I agree with your analysis and the need for transformation. It seems to me that seeing the end of a road is one of the hardest things to do in life; especially if you have been on that road for a long time. I prefer to end up at a dead-end or a brick wall for the finality of it removes all future doubt about the correctness of your conclusion that continuing the path was futile. When there is no other option you never look back and wonder if you made the right choice. I really dislike such looking back for it seems impossible to come to definite conclusions. When you do not see the end of your road but predict it is coming and therefore change your path, your are taking a risk on the basis of your assumption. We always have the possibility to look back and lament while fantasizing about how things could have been different if we had just hung in there a little longer with more faith and self-confidence. Making mid-stream changes when there is no certainty of failure or loss is the hardest thing to do and requires the most courage and self-confidence. Changing when you have no other option is to a large extent easy and painless, despite the devastation. But again, this is my personal opinion.
Those who have the greatest success in politics, finances, adventure, war, love and so on, are usually those who have taken a great risk by committing themselves to an uncertain course of action or change of direction. Usually those who take great risk have the potential for the greatest gain; however, conversely there can be the greatest loss and long-term lamentation and pain. This is life and we have to deal with it.
Then again, simply waiting for brick walls to manifest can be an excruciatingly slow process; so much so that one would rather do anything else than continue in the same rut. In that case, change is welcome despite the result which we can live with by virtue of our memory of being unable to continue. This is another type of relieving dead-end.
Now, you ask about seeing in advance and you link that with self-created restriction versus fate. Interesting. I think no one can definitely see in advance and no one has a flash light into the future. We feel potential, we have previous experience of similar situations, we hear from divine beings, we hear our own hearts, and we follow our thoughts and desires. Sometimes this works well and we pride ourselves in being seers, and sometimes this fails and we condemn ourselves as fools. Ultimately we have to live with whatever we decide and grow from the place where our step landed. In either case it is what it is and we see it as good or bad according to the way our mind and spirit have moved with the event. We cannot finalize our conclusion about an event until we see it within the context of time. Since we do not know how large a context is required to properly determine the goodness or badness of any action, the wise refrain from self-judgment and simply state, 'It was.' This is the only sane conclusion and it is often expressed as, 'I did what I thought was best at the time I did it.'
But where is that sane person who avoids self-condemnation? We all have our own form of madness and it is this madness which moves our spirit to take chances and leave the pack with which we now run. The pack taught us restrictions and we accepted them. Is this not also our fate? What is really the point in trying to distinguish the source of our limitations? What is the point of trying to ascertain if we are reaching a 'real' dead end or a 'mental' dead end? Are we separate from all that we are? If it is a mental creation, with what agency of analysis would we determine this, the mind? Slippery slopes, methinks. Anyway, my point is that although there is little use in trying to find the source of our troubles, we will always attempt it anyway. That is what makes us human and such endeavors are noble in a certain way.
When we erect our monumental structures should we design them? And how to do it properly not just from the point of view of architecture or technical science, but from spirit's point of view? What is important for our spirit in our designs of ourselves and in the way we start, maintain and complete or resolve our constructions, wipe our slates clean or try to revive them, search for new instruments, not knowing what to do with those we have already?
Our designs should be ruled by the principle to become the next greatest version of the grandest vision of ourselves we have ever had. I think this answers your question perfectly. You cannot wipe your slate clean for you can only move from where you are. Therefore, attempt to become the next greatest version of that greatest vision. There is enormous wisdom in this saying.
Hari wrote:
The only difference between the ideal state and the present state would be your freedom from the negative effects of the past which hinder your advancement.[end of quote from Hari]
In relation to this what are proper and harmonious ways to resolve negative effects, and even to understand which layers of our past are resolved and which are not and where are they holding us, or where are we holding them, which may be the same, may it not?
Acch, you are asking me to repeat all the different techniques created that are in their own way effective for different individuals at different times in their evolutionary journey. I cannot do that, neither is it required. Each of us has to seek out compatible methods of healing and continue with them as long as there is a good effect. We then either find another method and repeat the process or we seek out other experiences until we need to continue our therapeutic journey within.