds like some awful B-list horror movie or some kind of disembodied malevolent entity (like The Blob or something!)

    I guess relinquishing the false hope and letting the crap, the fear and doubt in, just letting it be and confronting what it is I was scared of was a liberating experience. I guess I don’t want to become too jaded but sometimes letting go of false hope and broken dreams after feeling scared for so long feels almost like a relief. It sounds weird but it’s the only way I can describe it. Yup, life is full of crap – I acknowledge the existence of crap but I’m not so quick to distance myself from it. If I can manage to turn the crap into something positive – i.e making some kind of snarky joke about it, I’m okay with that.

    I used to ponder on worst-case scenarios all the time and be scared that they would come true – I guess they really did happen about 30-40% of the time.

    Maybe my problem was the false ‘positive thinking’ – I was trying desperately to think positive things but inside I felt terrible, I felt as though everything was falling apart and I felt as though changes weren’t happening soon enough. Maybe I was just expecting a quick get-out-of-jail card, instant gratification…

    But I do believe that there are great things in life, and ‘the crap’ makes the good things even more powerful and intense.

    With regards to what you said about feeling instead of thinking – I think I can kind of agree with that – the rare 10% when things were going my way, I felt good about them and I just felt good in general beforehand.

    Thanks for posing Barry, I do hope you will stick around for more of this discussion πŸ˜€


    @Wisdom

    I guess the thought that the stories might have just been made up on that website did cross my mind. Still makes me wonder haha

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 2 months ago by Joe.
    • This reply was modified 8 years, 2 months ago by Joe.
    in reply to: the law of attraction – my thoughts #98715
    Joe
    Participant

    Wisdom

    I guess I still often wonder the same thing – does it only work for certain people? What do they do differently? Why are they so lucky? I still think most of what is in ‘The Secret’ is a load of old cobblers and I don’t live by it anymore, but I guess sometimes I still wonder…

    If attracting what we truly wanted was easy, we would all be living the life of riley. Who doesn’t think about what life would be like if they were lotto winners? We all think about it but very few of us get to live it.

    I’m just currently reading through some of the testimonies and stories on the secret website.

    in reply to: the law of attraction – my thoughts #98706
    Joe
    Participant

    Thanks for your input Anita!

    Sometimes I do wonder how some people do it – my sisters fiancΓ©, for instance. He is forever placing bets on football matches and winning money from it, and even his mother has managed to score a few winning streaks on the Irish lottery (she just wins hundreds of pounds each time) Whenever my friend drags me along to bingo, there is always somebody who wins at least five times. Makes you think!

    I remember one time I had finished reading “The Magic” (the sequel to The Secret, going over more of the same crap in the first book) and that same day I was sent to the horse racing stadium for an assignment – back at university, the tutors sent us out places to make observational drawings of race horses but most of us were too busy placing bets on the horses instead. Long story short, I won a bet I had placed on a horse named “Some Mothers Do Have ‘Em” – back then, I guess I thought to myself “Holy crap this stuff really works!”

    Hasn’t worked on at least 80% of the things I have wished for since, I might add…

    in reply to: a thing of stream of consciousness #98321
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    This was something I scrawled in my sketchbook this morning. I’ve been reading about the neurological condition known as synaesthesia, which I found out about a few weeks ago. I’m interested by this all of a sudden because I have realised that most people can’t hear colours, but I think I might have been hearing colours all my life and I didn’t really think much about it. As far as I can remember, every time I hear music, especially certain types of music, I just perceive that particular song or tune as “being a purple song” or “being a yellow song” and this brings about lots of strong vivid colours and imagery in my mind. I had always assumed everybody did this – I was telling my mom about this last night and she just stared at me as if to say “what are you going on about?”

    It sounds really mad, but it’s just always been normal for me. I’ve only read so much about this interesting phenomena. I’m not saying for certain I have this characteristic – it could be something else entirely. Maybe my mind just established neural links between certain colours and tunes as I grew up, I don’t know. I’m no scientist. I still find it fascinating!

    But maybe this is why I’ve always found certain types of music to be really inspiring when I paint.

    What are your thoughts on this Anita?

    Joe

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98318
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    My sentiments exactly. I guess people need to stop believing that attaining this pot of gold, this whatever it is that they are after isn’t the be-all-and-end-all, and placing so much importance on the end result. This all keeps coming back to what I have been reading about for the past three years or so in ‘The Power Of Now’ by Eckhard Tolle. If we’re not constantly re-living the past or alternate takes on the past, we’re projecting into a future where we will attain this false sense of salvation. The present moment is all we have. I’m not saying I am an expert on staying present but this book just makes so much sense for me.

    Have you ever read ‘The Power Of Now’? If so, what are your thoughts on that book?

    Joe

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98301
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    Maybe I’m not sure what this metaphorical pot of gold contains. I guess for me it’s just this need to always want to be somewhere else, a point in the future where we might find happiness or that thing we have dreamed about for so long (travelling, the nice job, the slice of cake etc). We stress the importance of these things and liken them to this pot of gold. Maybe we do arrive at these things and we may believe that these things will bring everlasting happiness but we just want more of what we have found. This idea of chasing what we crave is a wild goose chase…The pot of gold is an illusion…

    Joe

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98293
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    I was pondering this question also. The word ‘waiting’ for me turned into the phrase ‘chasing rainbows’. I’ve realised that I’ve been doing that for the past few years, going after that elusive something with the promise of the proverbial pot of gold at the end. I haven’t found the pot of gold yet. Nowhere near. At least, when I thought I had found something great that would bring me happiness, it turned out to be short-lived. There’s always something more that I think I need in my life.

    What is the pot of gold? Is this the promise of a better place? An escape from my boring existence? That thing which will finally give me happiness and satisfaction? That which will suddenly make me see and understand everything in my life? Love? More cake?

    I think you are right about the fact that we are seeking and waiting for when we are free from fear. I think we are onto something here!

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98207
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    Waiting…I guess that’s a word that resonates within me (I feel as though I should speak in 1st person for this now haha) – I think Eckhard Tolle once said that it’s not uncommon for people to wait for their lives to begin, or something to that effect.

    I guess I have been doing a lot of waiting…Waiting for what? Waiting for when things will go my way again? Waiting for the things I hope will bring me happiness and fulfilment? Waiting for my escape? Waiting to leave? Waiting to escape the past and move forward with my life? Do I carry on wallowing in this sandpit of my own making or do I find some way to engineer an escape?

    I’ve met many people who have described me as ‘neither here nor there’

    And I must say, I really enjoy our posts together – I am always fascinated with your ideas Anita πŸ˜€

    Joe

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98203
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    You have made Joe smile non-stop for the past few minutes. If you don’t mind Joe asking, what do you wonder when you see his drawings? Why do you think Joe draws his weird characters without smiles?

    Maybe Joe would consider writing stories basing the antagonists on some of his obnoxious relatives but for now he wants to write stories about travel and escape.

    Thanks πŸ˜€

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98190
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    Joe agrees that it is very fun to write about oneself in the third person, maybe he should do this more often! As for things Joe wants to write about, he would like to write fictional short stories and semi-autobiographical stories based around some of the people he has known and things he has done. I will be sure to write many things about the mental travels I take every time I daydream.

    Joe wants to travel to many places – for the past year or so he has been thinking a lot about travelling through Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Scandinavia, America and particularly would love to visit Iceland or Norway to witness the Aurora Borealis. There are many places in the British Isles he still hasn’t seen, especially Glastonbury, Stonehenge, rural Ireland and Scotland.

    Currently Joe is at ease with being single and free of a relationship as this means he is free to do anything he wants, but Joe would love to learn to love and be loved at some point in the future – he wants to try and conquer himself first.

    As for the kind of paintings and illustrations Joe creates – he describes himself as a ‘Joe of all trades’ and enjoys working in many mediums, namely inks, markers, watercolours, gouache, acrylics and digital media. His work is some crazy mashup of all the things that have inspired or influenced him – fantasy, creepy gothic art, surrealism, manga and pop art. He has a sample of some of his work on his Flick – https://www.flickr.com/photos/136271080@N04/

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98155
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    Joe has many things he wants from life – in the meantime, has many ideas for weird and wacky paintings and illustrations which currently lie in a sketchbook amongst other mad scribblings and doodles which have been scrawled with coloured biros. He is hoping to score some illustration gigs soon and to sell some of his handmade crafts so that he can save up some cash in order to make his dreams a reality. He would also like a part-time temporary job so that he can earn more money to work towards this.

    As for long-term goals, Joe still would love to travel – the only viable way he can think of achieving this would be to once again teach English – however, he has decided he would rather teach adults and university students and have the freedom to do as he pleased every day after work, living either by himself or others of similar age at a private accommodation. There are many places he would love to see. Joe also wants to carry on with his crafting and illustration work, and would love to take this with him on his travels as well.

    Joe has also forgotten that he once told himself he would love to write more and he would love to update and maintain an online blog to share his musings with the world. Writing things which aren’t just stream-of-consciousness writings and cut-up sentences.

    Joe probably has more things he wants but has forgotten about, but he will state them when he remembers what they are.

    in reply to: book recommendations? #98151
    Joe
    Participant

    Anita

    I think you’re right about meeting your reading needs on this site, and I like what you said about the posts being authentic. I also love reading paper books – smelling the pages, turning the pages and touching the paper (I sound like an absolute nerd!)

    As for this book you speak of – ‘The Year Of Joe’, I’m currently at the passive part of the story where nothing of major importance is happening in the life of the main protagonist. Joe is still waking up reasonably early (even on a Sunday), he is still filling most of his time with crazy illustrations made with marker pens and paint, listening to Kate Bush songs a lot and walks down to the library every Saturday where he assists members of the public with computer-related problems and placing returned books back on the shelf. Every night before he sleeps, however, Joe stares at the ceiling and imagines the vast world outside the confines of his small bedroom. He ponders on previous mistakes he has made and how he can avoid repeating them in future. He dreams of wanderlust and adventure in many faraway places he has never been to, and thinks about what needs to be done in order to make those dreams a reality. He also thinks back to where he was 10 years before and sometimes this causes him to worry; it’s gone by pretty darn quickly and he worries that if time just keeps passing him by and he doesn’t start to put more effort into what he wants, he might never get to do the things he wants to in life.

    in reply to: Thinking of permanently moving to Maui. #97706
    Joe
    Participant

    ElleTinker700

    I wish you the best of luck with your plans to move πŸ˜€ When do you think you will be moving there?

    in reply to: does horror damage us? is it bad to be interested in horror? #96925
    Joe
    Participant

    Hi Wisdom! This is an interesting topic here!

    I used to love all kinds of horror movies but now not so much. When I say horror movies, I mean the more extreme, graphic stuff – extreme blood and guts, demons, you name it…I’m still very much into the macabre genre of things – I love spooky stuff and I do have a morbid sense of humour at times but only at a Tim Burton level of spooky. The only horror movies I love watching are the trashy old B-list horror movies (Revenge Of The Killer Tomatoes), Elvira Mistress Of The Dark and like Anita, I also love psychological thrillers like Fatal Attraction and The Hand That Rocks The Cradle.

    I studied media studies when I was 17 and we had to explore why horror was so popular – people are just curious about horror because it’s a release thing, it’s a safer way of exploring darker subject matter without actually partaking in any of that kind of thing. I also read a movie magazine which suggested that as humans, we are naturally driven to horror and fear on an evolutionary level and that’s why we love watching horror films so much.

    Maybe we just love watching horror as some kind of release or escape from reality – who hasn’t imagined or thought about what they would do if they were caught in a zombie apocalypse?

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