To some extent, I feel the need for control, too. In my
case, though, it isn’t the only thing that prevents me from enjoying the
spontaneity of life. A bigger factor is my need to observe.
The problem with, or value of, spontaneity is that it
encourages unconditional connection with a person, situation, or whatever, unencumbered
by external considerations. It’s like walking into a wood. You can see the
detail in the nearest trees, but you can’t see the wood in the context of the
surrounding landscape. I need to see both at the same time, and that inevitably
dilutes the connection. On those occasions when I allow entirely
spontaneous behaviour, I always feel in retrospect that I’ve missed something. I’ve
let the bigger picture pass me by unnoticed. And that leads to a question:
Are the need for control and the need to observe two
different psychological traits, or is the need for control a corollary of the
need to observe?
2 comments:
Or is observing a way of controlling the situation?
Or is the practice of observing merely a by-product that develops out of the need to stay a little apart, just in case something happens that you can't control?
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