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Just For Fun Remembering Childhood
Joys
As adults, we
often get so caught up in "grown up" business that we can forget how to have
pure fun. This isn't the kind of fun that comes from doing a specific kind of
activity or being in a specific mood for fun. Rather, this is the fun born from
the state of pure being. You see this kind of fun in small children who are so
busy being fully present to their lives and in their own bodies that the glow of
fun radiates from them just because they are alive: the delight that flashes
across the eyes of a child who discovers that water flows with the turn of the
tap knob or the squeal of pleasure from a young baby whose tongue is being
tickled by cold ice cream; then there's the full, infectious laughter of a child
watching the same hat trick for the fiftieth time.
Back when we were
children, this experience of pure delight didn't have to come from a heightened,
heady event in order for us to feel like our day had been made; and it can be
that way for us again - if we are willing to remember and reconnect with that
part of ourselves that knows how to be in the flow of fun. You can begin this
process by reminiscing on what was fun for you as a child. Think about what
caused you to giggle in delight or wriggle in pleasure or burst into endless
laughter that you couldn't sit up straight no matter how much you wanted to. Try
to spend a few moments with each memory, and really feel what it was like to be
in those experiences - allowing that feeling of pure fun to wash over you. It
lives, in you - that feeling. It can't be bottled, manufactured, or sold. You
just have to call it back up in order to experience it again.
Pure fun
happens when we are fully engaged with ourselves and our world in each moment.
It is the spontaneous delight that bubbles out of us when we let go long enough
to bring it through; it is the experience of natural, organic pleasure that
springs up from our bellies, through our souls, up through our faces, and down
to our toes. We've naturally known how to have pure fun since we were babies and
the flicker of lights caused us to jump to attention from the sheer enjoyment of
being able to see. Approach your life today with the knowledge that pure fun
isn't something that is given or done to you; rather, it is something that you
allow yourself to experience. |
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Just For Fun Remembering Childhood Joys
As adults, we often get so caught up in "grown up"
business that we can forget how to have pure fun. This isn’t the kind of fun
that comes from doing a specific kind of activity or being in a specific mood
for fun. Rather, this is the fun born from the state of pure being. You see this
kind of fun in small children who are so busy being fully present to their lives
and in their own bodies that the glow of fun radiates from them just because
they are alive: the delight that flashes across the eyes of a child who
discovers that water flows with the turn of the tap knob or the squeal of
pleasure from a young baby whose tongue is being tickled by cold ice cream; then
there’s the full, infectious laughter of a child watching the same hat trick for
the fiftieth time.
Back when we were children, this experience of pure
delight didn’t have to come from a heightened, heady event in order for us to
feel like our day had been made; and it can be that way for us again - if we are
willing to remember and reconnect with that part of ourselves that knows how to
be in the flow of fun. You can begin this process by reminiscing on what was fun
for you as a child. Think about what caused you to giggle in delight or wriggle
in pleasure or burst into endless laughter that you couldn’t sit up straight no
matter how much you wanted to. Try to spend a few moments with each memory, and
really feel what it was like to be in those experiences �?allowing that feeling
of pure fun to wash over you. It lives, in you �?that feeling. It can’t be
bottled, manufactured, or sold. You just have to call it back up in order to
experience it again.
Pure fun happens when we are fully engaged with
ourselves and our world in each moment. It is the spontaneous delight that
bubbles out of us when we let go long enough to bring it through; it is the
experience of natural, organic pleasure that springs up from our bellies,
through our souls, up through our faces, and down to our toes. We’ve naturally
known how to have pure fun since we were babies and the flicker of lights caused
us to jump to attention from the sheer enjoyment of being able to see. Approach
your life today with the knowledge that pure fun isn’t something that is given
or done to you; rather, it is something that you allow yourself to experience.
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