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Today I'd like to introduce a traditional list called “the five strengths” — determination, faith, virtue, remorse, and aspiration • determination points to the need to stick with the path we're on, the path we've chosen • it’s connected with patience, recognizing that genuine spiritual training is not a quick fix, but a lifelong process • faith is trusting that what we're doing is worthwhile and valid, and it’s also the confidence that we are worthwhile and valid • determination is balanced by faith: there's no point in being determined to do something if we don't think we can do it, or if we don't fundamentally think it's worthwhile • the third strength is literally called seed of virtue; it has to do with a sense of compassion and ethical behavior • virtues are seeds that bear fruit: when we do something kind, something helpful to another, it bears fruit, it ripples out • the last two are remorse, which is is pointing to the things we need to let go of, and aspiration, which is pointing to what we need to cultivate • remorse means being honest and straightforward in reflecting on our behavior • aspiration doesn’t have to be a change-the-world aspiration; it could be something simple: maybe I could try not to be so easily triggered; maybe I could be a little bit more thoughtful to others.
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Today I'd like to introduce a traditional list called “the five strengths” — determination, faith, virtue, remorse, and aspiration • determination points to the need to stick with the path we're on, the path we've chosen • it’s connected with patience, recognizing that genuine spiritual training is not a quick fix, but a lifelong process • faith is trusting that what we're doing is worthwhile and valid, and it’s also the confidence that we are worthwhile and valid • determination is balanced by faith: there's no point in being determined to do something if we don't think we can do it, or if we don't fundamentally think it's worthwhile • the third strength is literally called seed of virtue; it has to do with a sense of compassion and ethical behavior • virtues are seeds that bear fruit: when we do something kind, something helpful to another, it bears fruit, it ripples out • the last two are remorse, which is is pointing to the things we need to let go of, and aspiration, which is pointing to what we need to cultivate • remorse means being honest and straightforward in reflecting on our behavior • aspiration doesn’t have to be a change-the-world aspiration; it could be something simple: maybe I could try not to be so easily triggered; maybe I could be a little bit more thoughtful to others.
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