Fruitfulness

In the old Irish, Celtic, calendar, Autumn begins in August, so now we are reaching the end of the second month of the season. In Irish the word for September is Meán Fómhair, which means the ‘middle of the harvest’. What do we harvest? The fruits of what we have planted in our lives.

There is a great difference between successfulness and fruitfulness. Success comes from strength, control and respectability. A successful person has the energy to create something, to keep control over its development and to make it available in large quantities. Success brings many rewards and often fame. Fruits however, come from weakness and vulnerability. And fruits are unique. A child is the fruit conceived in vulnerability, community is the fruit born through shared brokenness, and intimacy is the fruit that grows through touching one another’s wounds. Let’s remind one another that what brings us true joy is not successfulness but fruitfulness.


Henri Nouwen

Resisting what is

Your mind has decided what you want to be happening, and what you don’t want to be happening, and that’s what you’re having a problem with.

The cause of suffering is that you have a way you want it to be… and now you suffer when it’s not that way, don’t you? You decided, “I don’t want it to be a certain way.” Then you suffer, when it is that way. I want it to be a certain way. It doesn’t be that way. You suffer……Because you have made up in your mind how you want the moment in front of you – and by the way, the moment that hasn’t happened yet and the one that already happened – how you want them to be. Because you did that with your mind, you are suffering.

Here’s how I define suffering. If you have to be doing anything about it to try and be OK, it means you’re suffering.

Michael Singer, Every Day Gets Lighter When You Let Go of Yourself

Sunday Quote: Perfect composure

This week marks 15 years of writing this blog. A lot of changes in that time. I said 5 years ago that the reason I post is to remind myself to begin anew every day and that has not changed. Thanks to all who follow and I continue to hope that the thoughts selected help you also to see the world in new and fresh ways.

Without accepting the fact that everything changes,

we cannot find perfect composure

Shunryu Suzuki, roshi

As vast as space, as deep as the ocean

The 14th-century Tibetan master Longchenpa said there are five characteristics we should cultivate in order to practice the four immeasurables:

(1) A fundamental attitude as vast as space;

(2) A mind as constant as the depths of the ocean;

(3) Seeing all occurrences, inner and outer, as mist floating in the sky;

(4) A compassionate attitude as even as the rays of the sun;

(5) Sensing negativities to be like specks of dust in our eyes.

Buddhadharma: The Practitioner’s Journal, 2019 The Four Immeasurables Leave Nothing Untouched

Roots

All that’s visible springs from causes deep inside you
While walking, sitting, lying down
The body itself is the complete truth

Dogen

patience without forcing

The giant pine tree
grows from a tiny sprout.
The journey of a thousand miles
starts from beneath your feet.

Rushing into action, you fail.
Trying to grasp things, you lose them.
Forcing a project to completion,
you ruin what was almost ripe.

Therefore the Master takes action
by letting things take their course.

Tao Te Ching, 64