Jul 4, 2009

Personal Freedom

"It's supposed to be easy. Everything is supposed to be easy. Everything is easy. You live in a dream world. You're surrounded by illusions. And the illusions change when you change your thinking!

Tell yourself it's easy. Tell yourself often. Make it a mantra. Eat, sleep, and breathe it. And your life shall be transformed.

It's supposed to be easy."

- Mike Dooley, Notes from the Universe

No matter what is going on in this crazy world of ours...it's supposed to be easy. It's my choice to make this my personal mantra--to honor those who came before. This is my path to freedom.

Jul 3, 2009

3 July 2009

"Do at the beginning of day what would make your day worthwhile if you did nothing else." ~ Alan Cohen

"The first great gift we can bestow on others is a good example." ~ Thomas Morell

"People are not fixed entities, but dynamic energies expanding or contracting in relation to your thoughts about them." ~ Alan Cohen

"Listen now to the gentle whispers of hope." ~ Charles D. Brodhead

"It is when outer times seem dark that inner light shines the brightest." ~ Alan Cohen

"Take care of your minutes, and the hours will take care of themselves." ~ Lord Chesterson

"Do not seek to follow in the footsteps of the wise. Seek what they sought." ~ Matsuo Basho

Jun 29, 2009

Osho on Self Love

A person who loves himself can easily become meditative, because meditation means being with yourself.

If you hate yourself — as you do, as you have been told to do, and you have been following it religiously — if you hate yourself, how can you be with yourself? Meditation is nothing but enjoying your beautiful aloneness and celebrating yourself. That’s what meditation is all about. Meditation is not a relationship. The other is not needed at all; one is enough unto oneself. One is bathed in one’s own glory, bathed in one’s own light. One is simply joyous because one is alive, because one is.

The greatest miracle in the world is that you are and that I am. To be is the greatest miracle, and meditation opens the doors of this great miracle. But only a man who loves himself can meditate; otherwise you are always escaping from yourself, avoiding yourself. Who wants to look at an ugly face and who wants to penetrate an ugly being? Who wants to go deep into one’s own mud, into one’s own darkness? Who wants to enter the hell that they think they are? You want to keep this whole thing covered up with beautiful flowers and you want always to escape from yourself.

Hence people are seeking company continuously. They can’t be with themselves; they want to be with others. People are seeking any type of company; if they can avoid the company of themselves anything will do. They will sit in a movie house for three hours seeing something utterly stupid. They will read a detective novel for hours, wasting their time. They will read the same newspaper again and again just to keep themselves engaged. They will play cards and chess just to kill time...as if they have too much time!

Love begins with you yourself, then it can go on spreading. It goes on spreading of its own accord; you need not do anything to spread it.

“Love yourself..." says Buddha. And then immediately he adds: "... and watch." That is meditation, that is Buddha’s name for meditation. But the first requirement is to love yourself, and then watch. If you don’t love yourself and start watching, you may feel like committing suicide.

Many Buddhists feel like committing suicide because they don’t pay attention to the first part of the sutra, they immediately jump to the second: watch yourself. In fact, I have never come across a single commentary on The Dhammapada, these sutras of the Buddha, which has paid any attention to the first part: Love yourself.

Socrates says: Know thyself, Buddha says: Love thyself. And Buddha is far truer, because unless you love yourself you will never know yourself — knowing comes only later on, love prepares the ground. Love is the possibility of knowing oneself. Love is the right way to know oneself.

“Love yourself and watch...today, tomorrow, always.”

Create loving energy around yourself. Love your body and love your mind. Love your whole mechanism, your whole organism. By love is meant: accept it as it is, don’t try to repress. We repress only when we hate something, we repress only when we are against something. Don’t repress, because if you repress how are you going to watch? We cannot look the enemy eye to eye; we can look only in the eyes of our beloved. If you are not a lover of yourself you will not be able to look into your own eyes, into your own face, into your own reality.

Watching is meditation, Buddha’s name for meditation. Watch is Buddha’s watchword. He says: Be aware, be alert, don’t be unconscious. Don’t behave in a sleepy way. Don’t go on functioning like a machine, like a robot. That’s how people are functioning.

Watch — just watch. Buddha does not say what has to be watched — everything! Walking, watch your walking. Eating, watch your eating. Taking a shower, watch the water, the cold water falling on you, the touch of the water, the coldness, the shiver that goes through your spine — watch everything, “today, tomorrow, always.”

A moment finally comes when you can watch even your sleep. That is the ultimate in watching. The body goes to sleep and there is still a watcher awake, silently watching the body fast asleep. That is the ultimate in watching. Right now just the opposite is the case: your body is awake but you are asleep. Then you will be awake and your body will be asleep. The body needs rest but your consciousness needs no sleep. Your consciousness is consciousness; it is alertness, that is its very nature.

As you become more watchful you start having wings — then the whole sky is yours. Man is a meeting of the earth and the sky, of body and soul.

Jun 28, 2009

Sunday

I have been contemplating what has been up with me...I am having to not only release a lot of old "rules" about how things "should" be or what things are "supposed" to look like, I am having to confront some of them to find out if they are really true. And how can I know that they are true?

I have learned that finding out what is real means breathing thru the fear--what still exists for me is real in that moment. (Lots of things just seem to disappear and the only thing left is love or light or laughter--pretty much laughter at myself!)

Some crazy fears of late: That I will suddenly wake up one day to find that my body has betrayed me and I have turned into a dried up old prune!

That releasing my ego attachment to outcome also means letting go of deserving, receiving and having that which I desire!

That this particular cycle of growth and learning are just going to go on way too long before I see results!

I wish that I could say that today I am grateful for this learning experience. I don't feel that way quite yet. I can say that I do, in fact, see potential in it and I do think that eventually I will feel infinitely grateful and I will come away from this a more authentic, better and happier me. (I have felt naturally inspired to face some of the more challenging issues that I've been avoiding to the best of my ability. Of course, it also makes me crazy when I do the avoiding thing!)

I am submitting to this lesson and I am attempting to do so gracefully; I expect that I will continue to improve in this. (So, alright, I am not the most graceful of beings. I can admit it and it won't kill me. :))

Looking back at the events of the last year or so, I can see how I have been led to this experience. It is very odd to see that this is so. And yet, I feel its truth inside.

I have been asking to move into alignment with the deepest desires of my heart and into a space where I am open, willing and able to receive. I had a lot to do to get here. The only thing that I can do in this moment is trust that it will all be good, that my heart's desires will indeed be met and that I just have to let go of controling how it is going show up!

Dare to LIVE!