Sunday Quote: speed

The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom.

Isaac Asimov

autumn lessons – trust

Nature does not hurry

yet everything is accomplished

Lao Tzu

autumn lessons – what falls away

Ripeness is
what falls away with ease.
Not only the heavy apple,
the pear,
but also the dried brown strands
of autumn iris from their core.

To let your body
love this world
that gave itself to your care
in all of its ripeness,
with ease,
and will take itself from you
in equal ripeness and ease,
is also harvest.

And however sharply
you are tested

this sorrow, that great love –
it too will leave on that clean knife.

Jane Hirshfield, Ripeness

In your own back yard

The great lesson from the true mystics, from the zen monks, from the humanistic and transpersonal psychologists, is that the sacred is in the ordinary, that it is to be found in one’s daily life, in one’s neighbors, friends, and family, in one’s own back yard. This lesson can be easily lost. To be looking elsewhere for miracles is to me a sure sign of ignorance that everything is miraculous.

Abraham Maslow, 1908 – 1970, American psychologist

Compensatory programs

Beginning in infancy (or even before) each of us, in response to perceived threats to our well-being, develops a false self: a set of protective behaviors driven at root by a sense of need and lack. The essence of the false self is driven, addictive energy, consisting of tremendous emotional investment in compensatory “emotional programs for happiness.” 

Cynthia Bourgeault, Centering Prayer and Inner Awakening

What’s real

We live the given life, and not the planned

 Wendell Berry