Summary of Accept Them as They Are
- How do I accept my life the way it is?
- What did the Buddha say about acceptance?
- What does it mean to accept life?
- What are the 4 A’s of acceptance?
Search Results
AI Overview
AI Overview
Accepting life as it is involves
embracing current,, often uncontrollable realities without resistance, allowing for reduced emotional distress and clearer, proactive decision-making. It requires letting go of how things “should” be, practicing mindfulness, focusing on controllable actions, and finding peace in the present moment rather than fighting against it.
Key Aspects of Accepting Life
Radical Acceptance: This is the practice of accepting reality—even if it is undesirable—without fighting or demanding it to be different. It is not a sign of weakness or apathy, but an acknowledgment of the present moment.
Focusing on Controllables: A major component of acceptance is distinguishing between what you can change and what you cannot. Instead of wasting energy on the latter, focus efforts on personal reactions and actions.
Stop Resisting and Fighting: Resistance to reality often causes more suffering than the situation itself. By saying “It is what it is” (or similar mantras), you can break the cycle of unproductive, stressful mental struggle.
Mindfulness and Observation: Observe thoughts and emotions without judgment, which helps you become aware of resistance and let go of the need to fix everything immediately.
How to Practice Acceptance
Identify Resistance: Name when you are fighting reality, such as “I’m resisting the fact that this is happening”.
Embrace the Full Package: Understand that life inherently includes both good and bad, joy and sorrow. Accepting this reduces the impact of negative surprises.
Focus on the Present: Shift focus from past regrets or future worries to what is occurring right now.
Practice Self-Acceptance: Embrace your own imperfections and mistakes as part of your life’s reality.
Accepting life as it is enables a shift from feeling like a victim to becoming an active agent who, despite uncontrollable circumstances, chooses their own response.
Practical tips to accept life as it is!? : r/DecidingToBeBetter
Jan 14, 2025 — Here’s what worked for me: * Name the Resistance: When you feel frustration or resistance to something in life, name it. Literally…
Reddit
Accepting Life “As It Is” – Transformation Coaching Magazine
Nov 29, 2023 — The first approach is to consciously and wholeheartedly make a decision that you accept life as a package deal that includes all t…
Transformation Coaching Magazine
Why Accepting Difficulties Makes Life Easier | Eckhart Tolle
Oct 10, 2024 — life is difficult. but when you when you know that life is difficult and you fully come to terms with the fact that life is diffic…
YouTube
·
Eckhart Tolle
9m
Show all
Show more
Environment
Accept Them as They Are
In what ways do you wish that people were different?
Posted October 13, 2014 Reviewed by Ekua Hagan
I admit it: Whether close to home or far away, I wish some people were different. Depending on who they are, I wish they’d stop doing things like leaving cabinet doors open in our kitchen, sending me spam emails, or turning a blind eye to global warming. And I wish they’d start doing things like being friendlier toward me or spending more money on public education. Even if it doesn’t affect me directly, for their own sake I do wish that various people I care about were more energetic, less anxious, or less self-critical.
In what ways do you wish that people were different? Think about the people close to you — friends, family, mates — as well as co-workers, drivers on the highway, businesspeople, media types, politicians, and world leaders. Think about people who are not doing their share of housework, not getting you the healthcare you need, promoting political policies that you dislike if not despise, etc.
It’s normal to wish that others were different, just like it’s normal to wish that you, yourself, were different (e.g., thinner, richer, wiser). It’s fine to try to influence others in skillful, ethical ways.
But problems come when we tip into righteousness, resistance, anger, fault-finding, badgering, or any other kind of struggle.
Over the past several months, I’ve been writing JOTs about my personal Top 5 practices (all tied for first place), which are: Be mindful, love, take in the good, go green, and open out. “Opening out” — my current focus — means relaxing into a growing sense of connection, even oneness, with all things. This is hard to do when we’re struggling with other people!
Instead, we could accept them for who they are and for who they are not.
Accepting people does not itself mean agreeing with them, approving of them, waiving your own rights, or downplaying their impact upon you. You can still take appropriate actions to protect or support yourself or others. Or you can simply let people be. Either way, you accept the reality of the other person. You may not like it, you may not prefer it, you may feel sad or angry about it, but at a deeper level, you are at peace with it. That alone is a blessing. And sometimes, your shift to acceptance can help things get better.
How?
Pick someone who is important to you. (You can do this practice with multiple people.) In your mind, out loud, or in writing, say things like these and see how you feel: “I accept you completely. Countless causes, large and small, have led you to think, speak, and act the way you do. You are who you are. I let it be. You are a fact and I accept the facts in my life. You and I are part of a larger whole that is what it is, and I accept it, too.”
If you like, be more specific, naming aspects of this person that particularly bother you, such as: “I accept that you . . . snore . . . leave your clothes on the floor . . . are still angry with me . . . have little natural interest in sex . . . are fighting me tooth-and-nail in this divorce . . . don’t really understand me . . . are not a good teacher for my child . . . break the law . . . hurt people on a large scale . . . ” (And remember that you can still disagree with, make requests of, or stand up to other people – while accepting them fully.)
See if you can tolerate what comes up for you when you soften into acceptance. Often we avoid accepting other people as a way to avoid the feelings we’d have if we opened wide to everything they are and everything they’re not.
Consider how you have gotten tangled up with this other person, struggling to change them. When I do this myself, I become aware of my own rightness, positionality, judgments, pushiness, irritability, narrow views, hurts, longings, grievances, or remorse. See if you can let go of some, even all of these entanglements. Open to the easing, relief, and peace that can come when you do.
Also, consider how much you like it when you feel that another person accepts you completely. It’s a beautiful gift — and we can give it ourselves to others when we accept them. Imagine how it might improve your relationship with someone if that person felt you accepted him or her fully. Acceptance is a gift that gives back.
For more information, see my website.