Sunday Quote: Learning from nature

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Everyone who lived at that time –
not being as wise as you young ones are today – 

found it rewarding enough in their simplicity to listen to an oak or even a stone,

so long as it was telling the truth.

Plato, Phaedros

photo of County Wicklow by J H Janssen

Becoming silent

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As my prayer become more attentive and inward
I had less and less to say.
I finally became completely silent.
I started to listen
– which is even further removed from speaking.
I first thought that praying entailed speaking.
I then learnt that praying is hearing,
not merely being silent.
This is how it is.
To pray does not mean to listen to oneself speaking,
Prayer involves becoming silent,
And being silent,
And waiting until God is heard.

Søren Kierkegaard, 1813 – 1855, Danish Philosopher

photo miguel virkkunen calvalho

How to look at things today

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Keep your eyes fresh and open and joyful.

And move with sure steps, yet flexibly

through the fields of world so richly endowed

Goethe

photo saadbintariq

What distracts us

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In a consumer society there are inevitably two kinds of slaves:

the prisoners of addiction and the prisoners of envy.

Ivan Illich, Tools for Conviviality

photo Karin Beate Nøsterud/norden.org

Withdrawing permission

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In standing still and receiving life with all its adversity and sorrow, you have withdrawn your permission for suffering to define your life. You have also withdrawn your consent to living in fear. Something profound happens in your heart when you turn with kindness toward all the circumstances of pain which you have previously repressed, dismissed or fled from. There is a softening, an opening, a deepening capacity and willingness to understand sorrow and its cause.

Christine Feldman, Compassion

photo shaun ferguson

Love does that

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All day long the little donkey labours, sometimes
with heavy loads on her back and sometimes just with worries
about the things that bother only donkeys.
 
And worries, as we know, can be more exhausting
than physical labour.
 
Once in a while a kind monk comes
to her stable and brings a pear, but more
than that,
he looks into the donkey’s eyes and touches her ears
 
and for a few seconds the donkey is free
and even seems to laugh,
 
because love does that.
Love frees.
Meister Eckhart
photo dave whalley