We preoccupy ourselves

The thing that blinds us and deafens us is the ceaselessly moving mind, the preoccupation we have with our thoughts. It is the incessant internal dialogue that shuts out everything else. ….All day long we talk to ourselves. We preoccupy ourselves with the past, or we preoccupy ourselves with the future, and while we preoccupy ourselves, we miss the moment and miss our lives. Looking, we do not see. It is as if we were blind. Listening, we do not hear. It is as if we were deaf. Loving, we do not feel. It is as if we were dead. Preoccupied, we do not notice the reality around us. How can we be present? How can we taste and touch our lives?


The answer to these questions is not outside yourself. To see this truth requires the backward step, going very deep into yourself to find the foundation of reality and of your life. To see it is not the same as understanding it or believing it. To see it means to realize it with the whole body and mind.
Know that deep within each and every one of us, under layers of conditioning, there is an enlightened being, alive and well. In order to function, it needs to be discovered.

John Daido Loori, 4, 1931 – 2009, Zen Buddhist rōshi

Sunday quote: Courage

Courage is what love looks like

when tested by the simple everyday necessities

of being alive

David Whyte

Overthinking

It is imperative to cut off the mind road.

If you do not cut off the mind road, you will be a ghost, clinging to the grass.

Wu Men Hui-k’ai,, 1183–1260, Chinese Chán master

Magic all around

There’s always a lot of magic, but our way of seeing it is very small and we mostly just call it Nature.

Why, we are not at all surprised that we can pick up an apple in autumn that was a pink flower in the spring.

That’s natural magic and we don’t really notice it.

Pat O’Shea, 1931 – 2007, Irish children’s fiction writer, The Hounds of the Mórrígan

Stop talking to yourself

If you aren’t feeding the fire of anger or the fire of craving by talking to yourself, then the fire doesn’t have anything to feed on.

It peaks and passes on.

In order to be gentle and create an atmosphere of compassion for yourself, it’s necessary to stop talking to yourself about how wrong everything is – or how right everything is, for that matter.
 

Pema Chödrön, Start Where You Are – a Guide to Compassionate Living

Where you stand

How refreshingly bright is the moon of the Fourfold Wisdom!

Being so, is there anything you lack as the absolute presents itself before you?

The place where you stand is the Land of the Lotus,
And your person — the body of the Buddha.

Hakuin, Japanese Zen poet, 1686 – 1768.