The New Year is always brim-full of promises and ideas. Most of us make our “New Year’s resolutions” with great gusto and conviction, but may find that within a few days or weeks that enthusiasm (root: God within) to change has almost completely dissipated. Why is this so? How can we make change permanent?

The core of the issue is that, although our intentions are good, the way in which we direct them is subject to both individual and collective conditioning, hence, even the purest ideas become corrupted and lead us pretty much back to where we started.

An intention is the anticipated outcome we envision in our mind. Our values help us select and then guide our intentions. The dilemma is that our values, and the way we use them are the domain of ego, and so lasting transformation is difficult, if not impossible.

The most humble of New Year’s resolutions would be to end all unnecessary suffering, also known as, freedom. We will look at how this potential exists within your free will and how, when you are clear about your values, you can create a direct link between your intentions and your destiny. In this way your intentions become manifest in your future and you the master of your own destiny.

To stabilize the conditions for resolutions to “stick” you must reclaim consciousness that will otherwise be consumed in a continuous struggle with ego-based outcomes. Liberation from the effects of hand-me-down values, upon which we base our decision-making, is the outcome when those values are rearranged into one conscious group, where the primary value supports and guides your intention to be free from suffering.
The primary value that you select for this single hierarchy always represents that your interest in awakening is marginally greater than all others. Making decisions based on such a conscious primary principle will produce an enlightened effect. This new arrangement also supports all other necessary aspects of living, since subsequent values can include money, security, family, love, creativity, and learning.

An awakened person’s life is centered on a clear, single hierarchy of values, and when asked she could instantly identify what her primary value is. She may, however, have some difficulty determining what her second and third values are, as these will vary from choice to choice. Her primary value however, will be consistent with freedom from conditioning, and significant choices made in her day-to-day life will give consistent and tangible proof of this arrangement.

For example: To sustain the conditions for transformation consider placing a primary value such as completion, freedom, or fulfillment over and above all other values on a single hierarchy that is to represent your life from Jan 1, 2006 forward. Making a major life decision according to a primary value of completion delivers an outcome of completion regardless of the circumstances surrounding of that choice. Freedom is not dependent on the circumstances, options or outcomes, but on how consistently your pure intentions are directed by a related value that supports such an objective.

Conditioning segregates values into distinct and concurrent groups related to career, home, family, friends, and so on, in its futile attempt to manipulate reality. You may find out that you also have a “wish list” of values that includes valiant attributes such as integrity, perfection and creativity. The struggle with most major life decisions and their outcomes is the consequence of numerous “ego-guiding principles”. Not only does each group of values have it’s own agenda but each hierarchy has its own presiding primary value. This arrangement ensures that the ego remains in firm control of your life force and fortune.

Because most of us are not aware of the multiple groups of values we experience great anguish and confusion in times of making important choices. “Not knowing what to do”, is a clear manifestation that the ego is entrenched in values. An awakened person can make major life decisions in a matter of seconds with no worry, regret or fear that options may need to be “revised”.

Stressing over choices is a reflection of conditioning as it drains consciousness with compelling and conflicting narcissistic alternatives. The ego controls your decision-making process by selecting the most important values from these multiple and conflicting groups and then it lets you “duke” it out! In this way the ego can easily orchestrate your actions—and your fate—as you “weigh up the options,” “consider all the scenarios,” or look to the past for patterns. Whatever the original intention was, it is now lost, the outcome is conditioned, and lasting changes never seem to “stick.”

The ego also uses the battle for attention between all these values to drain your consciousness—in the present moment with deliberation—and in the future because of the conditioned outcomes you have to “overcome”. The continued existence of these multiple groups of values precludes you from being able to discover and express you full potential by setting and following through on noble resolutions.

As you awaken, it will become apparent how the first big decision you ever made—independently of your parents—was based on the existence of multiple groups of values, the result of conditioned intention and a product of the ego. You may also realize that you have been doing this pretty much ever since.

”The End of Suffering” was adapted from the soon-to-be-published book Power and Grace: The Four Steps of Evolving Consciousness by Irish author Mick Quinn, which is available online at: http://www.mickquinn.com

Author's Bio: 

A native of Ireland, Mick Quinn is authoring Power and Grace – The Four Steps of Evolving Consciousness. He has lectured to thousands nationwide and has received press attention from The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. He studied Buddhism, Christianity and the evolution of consciousness since 1991. View online at www.mickquinn.com