The weekend: unplug

A lot of our day is spent going around in a drama where we are the main protagonist.

All we need to do is unplug.

Then a sweet shift can happen in our sitting. We go from sitting there plugged into “our life” to a state where we can notice what that actually means

We might have seen images in the mind – of people, of a city, a room, whatever. We might have been hearing a kind of running commentary, like a sports reporter commenting on the action.

Henry Shukman

Don’t add anything

Choiceless awareness is pure observation without the observer.

When you look at a tree, a face, or your own reactions without naming, judging, or comparing, then there is no division between the observer and the observed – there is only seeing.

Jiddu Krisnamurti, The First and Last Freedom

Lemons

Some people say that suffering is a fixed part of the mind, that it will be there forever.

I was talking to someone about this just today. I tried to explain that suffering is not intrinsic to the mind. It arises in the present moment.

Think about a lemon. If you leave it alone, is it sour? Where is the sourness then? It’s when the lemon contacts the tongue that sourness occurs. If you aren’t experiencing it, it’s as if it isn’t there. When there is contact with the tongue it arises at that moment. And from there arise dislike and afflictions. These tribulations are not intrinsic to the mind, but are momentary arisings.

Ajahn Chah, Being Dharma

Happiness lies in a healthy mind

Happiness is not the endless pursuit of pleasant experiences – that sounds more like a recipe for exhaustion – but rather the transformation of the mind to a state of inner peace and fulfilment.

It is about cultivating a way of being that allows us to weather life’s ups and downs with equanimity.

Matthieu Ricard, Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life’s Most Important Skill

continually fresh

Every thought a present moment

In your practice it is important to make every thought a present moment. When you make every thought a present moment, there is no continuity of time, no carry over from moment to moment. Everything is continually fresh, like the water of a spring endlessly bubbling up into the open air. In this practice every moment is a rebirth.

Master Sheng Yen, Illuminating Silence

Sunday Quote: Present moment

Its good to connect with the essence of things, rather than relying on abstract concepts, labels or interpretations. 

When the bird and the book disagree,

Always believe the bird.

John James Audubon, 1785 – 1851, French-American artist, naturalist, and ornithologist, who attempted to make a complete pictorial record of all the bird species in North America.