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The Unsacred Clown and The Death of the Sacred

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“Man is a polluted river. One must be a sea to receive a polluted river without becoming defiled.” ~ Nietzsche

We are living in the age of the imbecile. It’s a time of catastrophic stupidity. A heightened state of human folly outflanks us. Willful ignorance has created a tsunami of stupid that’s tidal waving across the world in nauseating surges of dimwitted cruelty and gleeful shortsightedness.

Fault lines of idiocy ripple from it. Smoke and mirrors billow from it in brainless puffs of myopia and ill-reason. Alas, the twilight of the idols has given rise to the dawn of the dumb.

donald trump clown e1546509713960The worst part is that this particular flavor of dumb is also cowardly and spineless. The only thing worse than being surrounded by idiots is being surrounded by cowards. And when the positions of our (so-called) leadership and (so-called) elite are filled with both, then you know that you are in the midst of the age of imbecility.

It is then that you know the shadow of the Unsacred Clown has fallen upon the world and the end of the sacred is nigh.

The unsacred clown is the polar-opposite of the sacred clown, a clown-clown minus the sacred. A harbinger of self-destructive greed and meaninglessness. A force of imbecility so powerful that it corrupts absolutely.

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Art by Dwayne Wingert
King Clown Gaius Trump by Tony Pro
Bill Murray by Tony Pro

The Golden Shadow: Stepping into the Power of Who You Really Are

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“There are heights of the soul from which even tragedy ceases to look tragic.” ~ Nietzsche

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Most of us are familiar with the archetype of the Dark Shadow: the repressed dark side hidden within us. But we’re probably not familiar with the archetype of the Golden Shadow: the repressed gold hidden within our darkness.

The golden shadow symbolizes withheld courage, hidden talents, repressed passion and stifled creativity. It’s the unfulfilled potential that people fail to see or develop because of fear and a lack of risk-taking.

In the spirit of becoming a more balanced and integrated human, and more authentic in our engagement with ourselves and with each other, being curious about the darkness within is a profound way of discovering hidden gold.

Making the darkness conscious

“Too much of the animal distorts the civilized man, too much civilization makes sick animals.” ~ Jung

Having a shadow is a part of being human. We all have one and we all have a dark side. It was necessary to repress certain aspects of our animality when we were growing up.

In order to fit into our immediate cultural dynamic, in order to be civilized and a healthy, functioning member of society, it was an important and healthy thing to tone down our wildness, our unbridled frenzy, our violence, our unthinking spontaneity and learn some discipline.

This became our repressed darkness, our shadow. Making the darkness conscious is an artform. It’s a precarious endeavor, a delicate and dangerous undertaking. But no other practice is more vital to human flourishing. No other task is as critical for achieving balance and integration.

As Jung famously said, “One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.”

This is because the shadow is primal. It’s wild and intuitive. It’s umbilical. In our youth it was necessary to repress it in order to achieve discipline; in our maturity, it is vital that we integrate it in order to achieve enlightenment.

It must be reconciled lest it fester and spread and poison us. If we simply ignore the shadow, it will just become stronger, darker, angrier. It will become demonic and domineering, to the extent that it will eventually possess us like mere puppets under a dark unforgiving cloud.

It takes fierce courage to face our darkness and it takes ruthless questioning to get past the comfortable “answers” that we’ve settled for. It takes tender vulnerability to get past the rigid invulnerability that we’ve erected to keep ourselves “safe.”

But nothing is more important than making the darkness conscious, especially when our goal is healthy integration, wholeness, balance, self-actualization and enlightenment.

Mining the gold

“Heroes are meant to be forged golden from the blaze.” ~ Nikita Gill

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Once we’ve made the darkness conscious, we can begin the important task of sacred excavation. But it won’t be easy. The only thing harder than mining for gold in the shadow is making the darkness conscious.

This is because the shadow is turbulent and fierce. It’s an unbridled furnace of molten energy where all our repressed anger, grief, shame, guilt and wildness has boiled into a raging frenzy.

Mining for gold in such an environment is not for the faint of heart. A good strategy, going into it, is to harness the archetypal power of the Phoenix (the personified life-death-rebirth process).

By pitting one archetype (Phoenix) against another (Shadow), we will be more courageous and adaptable when facing the burning and more likely to gain the resilience of rebirth.

Easier said than done, but the discovery of gold makes it all worth it. For this type of gold reinforces our confidence and courage. It bolsters our self-esteem. It makes us more resilient, more imaginative and more spiritually robust. It reveals hidden talents, repressed passion and stifled creativity.

The interesting thing is that in order to gain the courage needed to mine for gold in the shadow, one must already have the courage to make the darkness conscious.

It’s like George Orwell’s paradoxical quote: “Until they become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious.”

The good (and bad) thing about the Unconscious is that it works behind the scenes despite consciousness. If we’re lucky enough to have a life experience that triggers our unconscious into giving us the much-needed courage to make the darkness conscious, in the first place, we’ll be able to bolster our courage through the discovery of our shadow’s gold, in the second place.

In the end, having made the darkness conscious, having been forged by the fire, having resurrected into a mighty Phoenix, we will have excavated sacred gold from the shadows and unveiled our deepest passions, hidden talents, fierce wildness, and innate creativity.

From these sacred artifacts, we can continue the reconciliation of the shadow and the cultivation of our authenticity.

With our mighty shadow by our side, as ally rather than enemy, as wholeness rather than dissociation, as diamond rather than demon, a cloak of antifragility dons our character and the path of self-overcoming and enlightenment widens before us.

Image source:

Art by Autumn Skye
Peter Mohrbacher art

4 Ways to Deal with The Elusiveness of Enlightenment

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“All things excellent are as difficult as they are rare.” ~ Spinoza

In the beginning, as in the end, enlightenment attracts precisely because enlightenment eludes.

This is all the more reason to allow the journey to be the thing. But it’s easier said than done. For the journey toward enlightenment can be one hell of a painful rollercoaster ride.

Filled with sinister abysses and soul-crippling crossroads, challenging dark nights of the soul and uncomfortable thresholds. The journey can hurt like hell, especially once you realize that enlightenment can never truly be achieved, and the best you can hope for is to discover an imaginative and open-minded sense of humor.

The Elusiveness of Enlightenment

The secret, beyond having a good sense of humor and allowing the journey to be the thing, is to embrace the pain experienced along the way as one might embrace a teacher or a guide.

A cruel teacher, sure. A harsh guide, no doubt. But that’s what it takes to improve oneself, to individuate, to self-actualize, to self-overcome. That’s what it takes to become enlightened.

Most people would probably rather bypass the blaze and go straight to being golden. They’d rather skip the rub and simply become a pearl, or forgo the pressure and somehow become a diamond, or waive off the sharpening and go straight to being sharp.

But the path toward enlightenment isn’t having any of that “easy road” nonsense. It’s not the path toward enlightenment because it’s easy. It’s the path to enlightenment because it’s difficult. If you’re on it, then you already know that this is the case.

If you have yet to begin walking it, then you’re in for one hell of a rude awakening; for the forge, the rub, the pressure, and the sharpening will test your mettle like nothing else ever has.

Let’s take a look at how we can deal with the elusiveness of enlightenment ~

Surrender to the forge

“Heroes are meant to be forged golden from the blaze.” ~ Nikita Gill

The crucible of life is going to test you anyway. You might as well learn from it. Let it burn you. Then rise from the ashes with a Phoenix heart.

The critical difference between being on the path and not being on the path is this: those who are on the path are hyper-aware of the crucible and what it has to teach.

When you are on the path, you are a comfort-zone-stretcher par excellence. You brazenly take leaps of courage. You are not afraid of “jumping into the fire.” Because you are fire. You are the blaze.

Your surrender, albeit painful, is a surrender into yourself. Fire plus fire equals greater fire. Pain is mere kindling. Nothing burns brighter than pain, and you have the courage and the wherewithal to own it.

Embrace the rub

“The pearl is also always grit, an irritation as well as a luster.” ~ James Hillman

Nothing takes more grit than putting one foot in front of the other on the path toward enlightenment, especially considering the fact that enlightenment will always be elusive.

As grit, your grit will come in handy when it comes to withstanding the rub. The rub is the Great Mystery’s way of polishing you into a pearl.

The cosmos is your oyster, massaging you into greatness with each irritating, painful, uncomfortable rub. Nothing is more difficult, yet nothing is more enlightening.

With enough cosmic rubbing you begin to realize that you are not just a speck in the universe, you are the entire universe in a speck. And suddenly your hard-earned luster has all been worth it.

As Rumi famously stated, “If you’re irritated by every rub, how will you be polished?”

Encourage the pressure

“The obstacle is the path.” ~ Zen proverb

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Without pressure, how will you know your capacities? Without a challenge, how will you know what you are capable of accomplishing? Pressure keeps you circumspect through the vicissitudes of life. It keeps your body healthy, your mind sharp, and your soul calibrated.

There are ways to smooth out the clumsy kinks, the ignorant delusions, and holier than thou mindsets that creep up along the path. And they all require pressure.

As with all diamonds, pressure is needed to polish them. Not comfort, not security, not safety, but pressure. So it goes also for the rough diamond of the soul. Pressure is needed to smooth out the edges. To make it more robust, more antifragile.

Indeed. It’s pressure that transforms the coal-black demon, buried inside you, into a diamond-backed ally, rallying beside you. Even the Shadow (probably especially the Shadow) is not immune to Pressure’s enlightening nudge.

Submit to the sharpening

“If on your journey, you should encounter God, God will be cut.” ~ Hatori Hanzo, Kill Bill

There is more wisdom in an inch of hard-earned scar than in a mile of easily-gained knowledge.

As long as the wound doesn’t kill you, there is the potential for great wisdom hidden within. There is pain there, sure, but it’s the kind of pain that sculpts a heart into wholeheartedness. That carves a mind into open-mindedness. That sharpens a soul into a thing sharp enough to cut God.

Your sacred wounds are the deep scars you earned from being raked over the coals of life. They keep you awake and aware to the process of becoming who you authentically are.

They keep you courageous in your vulnerability and vigilant in not allowing inauthentic invulnerability to dull your hard-earned shine. In short: they keep you antifragile and meta-flexible to the difficulty of the journey.

Submitting to the sharpening is being okay with the fact that you will receive many sacred wounds along the path toward enlightenment.

It’s surrendering to the Philosopher’s Stone and the alchemical process of transforming the dull, leaden, heavy, codependent, unenlightened you of yesterday into the sharp, golden, lighthearted, interdependent, enlightened you of tomorrow.

Image source:

Art by Cameron Gray
Artwork-1 & 2 by Hannah Faith Yata

Five Steps to Overcome Self-Sabotage

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“Believe in your heart that you’re meant to live a life full of passion, purpose, magic and miracles.”
~ Roy Bennett

Understanding Self-Sabotage

In the simplest form, anything from within that hinders us from achieving a better version of ourselves is self-sabotage. 

Ha, that was easy, but the truth is the roots of self-sabotage run deep, so we fail to recognize it on the surface. Self-sabotage holds us back from achieving our true purpose or walking the path of our calling.

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It’s easy to be stuck in a pattern of self-sabotage as we’re brought up with the notion that we need to excel in school, then university, get a good job and keep achieving monetary success. 

Then one day, your inner voice says, but I wanted to become an actor, and the life you’re currently living is what your parents wanted. You convince yourself that you’re doing well, and to fill the void you start working out more or partying harder on the weekends.

Suppressing this inner calling that holds your true desire is nothing but self-sabotage. Debi Silber in the video below gives us a more detailed look into the various kinds of self-sabotage.

Stop Sabotaging Yourself | Debi Silber | TEDxFultonStreet

“If you end up with a boring miserable life because you listened to your mom, your dad, your teacher, your priest, or some guy on television telling you how to do your shit, then you deserve it.” ~ Frank Zappa

Yes, thank’s Frank, though that may come across as a little harsh, in reality it’s all empowering. If it’s your fault it also means that you have the power to turn your life around and stop sabotaging yourself.

Overcoming Self-Sabotage

From Debi’s video it becomes quite clear, that an increasing number of people prefer to stick to a familiar pain and suppress the discomfort of their inner calling. Breaking out of the comfort zone isn’t easy, and neither is finding the cause and working on the reason of your self-sabotage. So why do we get stuck in self-sabotage?

“The comfort zone is a psychological state in which one feels familiar, safe, at ease, and secure. If you always do what is easy and choose the path of least resistance, you never step outside your comfort zone. Great things don’t come from comfort zones.”  ~ Roy T. Bennett

THE LIGHT IN THE HEART

Here are a few ways how we can identify and overcome self-sabotage ~

Identify the behaviour that triggers self-sabotage

Our habits are the first place that we should look at, this again is a tricky situation as cognitive dissonance is generally going to trigger here. For me personally I’m a gamer, and I have been told multiple times that I spend too much time gaming. 

This isn’t a new habit, it started in childhood and is here with me to date. My mother, wife, friends everyone has tried bringing it to my notice, but I always find a way to justify my addiction. (it took me a few seconds to consider if I should call it an addiction) 

If I could cut down on my gaming time and use the time more fruitfully for work and family and find balance, many aspects of my life will improve, which is what I’m trying to do now. 

Journaling and evening meditations can help you identify the patterns in your behaviour that lead to self-sabotage. What kind of behaviour stops you from achieving your highest potential? 

It doesn’t have to be just addiction, it can be a way of thinking, a voice in the head, a belief that is holding you back. The next step helps you identify this voice and work on it.

Identify the voice that leads to self-sabotage

Our past experiences are one of the main reasons why we end up in situations that lead to self-sabotage. For children with a rough childhood, traumatic relationships or those who have suffered abuse, all of this shapes our perspective. We tend to see the world through the lens of these perspectives, which in turn shapes our experiences.

Shirzad Chamine explains to us that there are nine kinds of voices that lead to self-sabotage in the upcoming video. The controller, victim, hyper-achiever, avoider, pleaser etc. are a few of them.

He calls them the Saboteurs, the voice that keeps judging other people, the voice that can’t say no and forces you to please other people. To gain control over these voices, we need to firstly be able to identify them.

It’s not necessary that only people who have had negative experiences operate with saboteurs, but even people who have not faced trauma. For example people who have not responded to their calling will have at least one, if not more saboteurs.

overcome self-sabotage

While the opposite of the Saboteur is the Sage, the positive intelligence brain, whose main focus is on thriving. In the picture above you can see the emotions related to each of these brain types. 

Shirzad states that once you identify the Saboteur’s voice, you need to change it to the Sage’s voice. Every time you do it you end up rewriting your brain in a positive way. Eventually you end up hearing the voice of the sage instead of the saboteur. 

Go ahead and watch the video below as it will really help with identification of the voice of self-sabotage and confronting it.

Know your inner saboteurs: Shirzad Chamine at TEDxStanford

Expand or Contract Your Circle

“To be of good quality, you have to excuse yourself from the presence of shallow and callow minded individuals.”  ~ Michael Bassey Johnson

As they say birds of a feather flock together. It’s important to take some time and see who you’re hanging out with, not just your friends, but even your associates at work, your family.

Are any of these people operating from the Saboteurs perspective? If yes, consider bringing it to their notice. But if they are not willing to change, it might just make matters worse. Although at times it makes sense to distance yourself from them, self-care is an essential part of the process.

Similarly invest your time in people who build you up, those who show the emotional signs of a positive intelligent brain can help you grow and rub off on you as well. 

Stick with It

One of the most important parts is sticking to it, the science does not work if you do it randomly. Everytime you hear the voice or have negative thoughts you need to check where they stem from.

It does get tough when you’re at work or in the midst of something but that’s why I mentioned the evening meditation where you play back your day before you go to bed so you can spot behaviour that you may not have caught.

Motivation is a key factor to this, so come up with a treat list. If I manage to confront my judgmental behaviour and let the sage out three times today, I get a brownie. Whatever motivates you, come up with a plan, set some goals, this is for a better yourself, you got to go out and get it!

Get By with a Little Help from Your Friends

Gotta love The Beatles and Joe Cocker, and yes if you find sticking to it difficult, get a friend or family member that you’re dependable on to help you stick to your goals.

It’s always nice to have someone to talk to and discuss your challenges and successes. Plus they can also help with the observation part when you’re around them and give your observer a much-needed break.

With a trusted partner you can open up to discussing perspectives and worldviews that shape your reality and figure out where you need assistance in growing.

“Believe in your infinite potential. Your only limitations are those you set upon yourself. Believe in yourself, your abilities and your own potential. Never let self-doubt hold you captive. You are worthy of all that you dream of and hope for.” ~ Roy T. Bennett

THE LIGHT IN THE HEART

I hope this article helps you get some clarity on the entire self-sabotage scenario and puts forth constructive steps to confront the saboteurs in the head! Heal well friends, the world needs more people operating from the sage perspective!

Image Sources:

Self-Sabotage by Lazaro Hurtado
Self-Sabotage by Sasa Nemec

9 Inspiring Quotes from the Tao of Pooh to Assist Life’s Flow

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There are several children’s classic books like Cinderalla, 3 Billy Goats Gruff, Winnie the Pooh, Ugly Duckling etc., that teach us about human nature, the struggles of life, and how one can rise through murky waters.

Another inspiring book that can help us navigate the path of life is the Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff. It provides a simple introduction to Taoism and how the teachings can be applied to life.

Here are some of the quotes from the Tao of Pooh to assist life’s flow ~

Tao of Pooh

1) “There are things about ourselves that we need to get rid of; there are things we need to change. But at the same time, we do not need to be too desperate, too ruthless, too combative. Along the way to usefulness and happiness, many of those things will change themselves, and the others can be worked on as we go. The first thing we need to do is recognize and trust our own Inner Nature, and not lose sight of it.”

As Bruce Lee says, “Be like water,” water doesn’t stop when you block its path with a rock it goes around it. Similarly, no matter what life throws at us, while we’re alive we may take a day, a month, or even a year to figure out how to overcome our obstacles but we learn a vital lesson from the experience.

So instead of driving yourself crazy trying to bring about change, just getting through the day at times is an act that requires evolution.

Brooke Hampton, puts this in perspective with this quote, “Drop the endless guilt trip bullshit. Instead of focusing so much on the things you want to eliminate, focus on the things you want to add to your life. Stop beating yourself up. Just keep adding the good shit and the bad shit will eliminate itself.”

Call draw on the fight with yourself and take a moment to relax, by keeping calm and doing what your soul desires is the path. You already know this, perhaps just skipped a beat with the pace of routine.

2) “Sooner or later, we are bound to discover some things about ourselves that we don’t like. But once we see they’re there, we can decide what we want to do with them. Do we want to get rid of them completely, change them into other things, or use them in beneficial ways? The last two approaches are often especially Useful, since they avoid head on conflict, and therefore minimize struggle. Also, they allow those transformed characteristics to be added to the list of things we have that help us out.

In a similar manner, instead of struggling to erase what we refer to as negative emotions, we can learn to use them in positive ways.

“We could describe the principle like this: while pounding on the piano keys may produce noise, removing them doesn’t exactly further the creation of music.”

Finding ourselves is an endless process and we are bound to meet several ugly versions on our path. On my journey there is one monster that keeps raising its ugly head repeatedly, my anger.

I have lost my cool on multiple occasions, especially with my mother, and the whole situation leaves me feeling distressed, frustrated and helpless.

There is an urgent need for transformation, I am aware about that. I have to learn to channelise it in the right direction, and get to the heart of the matter.

It’s always a work in-progress. If we overpower the demons in the forest of our mind, we begin to see life, donning a positive hat.

Like Kahlil Gibran said, “March on. Do not tarry. To go forward is to move toward perfection. March on, and fear not the thorns, or the sharp stones on life’s path.”

3) “In order to take control of our lives and accomplish something of lasting value, sooner or later we need to learn to believe. We don’t need to shift our responsibilities onto the shoulders of some deified Spiritual Superman, or sit around and wait for Fate to come knocking at the door. We simply need to believe in the power that’s within us, and use it. When we do that, and stop imitating others and competing against them, things begin to work for us.”

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It is so easy to doubt ourselves and our capabilities, and believe what others say about us. Self doubt is like walking on a tightrope, we can reach our destination if we stay focused, but if we begin to fear, we will get trapped in an endless loop of misery and low self esteem.

It’s a matter of choice one has to make: to either believe in yourself or get sucked into self-pity and feelings of self-doubt.

“When you doubt your power, you give power to your doubt.” ~ Honore de Balzac

4) “Many people are afraid of Emptiness, however, because it reminds them of Loneliness. Everything has to be filled in, it seems – appointments books, hillsides, vacant lots – but when all the spaces are filled, the Loneliness really begins. Then the Groups are joined, the Classes are signed up for, and the Gift-to-Yourself items are bought. When the Loneliness starts creeping in the door, the Television Set is turned on to make it go away. But it doesn’t go away. So some of us do instead, and after discarding the emptiness of the Big Congested Mess, we discover the fullness of Nothing.”

So many feel proud that their day is planned with endless activities, meetings, shopping etc. Running the rat race, trying to keep up with deadlines, attending meetings, working on weekends, social media late in to the night, perhaps we’ve forgotten what its like to sit idle doing absolutely nothing.

Busyness is an addiction and you might not know what to do in its absence, because silence is something most people can’t handle. The say and idle mind is a devils workshop.

The truth is we all need to confront the devil in the workshop and take over his business. Use this time to connect with yourself, face your fears and turn this loneliness into solitude.

5) “…the adult is not the highest stage of development. The end of the cycle is that of the independent, clear-minded, all-seeing Child. That is the level known as wisdom. When the Tao te Ching and other wise books say things like, “Return to the beginning; become a child again” that’s what they are referring to. Why do the enlightened seem filled with light and happiness like children? Why do they sometimes even look and talk like children? Because they are. The wise are Children Who Know. Their minds have been emptied of the countless minute somethings of small learning and filled with the great wisdom of the Great Nothing, the Way of the Universe.”

I have met few people in my life who have been an inspiration on my journey and the common thing that they all share is the lightness in their heart, sparkle in their eyes and pureness in their soul – just like a child.

Children are wonderful teachers who remind us how to live our life and derive happiness and joy from the most mundane and little things in life.

Empty your mind of prejudices, desires, redundant thoughts and the daily knick knacks; when you pour out all the garbage, is when you connect with your authentic self.

“Everything is emptiness. Everything else, accidental. Emptiness brings peace to your loving. Everything else, disease. In this world of trickery, emptiness is what your soul wants.” ~ Rumi

6) “Things just happen in the right way, at the right time. At least when you let them, when you work with circumstances instead of saying, ‘This isn’t supposed to be happening this way,’ and trying harder to make it happen some other way.”

Failure is your friend, it may not look like it when its happening. It can be extremely frustrating while you’re continuously trying to make it but when you get through it and look back you would realize you wouldn’t be where you’re today without the pains of yesterday.

One of my favorite quotes that inspired and egged me on comes from a speech by Steve Jobs, “The dots will connect.” You may end up doing odd jobs that are completely different, and you may not have a clue where it’s taking you but then one day it will all make sense.

So don’t push too hard. Have you ever tried to open a flower bud before its time. It just doesn’t work that way, everything has its time, be patient good things are on their way!

7) “Cleverness, after all, has its limitations. Its mechanical judgments and clever remarks tend to prove inaccurate with passing time, because it doesn’t look very deeply into things to begin with.”

Everybody is growing and learning. Clever is good, but never put down a person for their lack of knowing. As Buddha said a single candle can light up so many more candles and still it does not shine any lesser.

Be an enabler in a system of disablers, be someone who spreads the love when everyone seems to be out spreading hate. Be the good if you cannot find any.

8) “A way of life that keeps saying, “Around the next corner, above the next step,” works against the natural order of things and makes it so difficult to be happy and good that only a few get to where they would naturally have been in the first place-happy and good- and the rest give up and fall by the side of the road, cursing the world, which is not to blame but which is there to help show the way.”

No longer are the donkeys walking towards the dangling carrots, its us who have taken their place walking with our smartphones looking at what we should buy next to fill this void created by a society that sells us stuff saying we aren’t complete.

I like people, monk or anyone who can live a life of simplicity. Knowing for a fact we come here with nothing and we will leave with nothing.

But what about all the love you give, all the stuff you share, all the people you make happy by buying a meal, a smile, an open door. This is what we carry in our hearts that builds up and creates a lasting happiness.

As they say when you have more than you need, instead of building a wall, build a larger table. If you don’t have enough, life can be really simple, it’s us who makes existing difficult.

9) “An Empty sort of mind is valuable for finding pearls and tails and things because it can see what’s in front of it. An Overstuffed mind is unable to. While the Clear mind listens to a bird singing, the Stuffed-Full-of-Knowledge-and-Cleverness mind wonders what kind of bird is singing. The more Stuffed Up it is, the less it can hear through its own ears and see through its own eyes. Knowledge and Cleverness tend to concern themselves with the wrong sort of things, and a mind confused by Knowledge, Cleverness, and Abstract Ideas tends to go chasing off after things that don’t matter, or that don’t even exist, instead of seeing, appreciating, and making use of what is right in front of it.”

I don’t consider myself awakened, but someone who’s on the journey and I used to be full of knowledge. Used to love keeping track of everything around the world and then have conversations about it.

Technology, science, politics, automobiles, ask me anything and I could tell you what the leading tech is, what’s happening around the world and hold debates with this bullshit never ending cycle of knowledge that just feeds the ego.

Although I honestly haven’t managed to give up all of this I do not engage in conversations with the idea to outsmart someone but to learn something new which completely changes the dynamics of acquiring knowledge and if you’re lucky wisdom too.

Reference

The Tao of Pooh