An aside:
I disappeared a while ago. Haven't posted here or even browsed the forum much since I got a contract job in February. Got caught up worrying about office politics, and long days left little time to work on my game. As such, my state of mind went downhill, my confidence suffered, and I haven't been as social. Now that my contract is up and I'm looking for work again, I finally got around to starting on my inner game reading list, running again (being out of shape is a confidence killer), and also a renewed commitment to the forum. Especially this board, where I feel I have the most to (re)learn and the most to contribute.
AND SO...
The website "half" is usually cheaper than late book fees at the library. The first book on my list to arrive was Eckhart Tolle's
The Power of Now. I've been reading that only for a couple of days, along with my roommate's copy of
Be the Pack Leader by Cesar Millan, the Dog Whisperer. I went running earlier and came across some realizations while thinking about what I had read.
1. BELIEVING IN AN UNDERLYING ENERGY
For working out and for running especially, I try to keep playlists on my iPod of hard, fast, motivating music. 300...400...500 bpm, snare drum on 2 and 4 to keep my feet from slowing down. Ok, I know that's not for everyone. And sometimes, even a 460 bpm driving positive hardcore song won't keep me from tiring out.
Yet, there
ARE songs that will keep me going long after my body has given up. Some of them much slower by comparison. There are certain songs that give me goosebumps and a natural high, and I can't quantify this characteristic. -- ENERGY -- it's high or it's low, or maybe in the middle. The way a person plays an instrument, the energy they put in, has as much to do with what you hear than what notes they play, the equipment they use, or any other feature. That's why you hear of many record producers trying to capture a band's "live energy" in the studio. I started thinking of this because of Millan categorizing dogs as high energy and low energy and Tolle's assertion that energy is life.
2. THE FALSE DICHOTOMY OF SELF VS. OTHERS
I was into philosophy in college, perhaps too much so. Back then, I was attracted to the works of existentialists like Sartre. If you haven't ever read the play No Exit, I'm going to spoil the ending for you. The famous last line reads, "Hell is other people." Let me spell that out... According to Sartre, the worst thing that can happen to a single person and his/her desires is another person and that person's desires. So Sartre pits Self against Others. Needless to say, that philosophy isn't going to work out very well for our purposes. Ever meet someone with a "me against the world" attitude? Not exactly prime PUA material.
Now, Tolle has a great way of thinking about the Self as separate from the Mind. According to him, our Minds often get in the way of achieving peace through connecting with our Selves. It made great sense to me when I read it, essentially stop thinking and start doing. But I soon found a hole (which Tolle may very well address later in the book since I haven't got that far) in that theory: external sources of conflict. That is, other people bringing a fight to you. What dawned on me was that this isn't my Mind that's the problem... it's his Mind, the guy that's bringing the conflict. It's all our selfish Minds causing strife, and if we could connect Self to Self we may live in better harmony.
Note: I believe that the Mind vs. Self thing is why I, and perhaps others, have such trouble with routines and outer game and prefer to focus on natural game. Those things, unless/until they are ingrained in you, are in your Mind and interfering with your Self.
3. DO NOT PROCESS: SEEING WITHOUT WORDS
Thinking about Millan's statements that dogs live in the now, along with the title of Tolle's book, during my cooldown I started to try to live in the moment. I saw my street, houses, cars, trees, etc. And I did not allow myself to think about any of these things, not even the words to describe them. I have a habit -- and not everyone thinks this way -- of very quickly processing information as soon as I see something; THINKING about it as soon as I see it. (And thinking about it too much after that.) For once, I didn't let myself think. Rather, I didn't let my Mind think. I let my Self experience. Even the music, I started listening while blocking all of the lyrics from reaching that part of my brain that recognizes them as words and phrases. I heard what anyone would hear as a completely foreign language, only a voice and its energy. Listening to our Self and its energy rather than our Mind and its thoughts is sure to help keep our instincts sharp. (Nod to
Blink author Malcom Gladwell.)
THAT'S ALL
For now anway. I sincerely hope that you got something from all that reading... other than a head trip.

In summary:
1. Stop trying to quantify everything and realize that ultimately energy rules.
2. Don't let your or anyone else's Mind interfere with the energy of our Selves.
3. Stop (over)processing information, just take it in and experience it.