
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This episode is about groundlessness and uncertainty • how do we respond when we are no longer on familiar ground, when we feel insecure? • it can feel so uncomfortable that we might begin to panic; and often, when we reach that point, we scramble — we scramble to find some new secure ground to replace the one that we have left • so we go on a search to find some basis that is reliable, something we can count on, some sense of solidity • sometimes meditation is taught as a way to find such ground, a way to find some calm and peace within the storminess of life • and that's important; but it may be just another way of avoiding the reality of uncertainty • my teacher taught that in relating to meditation practice, we need to consider two aspects • first we need to tame and ground our mind, but then we need to extend beyond that • we need to sharpen our awareness; we need to expand our notion of what being grounded is all about • we need to drop the project of trying to find ground altogether, and instead we need to learn to find ground within groundlessness • in doing so, we find that our project of trying to secure our ground is is full of holes, full of little gaps — and that's a good thing • those moments when there's an interruption of our project of securing ourselves point to the possibility of true security • the basic point here is very simple: just notice such gaps during your practice and during everyday life • the gaps are not manufactured; and as such, they are the one true thing — so simple, so direct, and so fresh.
4.8
4646 ratings
This episode is about groundlessness and uncertainty • how do we respond when we are no longer on familiar ground, when we feel insecure? • it can feel so uncomfortable that we might begin to panic; and often, when we reach that point, we scramble — we scramble to find some new secure ground to replace the one that we have left • so we go on a search to find some basis that is reliable, something we can count on, some sense of solidity • sometimes meditation is taught as a way to find such ground, a way to find some calm and peace within the storminess of life • and that's important; but it may be just another way of avoiding the reality of uncertainty • my teacher taught that in relating to meditation practice, we need to consider two aspects • first we need to tame and ground our mind, but then we need to extend beyond that • we need to sharpen our awareness; we need to expand our notion of what being grounded is all about • we need to drop the project of trying to find ground altogether, and instead we need to learn to find ground within groundlessness • in doing so, we find that our project of trying to secure our ground is is full of holes, full of little gaps — and that's a good thing • those moments when there's an interruption of our project of securing ourselves point to the possibility of true security • the basic point here is very simple: just notice such gaps during your practice and during everyday life • the gaps are not manufactured; and as such, they are the one true thing — so simple, so direct, and so fresh.
261 Listeners
10,384 Listeners
1,833 Listeners
498 Listeners
343 Listeners
1,445 Listeners
684 Listeners
904 Listeners
321 Listeners
12,532 Listeners
943 Listeners
1,511 Listeners
3,759 Listeners
322 Listeners
1,232 Listeners