The familiar

Let go of the mind, the thousand blue
story fragments we tell ourselves
each day to keep the world underfoot.

If you can awaken
inside the familiar
and discover it strange
you need never leave home.

 

Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser,  Braided Creek : A Conversation in Poetry

A place of surrender

If we pay attention, we will realize that every moment around us, there is a world that we did not create that’s been there for 13.8 billion years, and there’s trillions of cells in your body that are doing what they’re supposed to do, and all of nature, everything.

You wake up and you realize, “I’m not doing any of this. I didn’t make my body. I didn’t make my mind think. I don’t make my heart beat. I don’t make my breath breathe, etc, etc, yet I have this notion that I have to make things happen. Yet, all throughout the universe, things are happening everywhere and I’m not doing them, so why exactly am I the one that’s in charge of what’s unfolding in front of me?”

What you realize at some point is that you’re not; that the moment in front of you that’s unfolding is no different than all the zillions of other moments that aren’t in front of you that are unfolding in accordance to the laws of nature, the laws of creation. You start to practice saying, “I want to pay attention to what the universe is creating in front of me just like it’s creating everywhere where I’m not, and let me see how I can participate in that – be part of that – instead of interfering with it with my desires and my fears.

That’s living from a place of surrender.

Michael Singer, Living From A Place Of Surrender, Sounds True Blog

Sunday Quote: Still

Wait in the stillness, until you get what you came for.

Byron Katie

In a moment

Hell is timely, for hell is the thought
that hell will go on, on and on, without end.

Heaven is only present, instantaneous and eternal,
a mayfly, a blue dayflower, a life entirely given,
complete forever in its hour.

Wendell Berry, VIII

Wonderful things

Each day we take a lot of things for granted…

Mountains and oceans have whole worlds, with innumerable wonderful features.

However, we should understand that it is not only our distant surroundings that are like this,

but even what is right here,

even a single drop of water.

Dogen, 1200 – 1253, Buddhist monk, founder of the Soto school of Zen.

Nothing solid

Through meditation practice you begin to realize that:

  1. Your thoughts have no birthplace, they just pop up out of nowhere

2. Thoughts are nevertheless unceasing….

3. They appear but are not solid….

4. Putting that all together, there is no birth, no dwelling, no cessation…

This understanding gives the unsurpassable protection of realizing what is called complete openness [shunyata]. There’s nothing solid to react to. You have made much ado about nothing.

Pema Chodron, Always Maintain a Joyful Mind