My Enlightened Wellbeing Self Assessment
March 13, 2011 by Kimberly Darwin Zadroga
Filed under Awareness, Featured
I just visited Deepak Chopra’s site and took an Enlightened Wellbeing Self Assessment. Talk about feeling like a mixed bag of growth. The assessment asks simple questions (“Are you happy with your body?”) and questions about enlightenment (“Do you see your world as divine?”) and some referring to terms I’ve never heard of.
The assessment took about 3 minutes, and returned a result smack in the middle of the spectrum…in other words, MEDIOCRE!
This is not what I wanted to see, but when I really reflect on it, I guess it is actually pretty accurate. After all, I am a pretty worldly person (I like my electronic gadgets and sparkly stones), but I do have a sense of the divine and understand the basics of why we’re here.
This assessment, of course, allows me the room to grow, and to focus my efforts on improving the areas in which I scored pretty low (like tapping into the Akashic field, whatever that is). I got a new Kindle, so what better opportunity to take my learning to the Akashic field by way of modern technology…the best of both worlds!
If you would like to take the Enlightened Wellbeing Self Assessment, you can take it here
Namaste
The Imperfect Path to Enlightenment
April 23, 2009 by Kimberly Darwin Zadroga
Filed under Awareness, Live Guilt Free
If you’re like me, fully self-actualized and near perfect (NOT!), then you have all of the time in the world to spend on the path to enlightenment.
Just like me, you get up at 3:30am, meditate for 30 minutes, practice your tai chi and yoga for another 90 minutes, and eat your vegan breakfast with spirulina before you cook the rest of the day’s meals and then sit down at your perfectly-organized desk for a day’s work in complete concentration.
If you weren’t laughing at the beginning of this post, you probably are now. But really, I do know someone like that. Of course she is a Tibetan nun who is supported by a group of kind and loving followers. Even worse, she doesn’t even do her own dishes, and if she drops something on the floor someone else picks it up for her.
The rest of us just don’t live that way. But does that mean that we can’t follow some different path to enlightenment? What if we could set a goal to meditate sometime in the day, even if it’s in the car before we get out for our latte. Or to write in our journal about what we’ve learned about the human condition as we nod off over our writing utensil? Is that good enough for God?
Why wouldn’t it be?
After all, if God had wanted us all to follow the same path, then he wouldn’t have created so many different ones to tempt us. We wouldn’t have been given free choice at all. So if you’re in self-flagellation mode about your imperfect path to enlightenment, thank God that he gave you so many choices to get there, even if you can’t get up at 3:30 in the morning.



