All posts by Pam

Mindfulness and Assignment 3

My next assignment will contribute toward establishing me continuously in mindfulness. Through a daily progression of nature meditation themes, I have come to the understanding that my goal is to begin each activity with a series of steps that invokes presence, with the added statement: This moment is palpably unique. In this way I ensoul each moment and the place where I am standing.

Then– Move with awareness.       — Gurumayi Chidvilasananda

Most of my life I have had a “chop and change” pattern of activity. This has worked against mindfulness. When I set myself to do an activity, invoke presence, invoke intention, and then check back (like a scientist) on the results, I am establishing myself in a mindful life. This has been my wish for a very long time. It has taken many, many years to get to this threshold.

The carrot for the art assignment is that I have loved for years the “significant moment” approach practiced by Cartier-Bresson. I now realize that this will be my approach, not to imitate him, but to make it the foundation of my assignment.

When you are able to accept divine will, you are also able to give yourself completely to every tiny action in your life. Each one becomes a fragrant blossom. It becomes worthy of respect. And God adores you.

— Gurumayi Chivilasananda

 

Mindfulness and Assignment 3

This morning during meditation I tapped into the well of contentment. That reminded me of my intention to work on mindfulness. I set myself to stop before each new activity and allow myself to become present through breath awareness coupled with listening (listening with breath awareness came up when I was doing my morning sunrise meditation outside.) I am putting this in the blog to help me to remember to:

PAUSE before each task to reignite PRESENCE so that I can do that task with mindfulness.

Meditation on Compassion

When you meditate deeply enough on compassion, there will arise in you a strong determination to alleviate the suffering of all beings, and an acute sense of responsibility toward that noble aim. There are two ways, then, of mentally directing this compassion and making it active.

The first way is to pray to all the buddhas and enlightened beings, from the depths of your heart, that everything you do, all your thoughts, words, and deeds, should only benefit beings and bring them happiness. In the words of one great prayer: “Bless me into usefulness.” Pray that you benefit all who come in contact with you, and help them transform their suffering and their lives.

The second and universal way is to direct whatever compassion you have to all beings, by dedicating all your positive actions and spiritual practice to their welfare and especially toward their enlightenment. For when you meditate deeply on compassion, a realization dawns in you that the only way for you to be of complete help to other beings is for you to gain enlightenment. From that a strong sense of determination and universal responsibility is born, and the compassionate wish arises in you at that moment to attain enlightenment for the benefit of all others.”

–The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying page 204

Underneath It All

She is the Hag, the Wild Woman, the Wise Woman. She is Baba Yaga, La Loba, Hecate.

Embedded in her name is the weight of history, religious persecution, torture, death, and the stigma of what remains – “evil doer”, “stick rider”, “night monster”.

But before that, she was the Knowing One, the Diviner, the One with Inner Wisdom. Because of her tumultuous history, few of us are willing to know her intimately. But she lives on.

There is an aura of darkness around her – from her past, from what is still unknown. And yet, we felt her between our fingers in the dirt as children, sensed her in the shadows, heard her breathing beneath the bed before we fell asleep.

We love her and we fear her. She is the part of us we cannot forget and yearn to bring back to life.

~Kristen

Encouragement in the Right Direction

There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all of time, this expression is unique.
And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and it will be lost. The world will not have it.

It is not your business to determine how good it is nor how valuable, nor how it compares with other expressions. It is your business to keep it yours clearly and directly, to keep the channel open.
You do not even have to believe in yourself or your work. You have to keep yourself open and aware to the urges that motivate you.

Keep the channel open.

— Martha Graham