Recognizing the Hero in Your Life

Ever wondered why others can be heroes and you are not? Ever felt plagued by a vague sense of uneasiness
that seems to be saying that you could do more? Ever felt bitter because others are openly and publicly recognized  for what they have accomplished, and you are not?
Perhaps you need to consider getting a new pair of glasses …
Over the years I’ve been greatly inspired by Joseph Campbell, world-renowned mythologist, who in turn, was inspired by another one of my own figurative mentors: Carl Gustav Jung, the Swiss psycho-analyst who so famously broke from Freud, and has been recently portrayed in the movie A Dangerous Method. Campbell spent much of his life writing about the figure of the hero, not only the mythological hero, but also the hero who resides in each of us and is begging for release into his particular and individual adventure.
Campbell notably wrote: Opportunities to find deeper powers within ourselves come when life seems most challenging. And that is what being a hero is all about. So when we seek recognition, it has to first come from our own recognition of the hero within … the hero that each one of us is on a daily basis.
Consider this:
  • what did you do that day in the schoolyard when you were only 10 and saw Suzy getting bullied by the two older girls?
  • what did you do that day when your car broke down in the middle of nowhere with no reception for your mobile phone?
  • what did you do when you found it appeared that your baby had drowned in the pool, but you refused to accept it and fought for his life?
  • what did you do when you lost your job due to downsizing, could not find another in your field, but had to pay the bills?
  • what did you do when you realized your profession was not fulfilling you, but because of your obligations to family and home, you were not able to simply strike out for something else? Did you not stay on, bide your time, and give of yourself for the sake of those who depended on you?
  • what did you do during the nine months your father was dying of terminal lung cancer to help him ease the discomfort?
Whatever you have done in your life, and not only in moments of challenge such as the examples enumerated above, but also in your quest to give meaning to your life … whether it be by seeking more intrinsically fulfilling work, or by learning how to play the piano, or by studying the mating patterns of sperm whales, or by teaching newly-arrived immigrants in your country your language to help them adapt more quickly – any and all of these examples, as well as all the others your imagination can come up with, show you where you have become a hero in your life. You You just have to recognize it.
You may not wish to be labeled a hero, but you will begin to appreciate yourself much more, and to approve of
yourself much more, and to love yourself much more, if you begin to give heroic value to those things that you have done – whatever they may be – that are in the directions I’ve painted above. 
Your heroic behavior deserves recognition and admiration, but sometimes we are the only ones who really know
about what we have done. CNN’s heroes of the year, an annual program that gives praise and recognition to a few individuals, nevertheless culls those particular heroes from a list that is much, much longer. The fact that some
receive such public acknowledgement and others do not, is not particularly important if you become aware of your own heroic qualities.
  • do you sit in a wheelchair all day, dealing with a life from that vantage  point, instead of being able to stand on your feet? This too, is being a hero.
  • do you spend the days of your retirement helping young teens at the neighbourhood high school excel in math? This too, is being a hero.
  • do you volunteer at a local shelter or soup kitchen? This too, is being a hero.
  • do you brush away your tiredness after a long day at work in order to come back home and offer your children a smile while you fix them dinner and help them with their homework? This too, is being a hero.
  • do you live a life of grim financial or physical hardship? And do you get up each morning and set out on your day determined to live positively, determined to look for yet another way out of your predicament, and
    determined to not allow it to get your down? This too, is being a hero.
  • have you become aware of parts of your personality that do not serve you well? Are you perhaps critical, judgmental, impatient, unkind or arrogant? Making the effort to overcome these ways of thinking and behaving is also being a hero.
  • do you have a dream … any dream … and do you make a conscious effort each and every day to make your dream a reality? This too, is being a hero.
Campbell also wrote It is by going down into the abyss that we recover the treasures of life. Where you stumble, there lies your treasure.
So again, it is in the overcoming of stumbling blocks, it is in facing the darkness (problems, desperation, pain)
that we find our rainbow, our inner light, which for the purposes of this article I am calling our inner hero.
Recognize your own hero, give yourself approbation and praise for what you have done this far in your life.
The inner hero resides in all of us … have you become aware of your own?

 

For much more about the self-transformational process – both in your outer life in the world, and in your inner life with your connection to your inner, divine self, have a look at my book Rewiring the Soul: Finding the Possible Self (paperback or e-book).

To download the first chapter, click here

From the Description on Amazon: Ask anyone, whatever their circumstances, if their life is vibrant, fulfilling, harmonious and happy. An honest reply is likely to be ‘no’, because to answer a truthful ‘yes’ is no mean feat. Only to grow psychologically and emotionally is not enough. And only to grow spiritually is not enough either. All three dimensions need to be developed in order to realize your full potential. If you are willing to assume total responsibility for the self and to start what is an on-going journey, you will quickly begin to glimpse the first fruits of the ultimate goal: inner well-being, freedom, peace, harmony and joy. This book sets out the pathway to self-mastery and self-discovery and walking that pathway will be the most exciting adventure of your life.