how endings become beginnings

The end of another year in the Christian cycle. Advent starts tomorrow and we begin to look forward. Cycles in nature and in our lives.

Seeing beginnings and endings – the arising and passing away of all conditioned forms – is a vital step in developing the understanding that nothing exists apart from interdependent, cause-and-effect relationships. To see the beginnings and endings is also, in my experience, a great support in difficult times. 

Early on, as I began to trust in the fiber of my being that nothing lasts, I became less afraid of pain. The fact that everything has an end comforted me. “One way or another,” I would say to myself, “this too will pass.” I was glad I saw that. I didn’t think much, in those initial moments of insight, about how the pleasant things change as well as the difficult ones. I know that when I struggle with the pain of any loss, the struggle preoccupies my mind and leaves no room for hope. When I recognize the pain I feel as the legitimate result of loss, I am respectful of its presence and kind to myself. My mind always relaxes when it is kind, and around the edges of the truth of whatever has ended, I see displays of what might be beginning.

Sylvia Boorstein, How Endings Make Room for Beginnings

Meet the tea

If we are not mindful, it’s not tea we are drinking, but our own afflictions and illusions

If the tea becomes real, we become real.

When we are able to truly meet the tea, at that very moment we are truly alive

Thich Nhat Hanh

The real journey is here

Don’t go off sightseeing.
The real journey is right here.
The great excursion starts
from exactly where you are.

Don’t look for the remedy of your troubles
outside yourself.

You are the medicine.
You are the cure for your own sorrow.

 

Rumi, The Journey Starts here

Show up

I decided that the most subversiverevolutionary thing I could do

was to show up for my life

and not be ashamed.

Anne Lamott, Operating Instructions: A Journal of My Son’s First Year

Enjoy this day

We spend so much of our lives inhabiting a fictitious future or nostalgically indulging in memories and reminiscences that we fail to notice this extraordinary thing that is happening to us right now. It has taken four billion years of evolution to generate this kind of organism with this kind of brain, and yet we wake up in the morning and feel bored.

Stephen Bachelor, in an interview with Wes Nisker, Inquiring Mind

How to keep our calm

Wonder exists in experiencing whatever manifests before you,

and practice must go beyond the present time.

Adapt to conditions and merge with awakening,

then you will not be obstructed by the many tiny motes of dust.

Hongzhi, 1091-1157, Chan Master