Soul Math
In a saturated life, you must subtract an equal number of activities to those being added. If you fail to do this, the demands will multiply with the sum result of dividing your soul into an inefficient force. Your limitations are the sum of your age minus your wisdom divided by the number of hours in a day minus the number of necessary or even un-necessary interruptions.
Your personal equations of life include a number of unique variables that determine the capacity of your spiritual load. Those variables include: family, marital status, race, gender, income, geographic location, profession, health, perspective, prayer life, genetic tendencies, and an almost infinite range of other factors. Never take them for granted. They affect what you can or cannot add to your life.
The efficiency levels of your mind, body, and soul will tell you when to subtract. When in doubt, subtract first. Do not add. You may find that the productive side has overwhelmed the human side of your daily equations. Life is math. Too much is too much — no matter how you form the problem. Ignore the negatives from those that have noticed you have subtracted. It is not their problem you are solving.
Take into consideration the fact that competing political and social forces seek to confuse your life processes with the following soul math tactics: control by chaos, undermining through doubt (without sufficient evidence or logic), pseudo-authority, financial intimidation, and the worst thing possible — keeping you too distracted to determine your own life formulas.
Redo your life math. If the lesser demands of your daily life are greater than your spiritual aspirations your life will have a result sum of exactly zero. If your priorities are out of sequence you will notice strong negative factors. Most of all: never let others work your problems; to do so results in irrational and failing results.







