I clearly remember deciding that from now on,
if life was unfolding in a certain way,
and the only reason I was resisting it was of a personal preference,
I would let go of the preference
and let life be in charge.
Michael A. Singer
Think of things that you do not have to do anything to earn or receive from anyone else – things you are already receiving from life before doing anything.
This is a powerful practice to greet each day and helps you to feel centered in the privilege and gifts of life.
Kristi Nelson, Wake Up Grateful, The Transformative Practice of Taking Nothing for Granted
Waiting and patience are two of the main themes of Advent
Let the apple ripen
on the branch
beyond your need
to take it down.
Wait longer
than you would,
go against yourself,
find the pale nobility
of quiet that ripening
demands;
watch with patience
as the silhouette emerges
and the leaves fall;
see it become
a solitary roundness
against a greying sky,
let winter come
and the first
frost threaten,
and then wake
one morning
to see the breath
of winter
has haloed
its redness
with light.
David Whyte, Winter Apple [extract]
We can often feel that our inner nature is rather dim or discouraged or that we are wandering in darkness, hoping sometime soon to reach clarity.
Today, December 8th, is Rohatsu, the day that the Buddha is said to have awakened, or attained enlightenment. In other words, he saw into the true nature of life, and through this, we are told, “the mind found its way to peace”.
It is said he meditated all through the night and in the predawn hours he looked up, saw the morning star, and exclaimed:
How Wonderful, Everything is already awake. How magnificent!
Thoughts prompted by a dharma talk given by David Rynick entitled Transcendent Enlightenment