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Archive for February 27, 2024

Lost? Here’s 4 Steps to Finding Your Path

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February 27, 2024

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Lost? Here's 4 Steps to Finding Your Path

Not until we are lost do we begin to understand ourselves.

– Henry David Thoreau –

Lost? Here’s 4 Steps to Finding Your Path

There are moments in life when we lose our sense of direction. Whether you’re faced with major life-changes, a sense of dissatisfaction, or simply feel the need for some self-reflection, UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center magazine outlines four research-backed steps to finding your path, with a focus on defining your values, identifying domains in life that matter the most to you, translating values into actions, and integrating these new practices into your daily life. “Your values are freely chosen, not because you think you should value something or because you think it’s expected of you,” writes clinical psychology researcher Jennifer Belus. “The more we engage in behaviors aligned with our values, the less distress, suffering, and depression we tend to feel, and the better we function overall.” The ultimate intent is not just ticking off a list of goals, but to lead a meaningful life that is aligned with your core principles. Evidence also indicates that clarifying one’s values can lead to lower biological stress reactions, such as reduced levels of cortisol. Like a compass, “values help us get unlost by bringing clarity to imbue our life with meaning and help us do important things, even if they are hard.” { read more }

Be The Change

Pick a domain in your life (e.g. family, community, work, health, etc.) and reflect on how you can foster deeper inner alignment to more fully show up in it.

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Three Supports For Turning Towards Mystery

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Feb 26, 2024

Three Supports For Turning Towards Mystery

–Martin Aylward

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2610.jpgThere are three primary supports for nonconceptual awareness. These three supports are obvious in many ways, and yet, their simplicity belies their extraordinary depth. Over the last thirty years of my own practice, I have found that these three elements continuously reveal their potency and possibility.

The first nonconceptual support is embodied presence. Embodied presence is a way of compensating for the tendency to be lost in abstraction. This practice requires us to listen from within, to listen not with our ears, not with our mind, but to listen with ourselves. While you’re sitting here now, while you’re reading and reflecting on this teaching, let yourself listen from within, with the whole of your sensory awareness. Allow yourself to feel the sense of being here—how your feet touch the ground, the length of your spine.

This means getting in touch with whatever tension patterns may have formed. We’re often holding some kind of unconscious habitual tension patterns in our jaw, forehead, or shoulders. Embodied presence is a way of meeting our tensions physically; connecting the dots for the kind of attitudes, mental states, and emotional patterns that keep those tensions going; and then softening them. Embodied presence is an invitation to soften, settle, relax, and open up to what’s here. When we’re driven along by our habitual thinking patterns, we hold onto those tensions. A free body is a relaxed body, an open body. The foundation of all of our not knowing, of all our deeper, freer ways of knowing, is embodied presence.

The second helpful support for nonconceptual awareness is building the capacity and the willingness to continue letting go of the various ways our attention is seduced. It’s normal for the mind to think. It’s as normal for the mind to think as it is for the eyes to see and the ears to hear. Thinking is the mind’s job, so it’s going to continue producing thoughts. Let’s not fight that.

In moments when we notice that our attention has been seduced, we often get discouraged. “Oh, no, I’ve been distracted again.” Or we think, “Oh, I’ve been distracted. I’m supposed to go back to being present, but maybe just in a minute… I kind of love this thought.” When you see that your attention has gone off into abstraction, absorbed into some idea or image, drop the thought. Without judgment, blame, or drama, simply drop it. Then, it becomes more possible and fluid to return to embodied presence. Awareness is way more potent, luminous, and immediate than all our mental prevarications. So when you find yourself caught up in a thought, notice it, and in the noticing, unhook, unhook, unhook. The more you unhook from your familiar modes of thinking, the more you give yourself the chance to land in the unfamiliar mode of not knowing.

The third important support for nonconceptual awareness is the willingness to not know. The willingness to put aside the familiar. The willingness to meet each experience anew. For example, we’ve been talking about listening from within, sensing the contact of our legs on the ground, and noticing tension patterns that arise. We can easily filter those experiences through a regular habitual discourse: these are my legs, these are my shoulders, here’s some tension, I should let it go. That familiar narration may be running in the background anyway. That’s fine. But what if you didn’t rely on the description of arms and legs, hot and cold, comfortable or uncomfortable?

Instead, you can just come into the fizzing of all this, the mysteriousness. What is here right now isn’t arms and legs and torso. What’s here right now is this aliveness. My usual ideas will tell me what my body is, where my body is, and how my body is. But this kind of unfamiliar contact, this nonconceptual contact, will show me the constant flickering of experience. My ideas will tell me where my body ends and where the world begins, but this willingness to meet experience in an unfamiliar mode tells me that experience is ageless. In the same way that sensations—what I call inner experience—happen, here in awareness, so too do sounds—or outer experience. This third support for nonconceptual presence is about letting experience be here in awareness. It’s about letting awareness be the primary ground, reference point, and container for experience. And all the rest—inner or outer, pleasant or unpleasant, good or bad, meditatively suitable or meditatively unacceptable—all of that can just be left aside.

Through this practice, we give ourselves a chance to taste the unfamiliar, to taste experience anew. In that newness, we find more depth, more dimensionality, more insight, and a greater capacity to meet what happens fully and freely. And so, our practice deepens.

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What does nonconceptual awareness mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced nonconceptual awareness through one of the three helpful supports: embodied presence, willingness to let go of the various ways we get distracted, and the willingness to not know? What helps you open up to mystery?

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