The Universal Helplessness
You're lying in the dark. Your eyes are closed. Your body is heavy with exhaustion. You need to sleep—desperately. You want to sleep with every fiber of your being. You know you have to be up in five hours. So you command yourself. Sleep. Sleep now. Close your mind. Relax. Let go.
And nothing happens.
The harder you concentrate on falling asleep, the more acutely aware you become of every sound, every sensation, every thought. The desperation to sleep becomes a spotlight, and you watch it illuminate the very wakefulness you are trying to extinguish. Minutes crawl. You try a different technique. Breathe slower. Count backwards. Empty your mind. But the very effort of emptying your mind becomes a thought you are aware of. Effort has become the enemy of what you're trying to achieve.
This is not a rare problem for the few. This is the universal human experience. Rich and poor, the brilliant and the simple, the pious and the profane—they have all found themselves in that dark room, willing with every ounce of their being toward a goal their will cannot produce. And in that moment, if you are paying attention, you come face to face with a truth about yourself that most of us spend our entire lives avoiding: there are things you want with genuine intensity that you simply cannot do, no matter how sincere your desire, no matter how determined your will.
This is not a failure to try hard enough. It is not a lack of motivation. It is a failure of capacity. And the human being was not designed to accept such failure easily. So we lie there, and we rage against it silently, and we wonder: what is happening to me?