Like
I do when I’m driving, I must stay both alert and relaxed as I live my life
today. When driving on frozen streets, I have to be observant for especially
slippery sections of the road, but I also have to remain relaxed enough at the wheel
to maneuver the car with deftness and flexibility. I have to stay both tense
and easy-going. I must be resolute, in the sense of unswervingly watching every
inch of the way ahead, but I must also be supple and even a little blasé as I
adjust to the shifting circumstances. I sometimes picture a good driver on a
bad road as having a furrowed forehead (the alertness) but a slight and honest
smile (the easygoingness). He’s working hard but still somehow taking pleasure
in the situation. I picture myself all day today in a similar way. Certainly I
have to be totally alert to every shade and tone of things as the hours pass. Like
all of us, I will sometimes wish I had fifty eyes instead of just two, and a
few dozen ears wouldn’t hurt. Thousands of mental and verbal events will happen
today, and I want to be aware of as many of them as possible. However, I must
always balance my watchfulness with an equal amount of lightness and easing up.
Living a safe but lighthearted life often resembles steering across a frozen
mountain road, and while I’m ever on the alert I also need to be relaxed enough
to move through the labyrinth that’s always created when a free-thinking,
restive senior citizen steers through the streets of a new day. I need to
‘drive’ myself with awareness of the coolest kind, with an attentiveness that
feels like easy dancing.
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