A person who is wild on the
inside looks actually very calm on the outside.
They may even seem boring
compared to one who is ‘inner domesticated’.
The reason for this is that the
more one needs and tries to fit into other’s expectations, cultural ideals or
needs, the more one reaches a neurosis on the inside that eventually breaks on the outside.
A person who is truly internally wild is free and trusts themselves. They trust their decisions and they trust
that a higher force that is loving and working for their higher good is at
play. This means having confidence that the weaving and winding path of life will pan out and make
sense in the long run, even if we cannot see it now.
A wild one is patient and acts
with tremendous loving force when the time feels right to them and much like nature itself they are fantastically energy efficient.
When a person is still domesticated on the
inside, they can expend a great deal of energy trying to be what they are not; tame-able, caged, and ‘fitting in’ with the crowd. This can cause depressions
and even in the mildest cases, addictions to experiences and substances where
one can temporarily feel like ‘themselves’ for a while, free of the outside
control.
In truth, there is no outside
control, it is always the terrorist in the mind, an attitude of lack that makes
us look for what we need ‘out there’ forgetting it was always the other way
round. The Wild One knows this, and she or he walks beyond the starched ideas of wrongdoings and right doings into their own authentic domain,
where they know they can serve themselves and others properly, with integrity
Caroline Myss says that a person
with a high esteem of themselves is also one who can take great responsibility
and accountability for their lives, it goes hand in hand. No longer needing to
make it about anyone else, wildness is the inside undoing of all that never was
and never will be us.
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