Widening Your Field of View
The universe can be cruel and it's important to see that coming.
The Myopia of Perceived Control
Welcome to the third module of our journey through deterministic self-improvement. Having established that your choices are predetermined and outcomes are inevitable, we now turn to the practical question of navigation: how to move through your predetermined path with greater awareness and less suffering.
Most people navigate life with a dangerously narrow field of view. They focus exclusively on their immediate desires, plans, and the illusion that they control their destiny. This myopia isn't just philosophically incorrect—it's practically dangerous. It leaves you vulnerable to the inevitable hardships, setbacks, and cruelties that the universe will inflict regardless of your preferences or apparent choices.
Widening your field of view doesn't change what will happen—nothing could. But it allows you to see what's coming before it arrives, reducing the shock and suffering that accompanies unexpected difficulties.
The Universe's Indifference
Let's start with a fundamental truth that most self-help philosophies desperately avoid: the universe is utterly indifferent to your existence. The causal forces that determine your path don't care about your comfort, happiness, or survival. The laws of physics, biology, economics, and social dynamics will operate with perfect indifference to whether their outcomes benefit or harm you.
This isn't pessimism—it's reality. The cancer cell doesn't care about your life plans. The economic downturn doesn't consider your career aspirations. The drunk driver doesn't think about your family's need for you. These forces operate according to their own causal necessity, entirely unconcerned with their impact on your particular existence.
Recognizing this indifference isn't depressing but clarifying. It removes the childish notion that the universe should be fair or kind, replacing it with the adult recognition that hardship isn't a deviation from how things should be but an inevitable aspect of how things are.
Expanding Your Temporal Horizon
The narrow field of view most people operate with isn't just spatially limited but temporally constrained. They focus on immediate gratification and short-term outcomes, ignoring the inevitable long-term consequences of causal chains already in motion.
Widening your field of view means expanding your temporal horizon in both directions:
Looking Further Back
Most people's understanding of their current situation is embarrassingly shallow. They see their present circumstances as the result of recent choices and events rather than recognizing the vast causal chains stretching back through their personal history, family dynamics, cultural context, and evolutionary past.
The person who struggles with chronic anxiety isn't experiencing a recent development but the inevitable expression of genetic predispositions, childhood experiences, cultural pressures, and neurological patterns established over decades. Their current state wasn't chosen but emerged from causal factors largely invisible to their conscious awareness.
By expanding your view backward, you can identify the deeper patterns and causes that have inevitably led to your present circumstances. This doesn't give you the power to change these patterns (impossible) but allows you to recognize their determined nature and inevitable expression.
Looking Further Ahead
Similarly, most people's projection into the future is pathetically short-sighted. They consider the immediate consequences of their apparent choices while ignoring the inevitable long-term outcomes of causal chains already in motion.
The person who "chooses" a career based solely on current salary without considering the inevitable health impacts of chronic stress isn't making a free choice but expressing a predetermined myopia. The person who pursues pleasure without recognizing its inevitable diminishing returns isn't choosing freely but following a predetermined pattern of short-term focus.
By expanding your view forward, you can anticipate the inevitable outcomes of current trajectories. This doesn't mean you can choose differently (impossible) but allows you to prepare for what was always going to happen, reducing the suffering that comes from being blindsided by predictable consequences.
Practical Techniques for Widening Your View
The Causal Archaeology Practice
Examine your current circumstances not as the result of recent choices but as the inevitable outcome of causal chains stretching back through your entire life. For any significant aspect of your present situation—career, relationships, health, finances—trace the causal factors that led to this point:
• What childhood experiences shaped your relevant patterns? • What family dynamics installed your relevant programming? • What cultural messages influenced your relevant beliefs? • What genetic predispositions created your relevant tendencies?
This practice doesn't give you the power to change these factors (impossible) but provides a wider view of why your present circumstances were inevitable given your particular causal history.
The Consequence Projection Exercise
For any significant trajectory in your life, project its inevitable consequences across multiple time horizons:
- One month from now
- One year from now
- Five years from now
- Twenty years from now
This isn't fortune-telling but pattern recognition. The person who consistently prioritizes work over relationships can predict with reasonable accuracy the state of their connections in twenty years. The person who repeatedly avoids necessary discomfort can anticipate the inevitable accumulation of problems that such avoidance creates.
This exercise doesn't enable you to choose differently (impossible) but allows you to see what's coming before it arrives, reducing the shock of predictable outcomes.
The Parallel Lives Meditation
Imagine multiple versions of your life unfolding simultaneously based on different external circumstances beyond your control:
- Your life if a global economic collapse occurs
- Your life if you develop a serious health condition
- Your life if a significant relationship ends unexpectedly
- Your life if your industry becomes obsolete
This meditation doesn't create choice but highlights the vulnerability of your current trajectory to external factors beyond your influence. The person who recognizes these contingencies isn't choosing differently but developing a wider field of view that includes potential disruptions to their predetermined path.
The Mortality Contemplation
Regularly contemplate the inevitable end of your existence—not as a morbid exercise but as a perspective-expanding practice. Consider:
- How your current concerns will appear from your deathbed
- Which aspects of your life will matter in your final moments
- What you'll regret not having recognized sooner
- How quickly you'll be forgotten after you're gone
This contemplation doesn't change your predetermined path but widens your view to include its inevitable conclusion. The person who regularly remembers their mortality isn't choosing differently but seeing their trajectory within its complete temporal context.
Case Study: The Career Tunnel Vision
Consider David, a high-achieving professional who navigated his career with a dangerously narrow field of view. From a free will perspective, David was making smart choices to advance his career. From a deterministic perspective, David was expressing a predetermined pattern of achievement-focus while remaining blind to the inevitable consequences of this narrow vision.
After practicing field-widening techniques, David didn't change his predetermined nature (impossible) but expanded his awareness of the causal factors driving his behavior and their inevitable outcomes. He recognized how his achievement orientation emerged from childhood experiences with conditional approval, cultural messaging about male worth, and genetic predispositions toward conscientiousness.
More importantly, David expanded his temporal horizon to see the inevitable long-term consequences of his current trajectory: deteriorating health from chronic stress, eroding relationships from consistent neglect, and diminishing returns from status achievements. This wider view didn't give David the power to choose differently but allowed him to see what was coming before it arrived.
When health problems eventually emerged (as they inevitably would given his patterns), David wasn't blindsided by them. When relationship difficulties intensified (as they inevitably would given his focus), David wasn't shocked by their appearance. His wider field of view didn't prevent these outcomes but reduced the additional suffering that comes from being surprised by predictable consequences.
The Paradoxical Benefits of Seeing What's Coming
Perhaps the most counterintuitive aspect of widening your field of view is how it can improve your experience of the inevitable. By seeing what's coming before it arrives, you create conditions where your predetermined nature can respond more effectively to inevitable challenges.
The person who anticipates the inevitable downturn in their industry doesn't avoid job loss (if that was predetermined) but positions themselves to respond more effectively when it occurs. The person who recognizes the inevitable health consequences of their lifestyle doesn't necessarily change their behavior (if that wasn't predetermined) but prepares for managing the conditions that will emerge.
This isn't choosing different outcomes (impossible) but reducing the additional suffering that comes from being blindsided by predictable consequences. The determined system that is you will inevitably respond better to challenges it sees coming than to those that arrive without warning.
The Cruel Kindness of Clear Seeing
There's a strange kindness in clearly seeing the universe's indifference and the inevitable hardships it will bring. This clarity isn't comforting in the conventional sense—it doesn't pretend the world is fairer or kinder than it is. But it offers the deeper comfort of alignment with reality rather than delusion.
The person who recognizes that suffering isn't a bug but a feature of existence isn't choosing to be pessimistic. They're seeing clearly what was always true: that pain, loss, and difficulty are inevitable aspects of any life, regardless of apparent choices or effort.
This recognition doesn't create resignation but realistic engagement. You'll inevitably continue to pursue comfort, connection, and meaning—not because you choose these aims but because your programming directs you toward them. But this pursuit can occur without the additional suffering that comes from believing the universe should cooperate with your preferences or that hardships represent deviations from how things should be.
Next Steps
In our next lesson, "Dealing with Coincidence," we'll explore how to respond when things actually go the way you intended. We'll examine how to recognize that such alignments between intention and outcome are purely coincidental rather than evidence of your control or agency.
Remember: You didn't choose to read this lesson, and you won't choose whether to widen your field of view. But seeing more clearly what was always going to happen might inevitably reduce the suffering that comes from being blindsided by predictable outcomes. Isn't that a curious comfort?