Saturday, December 22, 2012

How does one break from jealousy


Tara Brach

Emily asked, "How does one break from jealousy?"

RAIN on Jealousy:

When caught in jealousy, we are imprisoned in a very small, deficient sense of self. Underneath jealousy is a computation that there is only so much to go around, and that if another is getting something, we are at great risk of deprivation. We will not get the attention, approval, love, sex, power or material rewards we seek. For humans, because we are insecure about our worth and continually interpret what is happening as a reflection of our value, we are somehow less worthy if another is getting what we want.

Not only do we feel we are less important or valued, the very experience of jealousy further confirms in our minds our defectiveness. This makes jealousy one of the most difficult emotions to hang out with--it seems to reflect so poorly on us! While we might playfully admit when we feel jealous of someone, when the experience is strong, we feel tainted, unappealing, diminished by it. Literature through the centuries has cast the jealous sibling or friend or lover in a deep shadow, and our psyches agree.

Yet jealousy is entirely natural, the reflexive outcome of when there is something we want and another is getting it. It's wired into our nervous systems, and not just us humans. As soon as I lavish affection on one of my dogs, the others get noticeably agitated, needy and distressed. If the dog who is unattended to gets sufficiently agitated, she might act aggressively toward our other dog.

Jealousy itself need not cause suffering. But if we are not mindful and it proliferates--if we are consumed by it and/or act out of it--we do suffer. So how to release the grip?

RAIN--the arousing of a kind, clear presence--dissolves the bind of this painful emotion.
R-recognize
A-allow
I-investigate with kindness
N-not-identified, natural awareness

The first step is to recognize that you are feeling jealous, perhaps by noting it with a gentle mental whisper, and then allow it to be there. If you detect the second arrow of feeling that you are in some way bad for your experience (ie. "I shouldn't feel this way"), intentionally forgive jealousy for being there. Remember that it is entirely natural, we are all wired for it and it arises out of conditions beyond our control. If you can simply allow/forgive the jealousy, then you are far down the path of healing.

Next, investigate by bringing a curious and intimate attention to your experience. Be aware of the thoughts circulating, and perhaps the underlying beliefs--something is wrong with me, others don't care about me, I don't matter. Mostly investigate in your body what the felt sense of jealousy is. You might gently place your hand on your heart and breathe into where you feel most vulnerable. Notice what happens with a gesture or intention of self-kindness. Continue to offer presence and notice how feelings naturally shift around.

With a full presence, you'll begin to find that you're resting increasingly in a compassionate awareness, that which is attending, caring, investigating…and less in the identity of the jealous person. This shift in identity is the key to healing…it is a sign of "breaking free." You are coming home to who you really are, the oceanness that can include waves of jealousy without becoming possessed or reactive. This is the N of RAIN, Non-identification, and it really is the taste of freedom.

~ Tara

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

She loved life


She loved life and it loved her right back
celebrate her passion
She listened to her heart above all other voices
celebrate her wisdom
She pursued big dreams instead of small realities
celebrate her priorities
She saw every ending as a new beginning
celebrate her resiliency
She discovered real measurements had nothing to do with numbers or statistics
celebrate her self-esteem
She was kind loving and patient...with herself
celebrate her tenderness
She woke up one day and threw away all her excuses
celebrate her accountability
She realized that she was missing a great deal by being sensible
celebrate her spirit
She turned her cants into cans and her dreams into plans
celebrate her goals
She ignored people who said it couldnt be done
celebrate her independence
She had a way of turning obstacles into opportunities
celebrate her magic
She went out on a limb had it break behind her and she discovered she could fly
celebrate her faith
She discovered that she was the one shed been waiting for
celebrate her self reliance
She added so much beauty to being human
celebrate her presence
She walked in when everyone else walked out
celebrate her friendship
She just had this way of brightening the day
celebrate her radiance
She made the whole world feel like home
celebrate her warmth
She decided to enjoy more and endure less
celebrate her choices
She decided to start living the life shed imagined
celebrate her freedom
She colored her thoughts with only the brightest colors
celebrate her optimism
She was an artist and her life was her canvas
celebrate her brillance
She ran ahead where there were no paths
celebrate her bravery
She crossed borders recklessly, refusing to recognize limits, saying bon jour and buon giorno as though she owned both france and italy and the day itself
celebrate her joie de vivre
She held her head high and looked the world straight in the eye
celebrate her strength
She not only saw a light at the end of the tunnel she became that light for others
celebrate her compassion
She designed a life she loved
celebrate her joy
She took the leap and built her wings on the way down
celebrate her daring
She said bye-bye to unhealthy relationships
celebrate her happiness
She remained true to herself
celebrate her authenticity
She made the world a better place
celebrate her
- Unknown

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Rumi

You are my Love, you are my Beloved;
You are my heart, my soul, and the faith of mine.

By your breath I am alive;What is one life?
You are a hundred lives of mine.

Without you, bread cannot feed a man;
You are the water and the bread of mine.

By your touch, poison becomes medicine;
You are the cure and the sweet nectar of mine.

You are the garden, the grass,
and the heavens;
You are the cypress, the laughing jasmine of mine.

I have entered that supreme silence.
Please, you go on . . .
My mouth may open, words may come out,
But you are every sweet song of mine….!

~Rumi♥

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Admit It and Change Everything - Rumi

Define and narrow me, you starve yourself of yourself.
Nail me down in a box of cold words, that box is your coffin.
I do not know who I am.
I am in astounded lucid confusion.

I am not a Christian, I am not a Jew, I am not a Zoroastrian,
And I am not even a Muslim.
I do not belong to the land, or to any known or unknown sea.
Nature cannot own or claim me, nor can heaven,

Nor can India, China, Bulgaria,
My birthplace is placelessness,
My sign to have and give no sign.
You say you see my mouth, ears, eyes, nose – they are not mine.

I am the life of life.
I am that cat, this stone, no one.
I have thrown duality away like an old dishrag,
I see and know all times and worlds,

As one, one, always one.
So what do I have to do to get you to admit who is speaking?
Admit it and change everything!
This is your own voice echoing off the walls of God.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Rumi

There’s a basket full of loaves on your head,
yet you’re begging for crusts of bread from door to door.
Pay attention to your own head, abandon giddiness.
Why are you knocking at every other door?
Go, knock at the door of your own heart.

~Rumi (R.A.) ❤

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Prayer of Saint Francis of Assisi

"Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury,pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy."

"O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life."

- Prayer of Saint Francis of Assisi

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Hafez

“We should make all spiritual talk 
Simple today:

God is trying to sell you something,
But you don’t want to buy.

That is what your suffering is:

Your fantastic haggling,
Your manic screaming over the price!” 
― Hafez

Saturday, March 31, 2012

No other place

Cross and Christians, end to end, i examined. He was not on the Cross. I went to the Hindu Temple, to the ancient pagoda. In none of them there was any sign. To the heights of Herat I went and to Kandhar, I looked. He was not on the elevation not on the low lands.
Resolutely I went to summit of the fabulous mountain of Ka'af. There was only the dwelling of the Anqa bird.I went to Kaaba at Mecca. He was not there. I asked him from Avicenna the philosopher. He was beyond the range of Avicenna, I looked into my own heart. In that place I saw him.

He was in no other place.


― Rumi

Friday, March 9, 2012

The enemy within

No one escapes the suffering. So it is better to lose a few battles in order to fight for your dreams, then to be defeated without even knowing what you are fighting for ~ Paulo Coelho

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Lauren Zimmerman

We create our own darkness when we resist our own Light. ~ Lauren Zimmerman

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Rumi

Hidden from all eyes and ears
let us tell each other of our soul.

Smile like a rose with no lips
and keep silent like a thought.

Let us speak silently the secret like Spirit
and avoid talkers who use words in vain.

Let us join our hands
listen to every flutter of our heart
let us become one in silence.

Divine destiny knows our fate
to the last detail.
Let our story be told in a silent way.~Rumi♥

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Your love should never be offered

by Hafez
Love sometimes wants to do us a great favor: hold us upside down and shake all the nonsense out.

Your love
Should never be offered to the mouth of a stranger,
Only to someone who has the valor and daring
To cut pieces of their soul off with a knife
Then weave them into a blanket
To protect you.

Stay close to any sounds that make you glad you are alive.

Ever since happiness heard your name, it has been running through the streets trying to find you.
I wish I could show you when you are lonely or in the darkness, the astonishing light of your own being.

There are different wells within your heart.
Some fill with each good rain,
Others are far too deep for that

Fear is the cheapest room in the house. I would like to see you living in better conditions.

Even after all this time the sun never says to the Earth, “You owe me”

There is no pleasure without a tincture of bitterness.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Soul-Talk: Can Forgiveness Be Its Own Form of Poison?

Last week we likened resentment to drinking poison hoping the other person would die. If you have been stewing in your own resentment, there is an antidote you can self-administer. It's called forgiveness. Not the poisonous everyday run-of-the-mill-I-don't-really-mean-it forgiveness, but true forgiveness, what I call Self-Forgiveness.

While forgiving someone else for their offense is nice, and certainly better than continuing to drink more of your own resentment poison, that kind of forgiveness usually stems from another form of poisonous Self-Talk, that of blame and complain. Now I know it must be difficult to equate forgiving someone with taking more poison, so bear with me for a moment.

Forgiveness aimed at another operates from the notion that the other person is to blame for your upset in the first place, that you are upset because of something the other person did. Of course that seems to make sense. After all, the other person probably did do something that you found upsetting. However, blaming the other person for being upset ignores the simple fact that you're the one choosing to be upset.

If you are new to this approach to creating the life you want rather than the one you settle for, then consider this thought: Don't you know someone who could call you stupid and you would find it hurtful or offensive, while someone else could say the same thing and you would treat it as the proverbial "water off a duck's back?" C'mon, now. Sure you have.

Can Forgiveness Make Things Even Worse?

Focusing blame on the other person through "I'm upset because... " thinking is just another form of drinking more of your own poison. If you persist in blaming the other person for your choice to be upset, then forgiving the other person can become another way of fostering the charade that they're still to blame, and you're just a bigger person because you have forgiven them.

In an odd and counterintuitive way, this kind of forgiveness opens up an entire pantry of poison that you continue to take. Haven't you ever "forgiven" someone and still held on to the offending words or deeds in your mind? Haven't you forgiven someone and still rerun the events in your mind over and over again? If so, that's another form of drinking your own poison. Even if this kind of poison seems less toxic than the original resentment, it is still upset nonetheless, and you're the one drinking from the cup you continue to fill.

Rather than deal with the fact that you're the one who chose to be upset, forgiving the other person allows you to continue blaming the other person. While you may in all good consciousness truly want to forgive, your focus remains on the "offense" and the offending party. However, the truly offending action had a lot less to do with what the other person did or said and much more to do with how you chose to respond.

Haven't you ever stewed in your anger and resentment toward another and at the same time felt just a little guilty about remaining that upset? Of course you have. And if you have, then guess who needs to be forgiven! That's right, Bucko, it's that person staring right back at you in the mirror.

"Wait just one New York minute! What do I have to forgive? They're the one who committed the offense." Well, sure they did. But who did the judging? Who committed the offense of staying upset?

Why Self-Judgment Is the Real Offense

The real offense that most of us suffer from is one of self-judgment. Have you ever found yourself to be even just a little bit self-critical? I know I have and have written about the fact many times, most recently when I wrote about criticism as a disguised form of caring. The more critical I am of myself, the more easily I can become critical of someone else. Have you noticed anything similar yourself?

Years ago, I found myself stuck in an endless loop of blame-complain-forgive-upset-all-over-again. In this case, it was with some former partners of mine who kept making what to me were the same silly mistakes over and over again. Whenever I found myself getting upset, I would self-righteously comment that "if they only knew better, they would do better" and then "forgive" them for being so "blind." One day I found myself reading a book called Forgiveness when I suddenly realized that I was the one keeping myself stuck by judging-forgiving-judging them when the real object of my forgiveness needed to be toward myself for having judged in the first place. Once I entered Self-Forgiveness, I found that I had a lot more compassion for both myself and for them. With increased compassion came increased understanding. Compassion and understanding allowed me to drop the criticism and instead offer more real help in the form of compassionate caring. That caring, in turn, made my messages somewhat more accessible. I say somewhat because they never did move fully on the ideas, but I was more at ease with the situation and their responses. And that, in turn, lead to a deepening of our relationship, even though no one really changed.

How Can You Move Into True Forgiveness?

Criticism and judgment stem from your Self-Talk -- all those learned behaviors and limiting beliefs you have taken on throughout your life. Judging and criticizing yourself are the real offenses here. Why? Because the more you judge and criticize your own self, the more you are actually placing judgment against your very essence as a person, as a soul. That quieter voice of your Soul-Talk would have you move more gently, with more understanding, with more true forgiveness in your thoughts, words and deeds.

But how do you move from resentment, upset and blame into acceptance, understanding and true forgiveness? The answer lies in forgiving yourself. Not forgiving yourself for an action, thought, word or deed aimed at another, but forgiving yourself for having judged yourself in the first place.

This one will take a bit of real work to fully understand and experience. And by work, I mean the same kind of work it takes to bake a cake. Reading the recipe may help you understand cake but it won't produce the experience of cake. Mixing the ingredients together correctly, placing them in the correct pan, in an oven at the correct heat, and leaving it alone while it bakes for the correct amount of time -- these are the actions that lead to cake.

Reading about self-forgiveness won't produce the experience of fully baked forgiveness. Delving into those areas of self-judgment and forgiving yourself for having judged yourself is what produces the experience of true forgiveness. The more you can forgive yourself for having judged yourself, the less likely you are to judge anyone else. The less you judge others, the less likely you are to become upset because of something they did or said. The less upset you are, the less you will have to forgive in the first place -- either them or you!

There's another key to moving from upset to your seemingly-impossible good, which we want to explore next week: The Apology Trap

In the meantime, I'd love to hear from you. What has been our experience with turning from upset and resentment back into self-forgiveness? How have you moved into greater compassion and understanding? Please do leave a comment here or drop me an email at Russell (at) russellbishop.com.

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If you want more information on how you can apply this kind of reframing to your life and to your job, about a few simple steps that may wind up transforming your life, please download a free chapter from my new book, "Workarounds That Work." You'll be glad you did.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Iyanla Vanzant

If you are on the path to self-awareness and personal growth, criticism can provide you with very profound insights into yourself. If you can move beyond anger and fear, those who criticize you are actually using the only means they know of to make you aware of how you impact the world. If you can control the ego long enough to hear what is being said, you may just realize that people usually say to you the very things you have said silently to yourself.
By: Iyanla Vanzant