You might actually be quite free

Buddha nature refers to our deeper inner wholeness

Your buddha nature is always with you. It’s just that you haven’t noticed yet….

Thinking it’s not here is one of the things that keeps you from noticing it.

You might not be deluded in this moment at all. You might be quite free. You might feel the joy that’s the natural joy of being human.

John Tarrant

Sunday Quote: Flow

A very Taoist viewpoint, seeing that whatever is arising in our lives is already arising, and some element of wisdom comes from accepting that

Let go of all your assumptions

And the world will make perfect sense.

Chuang-Tzu, Second Book of the Tao

Perfection

We aren’t practicing to make things perfect or to do things perfectly. Rather, we practice to grasp and realize (make real for ourselves) the fact that things already are perfect, perfectly what they are. This has everything to do with holding the present moment in its fullness without imposing anything extra on it, perceiving its purity and the freshness of its potential to give rise to the next moment

Jon Kabat Zinn, Wherever you go, There you are

Things stick

“The Great way is not difficult. It just avoids picking and choosing.” There is a Taoist flavor to this saying. The sense of following the water path through life. The water if it runs into a stone, it just makes its way around. The water is clear and has no attachments which is why we have a little bowl of water on the altar.…. If we are clear, we hang onto the clarity. This old student doesn’t even hang onto that. Do you still hang onto anything, or not? So we could say that the greatest method of meditation is that whatever comes up, just don’t cling to it. Whatever comes up, let it go. If you can do this, you’ll find the way home very quickly. But it’s hard. Things stick to you.


John Tarrant

Passing by

Not everyone is able to walk, but most people can, which makes walking one of the most easily available spiritual practices of all. All it takes is the decision to walk with some awareness, both of who you are and what you are doing. Where you are going is not as important, however counterintuitive that may seem. To detach the walking from the destination is in fact one of the best ways to recognize the altars you are passing right by all the time. Most of us spend so much time thinking about where we have been or where we are supposed to be going that we have a hard time recognizing where we actually are. When someone asks us where we want to be in our lives, the last thing that occurs to us is to look down at our feet and say, “Here, I guess, since this is where I am.”

Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar in the World,

Hold it lightly

The water that you see in the waterfall

has already rushed to the great ocean.

Life is like the rushing water of the waterfall. From a distance it appears solid, but when you look closely, you see that it is in constant movement, continuous change, rushing like a cascade of long white rope

Tangen Harada Roshi, Throw yourself into the House of Buddha