Monday, October 29, 2012

The Purpose of Full Attention


The Purpose of Full Attention

Hey all,
My dear friend Kelly asked me about a week ago to begin going through a book with her. It is similar to a daily devotionals book, but it is about mindful ways of living. Each day is a new story followed by ways to apply it to your day. I have absolutely loved it. It has been incredible to be centered on a way of mindfully living each day. Today’s entry really struck me, and I wanted to share it with you all. It is from The Book of Awakening: Having the Life You Want by Being Present to the Life You Have. I think this title is fitting, because how often are we searching for something different than what we have? believing if only we had something different THEN we would be happy. Different circumstances, different friends, different living situation, etc etc. The beautiful thing about mindfullness is it teaches you to stay present in the life you have and learning to love and grow within THIS life.
Here is the excerpt I wanted to share:
“Amost profound and helpful learning came to me when struggling with the pain of having a rib removed. For weeks I felt a corset of pain girdling each breath. But watching the winter water of a stream begin to thaw and flow, over and over, I finally saw that to make it through the pain, I had to be more like water and less like ice.
For when trees fell into the ice, the river shattered. But when large limbs fell into the flowing water, the river embraced the weight and flowed around it. The trees and winter water were teaching me that the pain was more pointed and hurtful when I was tense and solid as ice. Then, each breath was shattering. But when I could thaw the fear and tenseness I carried, the pain was more absorbed, and I could, like the thawing stream, move on–not pain-free, but no longer shattered.
It is this way with much of nature. By opening fully to our own experience, we can feel and see the resilience of life around us. Feeling our woundedness, we can learn from the hollowed stump how to root smaller greens. Feeling our sadness, we can learn from the leaves too tired to be blown along how to surrender. Feeling our tenderness, we can learn from the caterpillar how to endure the tremble that preceds the appearance of wings. But it is only by showing up, by denying nothing, that other living things reveal to us the secrets of how they manage to live. In deep counterpoint to the old saying, “An eye for an eye”, there is a deeper law that guides us to wholeness: a truth of being for a truth of being. So the purpose of full attention is to invite through personal surrender the particular example of life force in whatever is around us to show itself: a truth of being for a truth of being.
Yes, when in pain, be like flowing water. When suffering near the bottom, feed off what you can, like the brilliant ocean fish, and spit back the rest. When feeling burdened, watch small birds to see how they begin to fly. When feeling finished, watch newborn animals open their wet little eyes and imitate their innocence. Once giving full attention, you will come back–one drop at a time–into the tide of the living.”

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