Tag: truth

What is Your Truth?

What is your heart’s yearning, my loves? What is it that inspires your hopes and your dreams – inviting belief into day?

But, more so…

What compels that cautionary pause born from an oft endless questioning?

As we begin to explore these thoughts, we come to understand the nature of their underlying energy. That which was once so invariably fixed becomes suddenly fluid, shifting to suit the needs of moment.

How much of what we believe is ‘real’? And, is it really true?

The Buddha taught that we must question these associations; to disentangle story from observation.

To be fully present for each experience, absent speculation and/or qualification of ‘goodness’. To relinquish our attachment to opinion. “It is always the false which makes you suffer…,” Nisargadatta once shared. “The mind creates the abyss, the heart crosses it.”

And in this way, allowing heart to serve as refuge.

We may never know the truth of our surroundings. Though, we will always know our truth within.

In peace…

Namaste ❤️

The Lesson of Tree.

I was looking out to the trees this morning. A Willow brushed its ‘fingers’ against the pond, while the Great Oak stood poised in deepened reflection.

In looking out to the trees, we do not judge – rather, we appreciate. We cherish every paled, weathered branch and with open heart, cast ourselves fully into its changes.

And never asking how or why, because we already know…

Every tree must forge its own roots.

While some are content to hug the path, others must reach precariously from mountain’s edge. And still fewer yet, strive to become “poems the earth writes upon sky.”

Because, ultimately the tree knows its path…

And so, without regard to fate or purpose, it scales the heavens with grace and resilience.

Knowing its destiny resides within a single seed.

A little something to consider, my loves ~ our truth is ours alone to discover.

In peace…

Namaste ❤️

As We Open to Truth.

“If you are unable to find the truth right where you are,” asks Zen Buddhist, Dōgen Zenji. “then, where else do you expect to find it?”

My darlings, there is a vastness within our being. A simple truth undeterred by the limitations of time and space; and yet- ever changing. We refrain from the wholesomeness of this life and this world; we take measure from attributes rather than authenticity.

In doing so, we lose connection with that simple truth.

We see the snow-capped mountains off to the distance, but – do we ever consider their greatness outside the scale of human thought?

“To me a mountain is a buddha,” writes Jack Kerouac. “the patience of hundreds and thousands of years, just sitting there being perfectly silent…praying for all living creatures.”

It is the majesty of its trails and walking paths, it is the sum total of experiences shared to all wanderers who dared. It is the heron’s ascent across the mirrored pond, and the moon’s reflection within that ‘single drop of dew.’

Like us, it has everything it needs. Like us, it is all and everything at once — with nearly imperceptible changes serving only to enhance its beauty.

My darlings, even the delicate shards of our wounded hearts contain miracles beyond comprehension.

When we see life and this world beyond the limitations of measure, my darlings – that is when we’ll finally know our truth.

Namaste, my loves ~ ❤️

Where We May Find the Divine.

“Say not, “I have found the truth,” but rather, ”I have found a truth.”
Say not, “I have found the path of the soul.”
Say rather, “I have met the soul walking upon my path.”
For the soul walks upon all paths…
The soul unfolds itself, like a lotus of countless petals.” – Khalil Gibran

I’ve always been inspired by this symbol of the Lotus blossom. Undeterred by these muddied depths, still she rises – a magnificent expression of the Divine. While the fragrance from her lovely petals lingers softly upon the summer’s air, and reminding us…

That she is beautiful because of her journey.

I like to think we are all very much like the Lotus flower; each blooming brilliantly in spite of our origins. And, manifesting so perfectly this energy of the Divine.

For even in the muddiest of waters, still our reflection shines – and, our inner beauty bursts forth all around.

Much love, my dearest darlings ~ and remember,

“The light you are seeking is you.”

 

Stepping a Little Closer to “The Truth.”

I once heard the most beautiful story told by Thay Phap An, a senior monk in the Plum Village tradition. It is perhaps, one of my most favorite koans.

It was given during a 2004 retreat, entitled “Learning to Speak the Truth.”

Thay Phap An tells the story of an elder monk who had volunteered to help him with the coordination of a great ordination ceremony – “The Full Moon Festival.” It was a relief to Thay Phap An, as the sangha was quite small and the attendants were already overtaxed helping to care for the visiting elders.

One morning, while Thay Phap An was washing a dish – the elder monk came in to say, “Well, I’m not going to organize the Full Moon Festival because the monk who did it last year refused to help me by passing on his experience.”

Thay Phap An was understandably upset, “What?! You promised that you would organize the Full Moon Festival, and now you won’t do it? How can you do that to me? Everyone already has jobs, so who’s going to organize the festival? Nobody can do it. Will you please do it?”

But, even with these pleading the elder monk refused again.

A few days later, the group met underneath the great linden tree to discuss how they might more positively ‘water the seeds’ to help their Sangha grow.

At the end of the talk, Thích Nhất Hạnh asked if there were any questions – an offer Thay Phap An just couldn’t refuse.

“Yes, I have a question.” he said, “How can we organize a summer retreat when someone here refuses to take the responsibility of doing his work?” And then, in front of the whole sangha, he explained selfishly the elder monk had acted.

Thích Nhất Hạnh was visibly upset, as he had just spent the better portion of the session acknowledging and reinforcing the good within each of them.

“In this meeting, Thay had tried his best to bring all of the good seeds from our store consciousness up to our mind consciousness, and then I turned around and invited all the negative seeds up. The whole Sangha became very tense. Thay was not very happy. He said, “Sit down and shut up!

Thay Phap An was both distressed and puzzled – hadn’t he only been speaking the truth, after all?

When the meeting was over, he asked Thích Nhất Hạnh’s counsel,

“Thay, please forgive me,” he said.  “I have made a mistake, but I don’t understand what I did, because I was only speaking the truth.”

To which Thay replied,

“What you spoke was not the truth. Truth is something that has the capacity to reconcile, to give people hope, to give people happiness. That is truth! When you speak and it causes damage, even though it may be correct, it is not truth.”

You see, Thay Phap An was from America – where he was accustomed to speaking the truth in a certain way. To be direct, honest, and forthright – no matter the circumstances, nor the outcome this truth may bring.

But, the real truth has the capacity to bring peace – it helps us move closer to our own practice, and ‘touch what is beautiful within that moment.’

“If we do not have happiness within ourselves, if we do not have peace within ourselves, whatever we do is only a reaction. Action is based on joy and happiness; reaction is based on suffering and pain. Slowly I learned to act, and not to react.” – Thay Phap An

When Thích Nhất Hạnh teaches about suffering, he encourages us to find the joy within each delicate moment – that we may someday know the foundation of love beneath our feet.

“Without this ground of happiness and joy,” offers Thay Phap An, “it’s very difficult to touch our suffering. Without it, we will be carried away by our suffering, and we will have no chance to recognize it, understand it, and transform it. So the foundation, the first stone we put our feet on, is our tiny bit of joy, our tiny bit of happiness, before we can go farther.”

Indeed, sometimes we can become so blinded by our quest for ‘the truth’, that we begin to lose sight – swept away into the volatility of our emotions, and, forgetting the most fundamental truth within:

That is, even the tiniest patch of joy, may soon become the very ground beneath our feet – offering us the strength to one day transform even our greatest of suffering.

And, reminding us – that the ‘real truth’ is that which brings us closer to our very own Buddha-nature.

 

Balancing Between Faith and Doubt.

Sensei Sevan Ross, director of the Chicago Zen Center, once led a discussion on the balance between faith and doubt . It was intended to demonstrate the interrelationship of the two – specifically, that one can not exist without the other.

[blockquote source=]“Great Faith and Great Doubt are two ends of a spiritual walking stick. We grip one end with the grasp given to us by our Great Determination. We poke into the underbrush in the dark on our spiritual journey. This act is real spiritual practice — gripping the Faith end and poking ahead with the Doubt end of the stick. If we have no Faith, we have no Doubt. If we have no Determination, we never pick up the stick in the first place.”[/blockquote]

In fact, true faith requires doubt; without doubt, true faith is not possible. It’s a spiritual symbiosis, if you will – one that serves as a catalyst to our own awakening.

I must confess, I’ve been wrestling with my own insecurities lately – the result of which, has left me wary where once so very sure-footed.  It happens to all of us, you see – that feeling of momentary suspension as the pendulum readies it’s next swing.

This is the nature of groundlessness – reinforcing our understanding that nothing is ever the same, once again. Our suffering occurs when we try to dismiss the truth of this reality.

As Pema Chödrön once said, 
[blockquote source=]”We think that the point is to pass the test or overcome the problem, but the truth is that things don’t really get solved. They come together and they fall apart. Then they come together again and fall apart again. It’s just like that. The healing comes from letting there be room for all of this to happen: room for grief, for relief, for misery, for joy…..To be fully alive, fully human, and completely awake is to be continually thrown out of the nest.”[/blockquote]

The Buddha taught that we might embrace all of these emotions with curiosity and open-heartedness – that we might utilize them as a means for spiritual discovery.

Doubt forces reflection, and doubt strengthens our resolve.

So, you see, even on those days where we may feel an unsettled mess – have faith, that there is great purpose in all aspects of our journey.

Even those, which are a little more emotional than the rest.