We need to encourage ourselves to look
deeply into all things in our lives to see the inherent goodness of
everything. Sometimes we find it difficult to see the
good in people, places, or situations that aren’t to our liking. We focus on
the things we don’t like in our lives as a way of fueling our efforts to
create change. There is nothing inherently wrong with this, and it is one way
we make progress. However, if we get too caught up in this way of looking at
the world, we lose touch with our ability to sit back and simply say yes to
everything on our plates, which is the true starting point for all successful
activity. Sometimes what we really need is to encourage ourselves to look
deeply into all things in our lives to see the inherent goodness at the heart
of everything. At the core of this inquiry is the practice
of unconditional acceptance, which can be scary because we feel as if we are
being asked not to change the things we don’t like. But when we think this
way, we are still operating on the surface of our lives. In order to feel the
beauty and warmth of full acceptance, we have to be willing to sink deeper
into the stratum underlying the external manifestation of our lives. This
deeper place of being is the origin of all lasting change, yet its paradox is
that when we are in it, we often don’t feel the need to change anything. From
this place, we experience the pure beauty of the process of being alive, and
we see that all things change in their own time. We don’t need to force
anything. If there are things that we do need to change, from this place of
serenity we create the shift easily, our hands guided by an energy that
resides at the very center of our hearts. In our active, goal-oriented culture, we
learn to distrust stillness and to engage in busywork on the surface of life.
This tendency can blind us to the good that lies at the heart of all things.
But all we have to do to see again is stop for a moment, let go of our
preconceptions and our agendas, and settle into the very center of our
hearts, remembering that it is only from here that we can truly see. |
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