What is your destiny? It is what you’re experiencing now, which you created yesterday and moments ago. It is what you, and others, will remember when you look back over your life years from now. It’s what they mean when they say, “That’s how he lived his life. That’s who he was”.
It’s your career, not your job. It’s how you loved, not who loved you. It’s what you did and gave, not what you earned or bought. It’s how much happiness you created, not how happy you were. It’s the truth you told, not the lies other’s told about you. It’s how accepted people felt in your home, not where you lived, or how big the house was.
If you really don’t like the destiny you’re creating for yourself, can you change it? Yes, either by becoming enlightened, or if, when the status quo finally becomes intolerable, you discover the courage to let go of it.
I don’t believe that people can change unless they’re forced to by intolerable pain. This doesn’t necessarily mean constant agony – perhaps, for you, the disappointment of not making more of your life has become intolerable, and this pain may be enough of a catalyst to help you change. Or maybe the loneliness has become so painful that it gives you the strength to overcome your fear of connection.
I think personality is hard-wired by the time you’re an adult, and from an evolutionary perspective, there’s been strong selection against the ability to self-rewire. Evolution works with versatility, but not insanity. Trying to change your personality is fairly insane – it got you this far, so it’s working. You don’t try to change what’s working in evolution.
But evolution apparently left the door open for change, if it’s unavoidable. If the pain caused by thoughts and behaviours becomes too much, you will change.
I also think that if you’re searching for meaning, you’ll find it. You’ll create the situations and circumstances in your life that give you the chance to find meaning. If you’re really stubborn, like most people, you may create situations that force you to look for meaning.
If you’re so impatient to change that you unconsciously create a really huge crisis in your life, you can use this as a turning point. This is very risky, because a crisis is painful and can seriously impact your life and other people. There’s the risk that things will go horribly wrong. So, rather be patient.
But I’ve found that things happen, if you’re open to change. A crisis, assuming you survive it, can shock you out of your mind, and give you an unparalleled opportunity to change your attitude and life.
Can you become enlightened without suffering? Can you become enlightened, or as Osho puts it, intelligent, just by choosing to, and thinking about it? I don’t know. Anything’s possible, but I doubt it.
So keep your wits about you at all times, as they say. Stay conscious, aware, and expect things to go well. Live by your values, because that’s what you’ll be remembered for, whatever else happens. If you do that, you’re already a hero, right now.
All the pain in the world is just the wrapping around the gifts, the love and happiness, that we crave. You’ll be happy now, if you stop fearing the pain, and clutching the gifts.

