
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
In one version of the story about the historical Buddha, the Middle Way is spoken of using an analogy of tuning a string: if it is too tight, it will snap; if it is too slack, it cannot be played at all. Fortunately, though we may believe or be told otherwise, there is not a specific note to which the tune must be tuned; in between the extremes of too tight and too slack, there is a vast and varied range of playability, beyond the limits and confines of a single note. The same is true of our lives: there are extremes we can go to which are ultimately unhelpful, yet in between these there is a vast and varied territory of life and the living of it, calling for continual adjusting and adapting and re-tuning. Thus, there is not just one way of being or one way to be, for just as life itself is in constant flux, so are we.
Support the show
By Andrew Palmer5
22 ratings
Send us a text
In one version of the story about the historical Buddha, the Middle Way is spoken of using an analogy of tuning a string: if it is too tight, it will snap; if it is too slack, it cannot be played at all. Fortunately, though we may believe or be told otherwise, there is not a specific note to which the tune must be tuned; in between the extremes of too tight and too slack, there is a vast and varied range of playability, beyond the limits and confines of a single note. The same is true of our lives: there are extremes we can go to which are ultimately unhelpful, yet in between these there is a vast and varied territory of life and the living of it, calling for continual adjusting and adapting and re-tuning. Thus, there is not just one way of being or one way to be, for just as life itself is in constant flux, so are we.
Support the show