The adventures of a small teddy bear and his friends have charmed generations of both children and adults for decades. The characteristics of timid Piglet, bouncy Tigger, bossy Rabbit and the sullen but lovable Eeyore have made us laugh at or sympathize with their predicaments.
But these stories are not so fluffy and mindless as one might believe at first glance. They are modern parables that can teach us much about love, patience and humour. There are also some subtler lessons for us to ponder, like when fear takes hold of the imagination.
Take the story of Pooh, Piglet and the Heffalump, for example.
鈥淚 saw a heffalump today, Piglet,鈥 Christopher Robin mentions casually. 鈥淲hat was it doing?鈥 asks Piglet, already beginning to tremble. 鈥淥h nothing much. It was just lumping along,鈥 responds Christopher Robin. That one short, casual conversation triggers the decision between Pooh and Piglet to set a trap for what was, in effect, just a figment of their imagination.
Many of us have more than a few heffalumps to worry about, and the list of health consequences from so much anxiety is long. In fact, we end up worrying about the fact that we worry too much; we develop strategies to cope, just as Piglet did.
I totally get Piglet, having experienced anxieties that felt overwhelming at times. I also glimpse an underlying message in that story -- that what we are worrying about may have no basis, and sometimes even comes from the suggestions of others.
For example, several years ago I had just started a new job that I enjoyed. However, as my training progressed it became clear that I needed math skills I simply did not have. I began to worry I would lose this wonderful job. Adding to the problem was the news media, which was consistently reporting higher levels of unemployment in the area in which I was living. All this anxiety resulted in many wakeful nights strategizing how I would cope when the pink slip eventually landed on my desk. I started getting headaches which affected my job performance.
It took me a while to recognize that, like Piglet, I was looking at the problem from the wrong perspective. I realized I needed a prayer break. And, what came to me in that quiet communion with God was a verse from the Message听interpretation of the Bible, rendered in today鈥檚 speech:
鈥淲hen we take up permanent residence in a life of love, we live in God and God lives in us. This way, love has the run of the house, becomes at home and mature in us, so that we鈥檙e free of worry on Judgment Day.鈥 (1 John 4: 16).
For me, the worry was about not having the needed skills to do my job; the Judgement Day was my performance review and the inevitable job loss. But this Bible verse awoke me to the realization that I wasn鈥檛 living in the present awareness of the God that is Love. Once I realized that鈥檚 what I needed to do, the relief was quick and permanent.
The final part of Piglet and the heffalump story offers a good example of what happens when we see things from the basis of love rather than fear. When Piglet sees what he thinks is a heffalump in the pit he dug with Pooh, he runs, terrified, to the cool, calm and always loving Christopher Robin. Looking at Piglet鈥檚 object of terror, "Mr. Cool" lovingly shows Piglet that it鈥檚 just Pooh Bear with an empty honey pot stuck on his head. No heffalump. It takes just a moment for Piglet to see his mistake. He was looking at the monster from the wrong perspective -- from fear, based on a misperception.
In my case, I had been looking at my problem from a position of fear. I observed that this was a question of identity. I could either see myself as vulnerable and fearful, or as permanently, divinely loved and capable. It couldn鈥檛 be both. So my way forward needed to be to humbly claim that loved status -- to see it and express it everywhere, including at my workplace. I realized there was no value in an identity that was fearful about what my boss might be thinking, but a more confident, loving approach could bring solutions. This was a major change of perspective for me. As I consistently cultivated these ideas and lived them every day, they became more 鈥渁t home鈥 in me. The sleepless nights, headaches and anxiety left as I felt more confident in this new identity.
When Judgement Day -- the 听performance review -- arrived, I was calm and ready to learn, but I had no idea of the surprise I was in for. My boss told me that I was being given more responsibility. As for the math, someone else was given that task! He understood that it wasn鈥檛 my strongest talent. I saw that where I had seen and feared lack and failure, he had seen potential and ability. He had a different perspective. We were both living in that same Love. I also realized that even had I lost that job, this new way of seeing things meant that I had lost my fear of unemployment. It never influenced me again.
Every day new worries are trumpeted from social media sites, blogs, news outlets and even friends and family. We unwittingly take on many of these worries.
However, we can learn to look at all these issues from the position of divine Love鈥檚 reality. Then we are able to cultivate a new sense of identity, and take up permanent residence in this life of Love.
There, we feel -- and are -- safe and healthy.
Anna Bowness-Park is a Christian Science practitioner, who writes frequently on the relationship between consciousness and health, and how prayer can play a role. You can follow her blog at听http://听听
You can read more articles from our interfaith blog, Spiritually Speaking,