Tag Archives: zen

true for you

Nobody is ever right or wrong..

Every being seems to be on a unique journey with its own rhythm, notes, lessons and truths. When something is written or said that is true for that person, it is hopeless to argue, defend, to attempt to apply and fit it into our own. It seems dangerous to idolize and believe one person.. (even Ghandi.. :) )

Take what you like and leave what you don’t, silently.

Whatever is true for you will resound without explanation, without warning and will stay safe in the soul always.

 

detachment

Opinions and judgments are the manifestation of your emotional reactions to memories and spiritual blocks. You want to remain open and not rigid in your attitudes. You must observe everything you perceive with objectivity and a lack of emotional bias. You can react to events, but you should not be overwhelmed by your reactions. You should maintain some sense of detachment even in your most emotionally affecting situations. Know why you cry; know why you have a sense of fear; know why you find yourself feeling angry. You are in control of yourself, not some person defined by outside events or manifestations of ideas that create road blocks in his or her awareness.

[ from Abundant Hope blog ]

 

look within

An excerpt from Jack Canfield’s superb book “The Success Principles:”

According to an ancient legend, there was a time when ordinary people had access to all the knowledge of the gods. Yet time and again, they ignored this wisdom. One day, the gods grew tired of so freely giving a gift the people didn’t use, so they decided to hide this precious wisdom where only the most committed of seekers would discover it. They believed that if people had to work to find this wisdom, they would use it more carefully.

One of the gods suggested that they bury it deep in the earth.

No, the others said–too many people could easily dig down and find it.

“Let’s put it in the deepest ocean,” suggested one of the gods, but that idea was also rejected. They knew that people would one day learn to dive and thus would find it too easily.

One of the gods suggested hiding it on the highest mountaintop but it was quickly agreed that people could climb mountains.

Finally, one of the wisest gods suggested, “Let’s hide it deep inside the people themselves. They’ll never think to look in there.” And so it came to be–and so it continues today.

dont believe in “your self”

I always get such deep, intense thoughts in the early morning when I am half-awake, half-conscious.

Is it my subconscious speaking to me? The “divine spirit?”

It was telling me about our “selves”…

We believe in our embodied shell so much sometimes that this belief causes us immense suffering. Yet pain is what makes us human, creates depth. Pain is what allows us to love.

When a person dies.. an elder.. a baby.. we think how unfair it is how their life got taken away.

It seems as though.. the moment we label this something (being) and contain it (body), it is now a thing to lose. This “self” has its own thoughts, dreams, hopes, personality but does it really?

We are here for a short time.. I also don’t believe my “self” is here only for a short time. Energy… I was here before and will be after. Not “I”, my egoistic view of self, but my being.

Temporary.

Impermanence

 

.. All of our problems, drama and suffering start from one place: forgetting we and everything around us is impermanent.

 

 

My silent meditation experience

Driving up the mountain; 5500 ft in elevation!

Agonizing.
Painful.
Surreal.
Cleansing.
Sensational.

I’m not sure how to explain something so indescribable with something as simple and transparent as words..

I’ll start with day 1.. (Note: I actually did 5 days, not 6)

My first zazen (seated meditation for almost 2 hours with 2 short walking meditations between) was surprisingly easy. I was told to count my breaths and let my thoughts flow in and out of me. One, two, three, four.. before I knew it the bell rang and we were to get up to begin a very slow walking meditation (foot slowly goes up when you breathe in and then steps back down when your breath lets out). Afterwards, we had a break for 2 hours. Break? What is there even to do here? I had no cell phone, no book, no pen or paper and this was a silent sesshin (an intensive zen retreat) so we weren’t allowed to speak to each other. Confusion.

It seemed the second I laid my head down for a nap, the sounds of the bell were heard to begin another zazen. It felt like something right out of a movie — people in their loose black robes whisking by with their monotonous chants and lighted wicks. My mind was absorbing all of the new and time seemed to be going by without a hitch. By the third zazen, my mind had absorbed enough and I was resisting. My knees hurt, one of my legs were numb and I just couldn’t sit anymore. Thoughts of rebellion crept in.. sitting in lotus position, I wanted to do a cartwheel off of my cushion and land two feet in front of me in resuming lotus position. One, two, one, two, in, out, in, out.. Kanye West rapping popped into my head. How many more days did I have left? 4. Oh. Right.

We did four separate zazens a day which meant almost 8 hours of meditation a day. The first couple zazens were easy but the following sittings got harder and harder. There was a sense of dread at certain points of the day. Again?! The mornings were the hardest for me. We got ourselves out of bed at 4:45 every morning and started the grueling zazen right away. It was freezing and dark outside and it took the life out of me to keep my head from nodding off to sleep. Maybe I could practice how to fall asleep sitting up. Almost like clockwork, the last portion of each sitting, my eyelids would fly open and I would look around the room. I would stare at the time-keeper. Telepathically I was asking him, could you ring the bell please?

After the third day, I had thoughts of going home. I couldn’t take it anymore. I wanted to speak! To eat potato chips! To sing! I wondered what texts I had awaiting me. I felt trapped. My body ached. My foot was tingling. It’s funny how separate the mind can become and we believe these thoughts. I had to be my breath, my sitting, the zazen. The more I believed my pain and tried to move or resist, the more it persisted even worse. Once I surrendered to it and breathed the pain, it fizzled away into nothingness. Nothingness, emptiness — essence.

I felt warm energy throughout my body. It was cold outside but my palms were hot — almost sweaty. Time became nothing. I noticed after every sitting that I couldn’t even remember from the minute I started to the minute I ended. It was as if there was no differentiation. Time was nothing! There is no before or after! It is now, only now. A zen master said that thousands and thousands of moments live and die in each second. Words do not encapsulate the true meaning but perhaps I had felt a bit of that. Anytime I became too aware of the pain, I meditated on these five simple words: Every beginning has an end.

I was starting to notice how profound everything was — to do the smallest of activities with diligence and care. Each activity had importance. This profoundness was what defined being present, for me. I was shocked at how quickly the time seemed to go. No TV, music, talking, internet. Just me — in my skin, nature and the sky. And with that, time was just an illusion — each moment seemed to pass as quickly as it came before me, yet each moment was as important as the next. Odd!

By the last day, I didn’t really feel much of anything. There was no resistance, no “defining,” no reasoning — things were just as they were. Weren’t they also just as they were the moment I came in on my first day? I was more aware of my energy — the connectedness of my energy with another’s energy, with nature. The body, the trunk, the flower; aren’t these just temporary containers for the everlasting, collectiveness of the soul?

On my drive home, I felt immense gratitude, peace, love and happiness. Everything seemed crisp. Were the clouds always that white? I was buzzing with a feeling of intense love. I was inspired by the souls I met at the retreat — the dedication, love and goodness within them. I can’t quite explain the sensations I have within me but it is as if life is going by in slow motion, absorbing and enjoying every bit, watching the colors and movements resume yet in the same aspect, the illusion of time also seems to go by so quickly, giving me a sense of amazement that I am living this life right now and just how lucky we are!

Updates

I updated my About page!

14 more days until I leave the country.. I feel anxious, scared, alone, excited, at peace, grateful. It’s definitely a new feeling.. whatever this is.

Only three weeks ago was I packing my one duffel bag imagining myself in a new place, wondering what I’d need and what I would be doing. Only two months ago did I buy my plane ticket and it was slowly becoming something of reality — not just something of thought. Only four months ago was this just an idea in my head, a notion, a hope. Only seven months ago did I have no clue what I was doing with my life and this blog didn’t exist. Nothing is ever of permanence — everything is ever-evolving and although life seems to be random, I believe there are no coincidences in life.

Tomorrow I will be off to a new adventure — something I have never done before. Meditating in the mountains for six days straight. To sit in silence and be, without needing anything, without asking or questioning, being aware of my thoughts while letting them go without attachment or opposition. I will be back next week; I hope everybody has a good week!

If you understand, things are just as they are… If you do not understand, things are just as they are… -Zen saying

We experience ourselves, our thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest. A kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. -Einstein

Ink: suffer

One of my favorite tattoos is one I have on my arm — souffrent, which means “suffer” in french.

I often think of the meaning of suffering. The word invokes certain emotions, usually negative. It is something to constantly avoid. Yet, it is the basis of buddhism: life is suffering.

Is not “suffering” only a word? Is it an emotion? No. Any emotion from “suffering” must be one we have chosen to attach, unconsciously conditioned since birth. It is paired with feelings of loss, pain or punishment. But is this really true?

If we take the word out of context, what if we can see the word as a different type of verb, such as something as neutral as walking or breathing?

Could we now understand that “to live” is parallel “to suffer?” It is what gives us depth and growth. Depth gives us compassion and compassion is the connector of mankind — our existance; love.

You might also like:
Why happiness doesn’t last
We are life
Ink: dharma
Stripping good + bad

Breathe

One..

Feel your lungs taking in a breath and letting it out; the aliveness, without your doing, without your asking, taking or wanting.

It just is.

Just at this moment, you are conscious. You are.

Imagine this feeling every moment of your life. This gift is inside of us always. We need not seek, ask, do, want or take..
For this is who we are.

How unbelievably lucky we are!

We are life


.


The present..

What a magical but simple concept that we cannot grasp.

We cannot grasp what we already are.
We cannot create what already exists.
We cannot label or define what already is.

To define or point out such would be to belittle it; to try and contain the beauty and mystery of a flitting butterfly, to hold the immensity of the glowing sun, to paint a child’s laughter, to count and preserve the endless breaths we take that give us life.

Impossible.

We are life. Life is not separate from I.

How laughable to think we can resist, control, change or run away from life. To do so would be to deny who we truly are — we are life. So, laugh!