When a car is in alignment it travels down the road in a straight line, even when one lets go of the steering wheel. When it is out of alignment, it veers to the left or the right, and eventually ends up way off course. If we are not in alignment, our wellbeing ends up being undermined in a similar way. Initially you may hardly notice any difference, but over time, you can find yourself seriously off balance.
So, when we think of wellbeing, what are the elements of alignment? A simple and effective summary of alignment is: Head, Heart and Hand (or thinking, feeling and doing). Are your thoughts, emotions and actions consistent, or are some aspects of your being pulling you off-course? It is extremely difficult to be in total harmony, but when there is significant conflict between these three dimensions there is certain to be trouble ahead.
Hands are the dependent variable in our internal harmony, they take instructions from either the head or heart, and sometimes both. Hands are the actionable tools in our public display of who we are. Sometimes both our heads (our thoughts) and our hearts (our feelings) are in harmony, but it is not always easy to hold an appropriate tension between these two.
Our heads can get so caught up in rationalizing (slow thinking) that we forget to act and just end up procrastinating, as our thoughts tie us up in impossible dilemmas or conundrums. Without strong emotions, we fail to act.
Similarly, our hearts (feelings) can prompt us to much kinder decisions which are ultimately much better for our wellbeing, but feelings can also be misleading, and we can run away with our emotions. They need to be policed by our thoughts to make wise, not impulsive, decisions.
To better manage our wellness is it useful to check in periodically and see how well we are aligned. Are our hands taking too much instruction from our head and not listening enough to our quiet heart and soul, or are we listening too much to our feelings and not enough to our heads?
Our best long term navigator is when our hands, heart and hands work together in alignment. Then the heart, acting like a moral compass, ponders the reputational consequences of our thoughts and steers us accordingly.
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