I have already posted about my regular morning routine, so I'm gonna commence with my evening ritual. The first portion is prayer.
I personally find this one a particularly interesting one, being that I am an atheist. It seems pretty futile, even comical, that an atheist would engage in prayer at all, much less every night that he remembers to do so. But I think there is power in ritual. Strip it of its mystical or spiritual overtones, it still has a profound effect on one's psyche.
I'm not sure what exactly those effects are, though I'm convinced that if I were to look into them I could definitely find some pragmatic and even concrete benefits it has on your psychological health. If nothing else, it helps me to focus on the positive and, more importantly, on being active. Seeing, being an atheist, I hold no pretense about any omnipotent supernatural beings coming to the rescue and taking care of things for me: I realize that if I am to manifest something into reality, the burden is on me to do it. Prayer, at least the pretenses of prayer, permits me the opportunity to pronounce what I wish to see manifested freely, without restraint. It is an opportunity for me to declare what I would have be, removing the shackles of what is supposedly realistic or practical. I give myself permission to dream and push my creative limits in terms of what I feel I can cause to materialize.
So I practice prayer fairly regularly. Call it unrestrained and benign, even altruistic, goal-setting if you will. In either case, it amounts to the same thing: willing yourself to conceive of possibilities beyond your perceived limits.
I personally find this one a particularly interesting one, being that I am an atheist. It seems pretty futile, even comical, that an atheist would engage in prayer at all, much less every night that he remembers to do so. But I think there is power in ritual. Strip it of its mystical or spiritual overtones, it still has a profound effect on one's psyche.
I'm not sure what exactly those effects are, though I'm convinced that if I were to look into them I could definitely find some pragmatic and even concrete benefits it has on your psychological health. If nothing else, it helps me to focus on the positive and, more importantly, on being active. Seeing, being an atheist, I hold no pretense about any omnipotent supernatural beings coming to the rescue and taking care of things for me: I realize that if I am to manifest something into reality, the burden is on me to do it. Prayer, at least the pretenses of prayer, permits me the opportunity to pronounce what I wish to see manifested freely, without restraint. It is an opportunity for me to declare what I would have be, removing the shackles of what is supposedly realistic or practical. I give myself permission to dream and push my creative limits in terms of what I feel I can cause to materialize.
So I practice prayer fairly regularly. Call it unrestrained and benign, even altruistic, goal-setting if you will. In either case, it amounts to the same thing: willing yourself to conceive of possibilities beyond your perceived limits.