TLDR: When you believe your life isn't the way you want it, you live in constant resistance—a fundamental energy of trying to escape where you are. Peter Crone argues that problems don't exist in circumstances themselves, but in how you interpret them. The illusion is that you'll only be okay once things change. In reality, your capacity to be at peace with what is right now—and still pursue meaningful goals—is entirely within your control through a shift in perspective. You can choose who you want to be regardless of circumstance.
What Is Life Resistance and How Does It Work?
Life resistance is the default position many people adopt when they believe their current situation is unacceptable. According to Crone, if you're operating under the impression that "the way your life is right now isn't the way you want it," your predominant focus becomes trying to be somewhere else. You tell yourself, "I'm not okay or I'm not going to be okay unless things are different." This underlying assumption generates what Crone calls "a fundamental energy" of resistance to life as it is.
The trap is subtle. You can convince yourself that this dissatisfaction serves a useful purpose—it motivates you, gives you incentive, makes you want to improve. And there is legitimate value in creativity and pursuing goals. Crone doesn't deny that. But the critical distinction he makes is the difference between working toward something for the sheer joy of it versus working because you're trying to get away from where you are. One is generative; the other is a form of escape rooted in the belief that your current state is fundamentally unacceptable.
Why Do Circumstances Feel Like Problems?
Crone makes a bold claim: "There's no problems in reality." This doesn't mean circumstances are easy or that you don't face genuine challenges. He explicitly acknowledges that difficult situations exist and that people legitimately struggle. But he draws a crucial distinction between circumstances and problems. Circumstances are simply what is happening. Problems are the mental story you construct about those circumstances.
"Problems aren't in circumstances," Crone states. "Problems are in perspective of circumstances." This reframing is foundational to his teaching. When you encounter a difficult event—a conflict with a parent, a boss's criticism, financial pressure—the event itself is neutral data. What creates suffering is your interpretation of that data, your judgment that things should be different, your conclusion that the situation makes you "not okay."
You can prove this to yourself, Crone suggests, by asking: how do you know you can be at peace with things as they are right now? His answer is simple and direct: "Cuz you're here." The fact that you exist in this moment means you have the capacity to be present with it. The only thing preventing that peace is the story—the perspective—you layer on top of reality. Remove the resistance to what is, and the suffering dissolves, even if the circumstances remain unchanged.
How Do You Empower Yourself Through Perspective?
A major source of disempowerment, according to Crone, is externalization of control. When you say, "I'm only okay if my mom acts differently, if my dad changes, if my boss approves," you are making a conditional statement about your wellbeing that depends entirely on other people's behavior. Crone identifies this as fundamentally disempowering: "What you're saying is, I'm going to give that person, that circumstance a certain degree of my power, and I need them to act in a certain way for me to be okay."
The alternative is to reclaim agency over who you are, independent of external circumstances. Instead of waiting for conditions to shift before you grant yourself permission to be okay, you choose to be okay within the circumstances you're facing. This doesn't mean passivity. You can still handle what needs handling, still pursue goals and creative expression. But you do so from a place of wholeness rather than from a place of brokenness that requires external repair.
Crone frames this as a genuine possibility: "What if you could choose who you want to be no matter circumstance? That you're okay." He suggests this would be "not only a unique way of living life, but a powerful way to live life." The uniqueness lies in the fact that most people are unconsciously trapped in resistance, waiting for life to deliver the conditions they think they need. The power lies in recognizing that your acceptance of life as it is right now is a choice you can make, and that choice is available to you regardless of what's actually happening.
Can You Pursue Goals While Accepting What Is?
One potential misreading of Crone's teaching is that acceptance means passivity or giving up on improvement. He explicitly rejects this interpretation. He has "a lot of things that I'm working on," he states, but pursues them "for the sheer joy of it, not because I'm trying to get away from where I am." This distinction matters enormously.
The difference is internal orientation. One approach to goals comes from resistance and fear: I must escape my current state. The other comes from creativity and joy: I want to build something, explore something, develop something because I find meaning in it. Both may involve the same external actions—learning, working, changing habits—but the energy is completely different. The first drains you because it's rooted in the belief that you're currently broken. The second energizes you because it's rooted in the belief that you're already whole and simply choosing to expand.
What Is the Difference Between Accepting Life and Accepting Unacceptable Situations?
Crone shows "super amount of compassion for those people who really struggle with circumstances," and he's careful to distinguish between acceptance of what is and approval of what is. He is not suggesting that difficult situations are desirable or that you should remain passive in the face of injustice, abuse, or harm. Rather, he's pointing to a psychological stance you can take toward reality: recognition that this is what's happening right now, combined with the awareness that your peace and identity do not depend on immediate change.
Acceptance in this sense is not resignation. It's the opposite of resistance. When you stop resisting reality, you free up enormous energy that was previously tied up in the story "this shouldn't be happening." That freed energy becomes available for thoughtful action, for genuine problem-solving, for creativity. You can work to change a difficult situation much more effectively when you're not simultaneously fighting the fact that it exists.
Where to go from here
The practical invitation Crone offers is an experiment in perspective. Notice where in your life you're operating from the belief that things need to be different before you can be okay. Observe the energy of resistance that accompanies that belief. Then ask yourself: what would it feel like to accept this circumstance as real right now while still being committed to growth or change? Can you hold both—presence with what is and intention toward what could be? Can you choose to be the kind of person you want to be, independent of whether your external circumstances cooperate? This is not a one-time shift but an ongoing practice of recognizing where perspective has become habitual, and choosing a perspective rooted in wholeness rather than deficiency.



