not free

A baby has the same basic attitude of interest towards all things.

If you watch her, she will always be enjoying her life

We adults mostly are caught by our preconceived idea.

We are not completely free from the objective world, because we are not one with the objective world

Shunryu Suzuki roshi, Not Always So

Letting go of the labels

Even the idea of being a ‘good meditator’ or a ‘wise person’ is just another ego-trip.

The Buddha didn’t teach us to replace ‘bad self’ with ‘holy self’ –

he taught us to let go of the whole business.

Ajahn Sumedho Dhamma talk 

How to deal with (negative) thoughts

When thoughts swarm like flies, pay them no attention.

Do not wrestle with them; do not entertain them.

Let them pass as if they were nothing,

and return to that silent, nameless yearning for the Ultimate

The Cloud of Unknowing, 14th Century anonymous work on Christian meditation

Make your mind bigger

Someone once asked me, ‘How do you bear the suffering of the world?’ 

I said, ‘I make my mind bigger.’ 

There’s always enough room when we stop conflating ‘being with’ and ‘being overwhelmed by.’

Sylvia Boorstein

Effortless

In Zen archery, the archer doesn’t shoot the arrow; the arrow shoots itself. The moment you aim, you’ve already missed. This is the paradox of wu wei: the harder you try, the more you obstruct the flow. But when you surrender all trying, the universe acts through you. A dancer becomes the dance; a singer becomes the song. There’s no separation between the artist and the art.


This is why Lao Tzu says, ‘The Tao never acts, yet nothing is left undone.’ The sun doesn’t decide to shine; the rain doesn’t intend to fall. They simply follow their nature. When we align with this same spontaneity, our actions become as inevitable and effortless as breathing

Stephen Mitchell, The Way of Effortless Action: Wu Wei in Zen and Taoism

Sunday Quote: fragment by fragment

There are very few human beings who receive the truth, complete and staggering, by instant illumination.

Most of them acquire it fragment by fragment, on a small scale, by successive developments, cellularly, like a laborious mosaic.

Anaïs Nin