For every act of evil, there is an act of beauty. You Can't Change the World, Only Your Attitude Towards It.

Bodhidharma, the startling awakening

"If you want to abandon the unreal and turn to the real, sit steadily and gaze at a wall. Self and other, ordinary people and enlightened ones, are one and the same. Sit firmly without moving, no longer following spoken instructions. In this you are identical with the hidden form of the true principle, a stillness without name." Bodhidharma, Two entrances and Four practices. *


"Ordinary people and enlightened ones, are one and the same." (not remotely hard to accept, naturally true) 

"In this you are identical with the hidden form of the true principle, a stillness without name." (BOOM!)


Clearly the swirl of what was, what is, and what will be, are precisely "this", as what else? 
Naturally, the swirl appearing here, [this meness] can't be anything other. As is anything seen, not seen, known or not known. 



Statements have sent me over the edge before and into a satori-like place from where I have naturally wobbled back. Such visits to the other side have kept me checking back for more, finding such statements in books or falling out of my own head when walking, sitting or whatever, that too nudge or throw me over to the other side. Only the mind brought me back each time. 

This statement did not send me over the edge, it nudged me so that I found myself perfectly balanced on it, like a flywheel spinning so fast that it could not fall one way or the other and ran on the edge in a line so sure it was beyond description! 

The certainty and uniquely interesting difference here is that, yes, you can be thrown towards, near to, or over the edge many times by just the right words, or events, and the mind will pull you back with its doubts, habits and mischief. Here though it was not just the statement sending me perfectly to the balance, but that I knew, certainly, that the mind would never get me back, it was beaten, it didn't try, and while I played with the idea, only smiles returned. 

The mind can't get me back and it knows it. The state is firm as the argument is so precise. The knowing far beyond description. 


Words are inadequate to describe, so I'm not expecting you to get my point, but I'll ramble on a bit. 


Starting with entry level Buddhism or Taoism, let's appreciate a mountain. Begin with a flat land and pile up some rock. Great, a mountain. Start again with flat land and this time carve two big valleys into the land. A mountain emerges between them. So both times we got a mountain AND valley, just first time we may have missed the negative space required to have a mountain. Form and space are equally required. Form cannot be without space, space cannot be without form. Extremes are not possible. If something was entirely something but not absent of anything else, it couldn't exist. Short needs long, happy needs sad. 

So it is not to be entirely anything, like enlightened, or to be entirely free of anything, like imperfection. It's not to have stillness of mind and live in a cave. Your naturally active mind only exists in harmony with the pure still mind. Wanting a still mind is an active mind at play. An active mind is a perfect mind with stillness perfectly in place. 

I've played with such thoughts as I'm sure you have too, and when a great master writes a phrase or poem that beautifully states such a thing, it can throw us over into satori, for a while. 

Consider though, the nameless, descriptionless, ????ness that must be. That simply must be. This non thing that we can't name, describe or know by knowing. Just as the mountain is the valley, and you are the swirl of events flowing through right now, you're undeniably this ????ness. You were this before birth, will be it when dead, undenibly must be it now. What more convincing does the mind need to sit on the edge and be unable to reason a way back?

~

*It's only right that I share the book where I found this Bodhidharma quote, it is, The Spirit of Zen by Sam van Schaik. Great reading. 

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Tao Wow | Daily Cup of Tao

The path to a contented life





Emptiness (and other names)

Consider your first memory. Consider your first non-memory. Consider Emptiness of memory. Before birth, even after birth and before much conceptualisation was going on in your head, there was a world of things and people, but you had no idea.

Consider your mind after death.

The universe has qualities, we assign it qualities, before and after life, we know of none.



Unlikely existences

It is unlikely that a human is born happy, lives each moment in happiness and dies happy.

It is unlikely that a human is born sad, lives each moment in sadness and dies sad - having never seen any happiness.

Happiness and sadness define one another and exist as the crests and troughs of waves. They cannot exist independently.

The peak of the happiness wave relies on the seed of the trough drawing upon it. Sadness is known to exist only because a concept of happiness exists within it.



Common Existences - and its apparent parts

The common existence is to ride from happy to sad, and while doing so, to wish for happiness to last and for sadness to pass by quickly.




Conflict

When desire and reality clash, there is conflict. The want for happiness in times of sadness, the wish to be somewhere else other than here.



Resolution

Boil everything down to the bare facts: Life is born of emptiness and so is full and wondrous. Within this wonder are humans who, like all life, attempt to avoid pain and to seek happiness. Happiness and sadness are interdependent so cannot exist alone, one is known by the seed of the other being present. The acts of grasping onto happiness and rejecting sadness, create conflict. So, resolution is plain and clear, just somehow difficult to accept.




Life in this mode

Please note that, for example, cooking, drinking wine, and dancing to music, will seem like happiness and may well be. You’re distracting yourself though. Happiness is there in this moment if you are truly in the moment. Human though, your mind will soon wander. This moment will only be happiness if you can maintain the distractions. This method may give happiness, and such fun is not to be avoided, you must see though, that it is not a recipe for lasting happiness as it cannot be maintained.


Lost in the act of reading, you do not know of an alternate act, so you’re content.

Reading while considering what you could or should be doing as an alternative, you’re in conflict and sad.


Cooking, chopping, smelling the ingredients, you’re content.

Cooking, listening to the TV, living out an imaginary argument with your coworker, you’re in conflict and sad.


Sitting, breathing, letting your heart beat, feeling one hand touch the other, you’re content.

Sitting, wondering if you should be elsewhere, you’re in conflict and sad.




Each step in more detail

You don’t need to read this, you know first hand the truth of this as you live it. Here though we can see how others get it wrong, and learn from them as we are the same. There are no special humans, we all have the same basic traits. We seek pleasure and we seek to avoid pain.


Imagine in your own way, pulling upwards above yourself, your home, your town, your country, the ocean, the atmosphere, the planet. Down there on earth are billions of humans. You spend nearly every thought on why your life is such a way, how to prevent bad things and how to gain some comfort. Each other human does the same. We take the extremes first: The few very rich, and the vast number of very poor. The very poor are stuck facing their concern, often to get enough food, or to manage pain or loss. Their seeking and rejecting are plain to see and easy to understand. The rich are always busy. Perhaps busy doing nothing, but truly never nothing - they are funding a constant stream of distractions, distracting from sadness and attempting to extend happiness. Both parties and in truth all the billions of humans down there on earth are performing the same act. You too, you’re not remotely special or different.


Grab the most poor person and the most rich and swap their minds. The rich person will instantly suffer, the poor person (now living through the rich person's body) will be temporarily happy, and perhaps a little shocked. The poor person (living in the rich body) will be able to satisfy many needs, mainly to eat, perhaps seek medical attention, perhaps live out a fantasy or two. Then, they will feel the seed of sadness taking root. They will begin to reject that seed of sadness and seek for the next distraction that will perpetuate happiness.


The newly rich (previously poor) person seeks their next happy moment in fear that the seed of sadness will grow too much.

The newly poor (previously rich) person rejects their sadness and seeks for happiness.


Each other person on the planet does the same, though less extreme. Most average people have enough to get by, they have more today than the wealthy of years gone by. They have adequate resources to be content, but they still seek something elsewhere. Each lifeform with sense organs and some ability to select a future does the same. Plants turn to face the sunlight.


One of the most commonly shared fantasies is to be rich enough to buy enough distractions to ride the crest of the wave, to be near to the top of the happiness wave and never come down. The drive is the constant knowledge of the wave trough drawing you towards it.


Richness is of course relative. If everyone was rich, then no one would be rich. By looking into the lives of the very rich, we can see that they still seek to do, to act, to distract themselves from sadness. If asked to imagine a perfectly happy being, we do not truthfully picture a rich person, but a simple content person. True happiness is in wisdom, in being content with here and now and simply knowing that change is unavoidable.


If a sad person, say someone you love, comes to you with a story of sadness, how do you help, and what is it that brings about happiness? You help by distracting them, or providing an alternate perspective. They are happy when they have accepted or moved forward from their situation. You are never able to alter the past for them, or change the way they feel in the moment they present themselves to you, you seek to alter the next nearest moment you can. With simple problems, perhaps the next moment is nearby, with hard problems the next moment is far away, but we must arrive there.



Why read on?

The fact of the matter was stated on page one, and you agreed with it. It is one of those things so simple that we say “of course it is true” but until we feel it deeply, or recognise several times as it happens directly to us, that we don’t accept it as both true and with no alternative. We read on as we insist there is an alternative. We read on as we want to be endlessly happy. We are, for now, quite silly. It is absurd, selfish, quite normal and quite laughable.


You could well throw this book aside for two quite good and quite opposite reasons. You may throw it aside as it is not offering you a magical recipe to everlasting happiness. You could throw it aside as you’ve suddenly and deeply felt the truth of the matter. You may read on with a dogged determination that, though you sort of get the point, you want a better, less painful version of it.



Brilliantly, by persisting, you’re opening up to the bones of the matter. You’re demanding to see the deeper mechanisms and by doing so, you will see, in fact, this is true.


We are born from emptiness and return to it. Like all life, we avoid pain and seek pleasure. By wanting for an alternative to the present moment, we give rise to conflict. We are smart enough to know the resolution to this.


Assuming you’re still here, you’re just unsatisfied with this fact. Thus, proving it to be true. And now upset and more driven than ever to disprove it.


By attempting to disprove it, you will prove it. And you’ll circle a few times, perhaps many, with each lap, proving it further.

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Tao Wow | Daily Cup of Tao

On being Happy





You can't have a perfect past. You can't have a predictable future. Somehow you want both, but given a little thought, you accept the past can't be changed, and the future is unknown.


You may just want to be happy and at peace. So just be happy and at peace!


Are you cured? Of course not.


It is though the fact of the matter: That past you can't change, is gone. That future you can't know, isn't here. It is simply now, and there is nothing wrong with now.


Is there?


What is ruining this present moment? Thoughts of the past or dreams of the future. We can boil it all down to 3 things:


Things we reject

Things we want

And pure fantasy


Fantasy will look like an unnecessary addition later, but for now it's an important category to explore and it contains: Those arguments you have in your head that you never get to live out. The things you'll do when you win the lottery. The job or relationship you'd be in if it wasn't for that unfortunate event.


These fantasies make up for a lot of what goes on in your mind and, as they've done this for most of your waking and even sleeping hours, they will be hardest to shake.


They are though why you're seeking happiness and not just simply being happy.


Fantasies are a waste. You'll never be free of them though, and some will be fun, so you'll never convince yourself to stop fantasising, nor could you ever prevent your mind from having them. The only trick you'll learn, is to recognise when the mind is in a useless place, forgiving yourself for the inevitable, and moving on.


The same will happen for rejecting and wanting. They will happen, but you'll train yourself to recognise them and let them go.


Take care here not to reject those thoughts you don't like. As that's rejecting. You just need to notice them, with the smallest brush of attention, and move on.


In bad times we reject what is happening. In good times we want what is happening to last. At other times we wish for good times and we also wish for bad things to not occur. Yet we have never altered the past or brought a future into being. We're a little bit silly. We do not learn and we are not alone.


Content, peaceful and happy are not things that benefit you at any other time than the present moment. And the present moment is short. If you notice that the present moment is contaminated in some way, you can let it go in a moment and have a pleasant next moment.


Focus just on your next in breath. Relax as you breathe out. Breathe in again, and smile through your eyes as you exhale. Breathe in again, and out.


3 breaths. Happy, content and at peace.


Then what? Likely back normal.


The present moment is it. That's where we experience, that's where we are, that's the only place that happiness matters, and it's the only place that happiness exists. Our only job is to fix the present moment. And repeat.


As the mind wanders and sets about with business as usual: wanting this, rejecting that, dreaming of this, wishing for that, the same simple trick is the solution. You don't try to extend that fleeting moment of happiness from before, you don't reject that invasive thought that occurred, you breathe, and let go.


Lovingly and forgivingly, watch thoughts pass by. Don't judge or rate your mind for having thoughts or get caught up in how good or bad you think you are at letting them go. Breathe, and move on.

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Tao Wow | Daily Cup of Tao

The Marrow of Zen

The Marrow of Zen




Insight Meditation 



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Tao Wow | Daily Cup of Tao