Last night we had dinner with family and I learned something from my 3-year old niece and my 5-year old nephew. They have a saying at their preschool: "Take what you get and don't throw a fit." This seems unusually apropos for toddlers who fight over who gets the larger snack, the softer blanket, or first ride on the swingset during playtime. As adults, however, I think we forget that we also usually act like unruly children when someone tries to thwart our desires and wants.
What I like about this little saying is that it immediately hones in on the Buddhist concept of living in the moment and not letting your emotions and desires take over. All we have is the present moment whether it's good or bad ("take what you get"). We should embrace that moment and not let our desires about how we think the moment should be get in the way of how the moment actually is ("don't throw a fit").
Whenever we "throw the fit" it's because we're jealous or envious that someone has something we want or think we need. We get obsessive about things we don't have that we think we should have. It is rooted in our innate fear that we won't be adequately provided for--that someone else will get the stuff we're entitled to. We always forget that there's enough for everyone. It's not a zero sum game. Just because someone else has it doesn't mean there won't be enough of it for me.
From a Christian perspective, this is why the 10 Commandments warn about coveting your neighbors possessions--it only brings unhappiness. Jesus addresses this worrying about what others have and we don't have and whether we will be adequately provided for in the parable of the birds of the air and the lilies in the field (Matthew 6:25-34). In the parable Jesus talks about how the bird of the air and the lilies of the field do not spend their time worrying about what tomorrow will bring. Can worrying about what you will eat (or what you want but don't have) add a single hour to your life or a single moment of happiness, Jesus asks. Or does the worrying and desiring only bring unhappiness. "Do not worry about tomorrow," Jesus says, for "tomorrow will take care of itself." And if God provides for the birds of the air and the lilies of the field, will not God provide more so for you.
So, live in the moment: take what you get and don't throw a fit. Throwing the fit will only bring unhappiness. This is the heart of the Buddha's Noble Truths: life is suffering, suffering comes from attachment to things and unfulfilled desires, happiness comes from not letting the emotions and energy that is tied to those desires and attachments keep us from living in the present moment.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Thich Nhat Hanh Says It Best
Below is today's post from Tricycle's Daily Dharma. The Daily Dharma quotes Thich Nhat Hanh who is basically saying what the Dalai Lama says (included in my May 24 posting). The Buddhists seem so accepting of our Christian tradition and encourage us to stay with it, incorporating aspects of Buddhism that work for us. That's what I'm trying to achieve with this blog--staying true to Christianity while enriching our tradition with Buddhist wisdom.
June 7, 2009Tricycle's Daily Dharma
Bring Your Spiritual Traditions Together
Many Westerners attracted to Buddhist practice have abandoned their own spiritual traditions. They reject the churches and clergy of their own traditions because they feel constricted and uncomfortable with the attitudes and practices they have encountered there. They have suffered within their own tradition and so have sought another. They approach Buddhist practice with the hope of replacing their own tradition and may wish to break away from their own tradition forever.
According to Buddhist wisdom, such wishing is in vain. A person severed from her own culture and traditions is like a tree pulled out by the roots. Such a person will find it hard to be happy. Buddhist practice can offer effective means to heal, reconcile, and reunite with one’s blood and spiritual families, in order to discover the precious gems in one’s own traditions. Thanks to the practice, people will see that Buddhism and their own spiritual tradition have many things in common, and therefore it is not necessary to reject their own spiritual tradition. They will see that there are things that need to be transformed in Buddhism as well as in their own tradition.
–Thich Nhat Hanh, from Teachings on Love (Parallax Press)
June 7, 2009Tricycle's Daily Dharma
Bring Your Spiritual Traditions Together
Many Westerners attracted to Buddhist practice have abandoned their own spiritual traditions. They reject the churches and clergy of their own traditions because they feel constricted and uncomfortable with the attitudes and practices they have encountered there. They have suffered within their own tradition and so have sought another. They approach Buddhist practice with the hope of replacing their own tradition and may wish to break away from their own tradition forever.
According to Buddhist wisdom, such wishing is in vain. A person severed from her own culture and traditions is like a tree pulled out by the roots. Such a person will find it hard to be happy. Buddhist practice can offer effective means to heal, reconcile, and reunite with one’s blood and spiritual families, in order to discover the precious gems in one’s own traditions. Thanks to the practice, people will see that Buddhism and their own spiritual tradition have many things in common, and therefore it is not necessary to reject their own spiritual tradition. They will see that there are things that need to be transformed in Buddhism as well as in their own tradition.
–Thich Nhat Hanh, from Teachings on Love (Parallax Press)
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