Tara Brach - The Evolving of Generosity
Episode Date: November 26, 2025In this week's talk, we explore the heart practice of generosity—a teaching at the very center of the Buddhist path and a medicine so deeply needed in our world. Together, we reflect on the two pa...tterns that shape our lives: the tightening of grasping—the sense of not enough—and the natural ease that arises when we open our hearts and offer our care. When we become more mindful of giving, even in small and spontaneous ways, we reconnect with our innate goodness and with the love that flows through all of life. And, as we let go of the habits that create separation and reflect on the goodness within and around us, we discover the joy of a generous heart. Our introduction music is from "Opening" by Adrienne Torf, © 2025 ABT Music
Transcript
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Welcome, friends, to the Tara Brock podcast. I'm so glad you're here. Each week, I share
teachings and guided meditations to help us awaken our hearts and bring healing to our world.
You can learn more or support this offering by visiting tarabrock.com, where you can also join
our email list. Now, let's explore together the many ways we can live from the love and presence
that's our deepest essence.
Namaste.
Namaste.
Welcome, friends.
There's an annual tradition now.
I've been teaching for decades on Wednesday nights.
So it's the eve before Thanksgiving and each year I do some reflection on generosity.
So I wanted to begin this one with a,
true story that I love. It's about Tetsugan, who is a devoted Zen practitioner and teacher in Japan. He lived
in the 1600s. And he decided to publish the sutras, those are the discourses of the Buddha,
which were at that time available only in Chinese. So the books were to be printed in Japanese,
and it would take the construction of 60,000 wood blocks to accomplish this. So he began by
traveling and collecting donations and bit by bit he collected a significant sum of money that was
needed to do the project. A few sympathizers would give him hundreds of pieces of gold. Most of the
time he received only small coins and he thanked each donor with equal gratitude. So after 10 years
he had enough money to begin his task. And yet it happened that at that time the Uji River overflowed
and crops were ruined and famine followed.
So Tetsugin took the funds he'd collected for the books
and he spent them to save others from starvation.
And then he began again his work of collecting
and several years afterwards an epidemic spread through the country.
So Tetsugan again gave away what he had collected.
And then for the third time he started his work.
and after 20 years his wish was fulfilled.
The printing blocks, which really produced the first edition of the sutras, can be seen
today in the Obaku Monaster in Kyoto.
And the Japanese tell their children that Tetsugan made three sets of sutras and that the first
two invisible sets surpass even the last.
He's celebrated January 1st of each year.
Ah, I really love that story.
And here we are entering a season that for many is marked by holy days.
And I imagine that like me, a good number of you sensed the poignancy of the times,
how deeply we need that spirit of generosity, of caring hearts.
the inspiration of those invisible sets that had soon been created.
And I have been in touch with many who are sharing dismay and distress and outrage at the
growing callousness and cruelty in our society towards those who most need care.
And behind their reactivity feeling a really deep sorrow.
When we sense the real meaning of a society having holy days,
it's to bring us back to what we most value, connection, caring, presence, true community.
And in a very concrete way, it's an invitation for each of us to sense how, given these times,
how we might align with that caring, be part of the healing.
So I've chosen one of these many Thanksgiving reflections I've been giving over the years
from the archives.
I chose one that I really hope helps you connect with that quality of open-heartedness,
of generosity that we all honor.
So may you enjoy.
Thanksgiving Eve, we get to share in the reflection on
generosity, which has been in the Buddhist tradition is described as the first spiritual perfection,
meaning that the cultivation of generosity helps to awaken and free the heart and it's an innate
expression of an awakened heart. So this is the first of the Buddhist teachings. And one of the
reasons I really enjoy reflecting on it is that when we get more mindful of generosity
and more intentional about it, it very directly affects all our relationships and in a really
deep way affects our whole experience of being. So there's a lot of fruits from the reflection
and in a way there is that question of, well, if I'm being generous to have the fruits of generosity,
isn't that kind of greedy or, you know, doesn't that cause trouble?
But actually, the deepest intentions we have towards generosity
actually come from a very pure place, as we'll explore.
One of my favorite recent stories, this is actually on NPR last year,
was a research study that was conducted in Vancouver
with fourth and fifth graders.
And the children were divided.
up into two groups and one of the groups was assigned to go to different places and go visit,
just visit different parks and malls and whatever they were drawn to, somebody else's
house and the other group of children were assigned to random acts of kindness.
And it could be anything, it could be hugging a parent or helping with the dishes or
giving or sharing some lunch with a friend, whatever it was.
And so they did before measures and after measures and as you might imagine the level of
well-being and of feeling acceptance towards others got notably heightened with the children
that had been assigned to practice random acts of kindness.
What's interesting is it was all very intentional.
They had to plan their activity and think about how it was going to be and then notice
what it was like, so it was a very conscious, mindful kind of a process for them.
So there is a growing body of research on generosity and you've probably heard some of it
that generosity is correlated with happiness, that the more people that are generous are
happier and acts of generosity make us happier and you can see on an MRI the parts of the brain
that light up, you know, that are correlated to positive affect.
And there's been experiments that show that people, after they spend money, if they spend
money on another person, they feel happier than if they've spent money on themselves.
And in a way, it's all pretty intuitive.
We can kind of get that it would be this way.
And it's kind of wonderful to watch the research that shows it.
behavioral scientists call generosity a joyous pro-social behavior.
And I like that term, this joyful pro-social behavior.
So I was reflecting on this and one of the reflections was on how really at all stages of life
it's available to us.
And I remember my son when he was, I think it was about four or five years old.
my son Narayan, and this was right after Easter.
At Easter I'd given him this really, really big chocolate rabbit.
Now, I don't know why I ever thought I should do that, but I did.
And he had already gotten through some of the ears when a group of friends was over at his house playing.
So I suggested that he shares some of his rabbit with his friends and he dug in, you know, no way, it's my rabbit, you know.
And so my response to him was,
you're right, it is your rabbit. And that's why you get to share it with others. And he kind
of looked at me. But he thought about that and then he kind of lit up and he got this great
smile and with all the dignity you can imagine. He broke off a piece for each child and
you know, he got enlarged and important with that. So we know that in evolutionary terms, that
evolution rewards generosity. We have good feelings light up biochemical. You know, we get
a reward because generosity promotes pro-social behavior. It lets us collaborate, lets us do the things
that actually enable humans to flourish. So it's part of our, it's part of our evolutionary
development and on the spiritual path as I've mentioned generosity is one flavor of loving.
It's a quality of living love that wakens up in us. We already have it in us but it
wakens up as we become more awake and gets expressed and it comes as we realize non-separation.
the more we sense our belonging in our connection, the more the less fear and the more there's
that natural extension without holding back of loving.
So generosity comes with a sense that not separate, you know, the sense of belonging, and
it comes as we therefore no longer need to cling to grasp.
And again, if we think of it in an evolutionary way, it's quite natural that we all come
into, we incarnate and there's a sense of separateness and part of survival is that we grasp
onto some things and we push away others and that's a natural stage of our evolving.
And it's not the end of the story.
We also, both through the history of our development and our development and we're not the end of the
development and also through each individual's development have this frontal cortex that
emerges that has this capacity to sense our connection.
Your neurons and the like we have compassion and it allows for generosity.
So what I'd like to do as we reflect tonight is to consider both the
the phase of feeling separate and grasping, that way that we move through life I want,
I need, holding on as a habit we develop and also to look at generosity as a habit and that
every habit that is developed can be either strengthened or it can be loosened.
And that one way to conceive the spiritual path is that we have this habit of grasping,
and the more awake we are, the more we see it and see it suffering, the more we loosen the grip
and begin to naturally cultivate and strengthen the act of generosity.
So generosity is a habit and when I talk about habits, I'm going to actually talk about them
as really will-grew feedback systems where there's a cue.
For instance with generosity, the cue is the sense of
this longing to express our love. And then there's this action where we look for ways,
these opportunities to give to others or to express our thanks. And then the feedback system,
the reward is that makes us feel better and that keeps a loop going. Then we want to give more.
So generosity begats generosity. The more we give, the more we want to give.
It's also interesting that generosity brings that, it's contagious.
Do you know what it's like when you're with somebody that's really giving and gives you something
and makes you, you know, wants to offer you their care or their goods or whatever it is?
There's something in us that just, it kind of dissolves all the self-protective stuff
and we want to give back.
It's just this natural contagious experience.
So there's a habit, a feedback loop that comes with generosity.
And one of the main experiences that we start noticing is that there's a sense of enough
underlying it.
That if you interview someone who's generous, you're going to find that there's not only,
it sometimes could be called non-grasping, but there's that well-being of feeling that I have enough.
I remember hearing this story, somebody did some research in Appalachia, and he came upon an
impoverished elderly woman, and she was living in a tiny shack with dirt floors, no heat,
and no plumbing. And he asked the woman, this researcher, what,
would you do if someone came along and gave you some money to help you out? And she rocked
in her chair and shook her head and finally she said, I guess I'd give it to the poor.
So there's something really, again if we're looking at what's behind generosity, what's behind
the habit of it, what enables us to be generous, there is that sense of fullness. One of my
favorite descriptions of it is Kurt Vonnegut wrote a poem kind of verse, whatever you call it,
in the New Yorker some years ago. And I'll read it to you. It's called Joe Heller. He's, by the way,
you might remember Joe Heller as the writer of Catch 22? Okay. Okay, here's Kurt Vonnegut's words.
He says, true story, word of honor, Joe Heller, an important and funny writer, now dead, and I were at a party given by a billionaire on Shelter Island.
I said, Joe, how does it make you feel to know that our host only yesterday may have made more money than your novel Catch-22 has earned in its entire history?
And Joe said, well, I've got something he can never have. And I said, what on the other?
earth could that be Joe?"
And Joe said, the knowledge that I've got enough.
Not bad.
Rest in peace.
Kurt Vonnegut.
So if we look at the habit of grasping, which is, you know, if we can developmentally we
all have some of it in us and the more we look at it and understand it, the less it grabs
us.
like that loop with generosity that keeps generating more, there's a grasping loop.
And underneath the grasping loop is not enough. It's a sense of something's missing.
It's a sense that I'm separate, I'm incomplete, something's missing of me, something's wrong
with you, something's wrong with life, but there's a sense of not enough, something's missing,
need more. And so the cue is...
is wanting to feel better, wanting relief, wanting to fill what's missing.
There's that cue that we get with grasping, wanting something.
And then the action is to grasp onto food or another person or an idea or whatever it is.
And it wouldn't be a habit if there weren't temporary relief or good feelings from it.
We get something.
Okay.
But then as you know, it's never enough.
and so the not enough need more, something's missing, cues us again and then we have
to go after more.
Not only that, there's a secondary, a second arrow that happens which is that grasping reinforces
a sense of I'm not okay.
Deep down we don't like ourselves for grasping.
So that starts to fuel it too.
So it becomes a very, it's a very deeply grooved pattern.
So if we look a little closer at the beliefs that are underneath grasping and you can
just think of it as it's kind of the egoic self's perception of scarcity, that I'm not enough,
I need to be more, there's not enough love or resources or approval out there, I need
to grab onto it.
It's a grasping and often it has to do with, takes place of trying to fill the
what's missing with, consuming, and with, you know, goods of some sort.
Some of you might remember that line, executive quits fast track to have more time with his possessions.
So, and as we know, there's definite consequences to
this, if we get a developmental arrest and we don't go beyond the grasping phase where we're
me, me, I need more.
Well, we can see what happens with societies.
When there's more power and there's more intellect behind it,
but the grasping leads to creating tremendous destruction in our world.
John Stewart kind of wrapped it up this way.
He said, I celebrated Thanksgiving in an old-fashioned way.
I invited everyone in my neighborhood to my house.
We had an enormous feast and then I killed them and took their land.
It's terrible and funny, right?
I mean, let's just say it like that, right?
It's horrible and it's, yeah.
So, but isn't it the truth?
I mean, look at what we're celebrating with Thanksgiving.
We know the history behind it.
You know, the horror that came with the first people that were here.
We know that out of fear and out of grasping, we live in a very destructive place.
And so there's ever ongoing warfare in competition for what seems to be scarce resources.
There is some insane commitment to an eternally growing economy.
somehow rather we're supposed to keep growing our economy and consuming more.
And when there is grasping, there's a kind of cut off from our body and the earth body, so
there's a destruction of the earth that doesn't quite register in the psyche.
And of course, as we know it in a similar way, the suffering of getting a developmental arrest
in the grasping phase does the same thing to our own bodies when we're
grasping, we disconnect, we're not listening to what we really need with grasping, so we
overdo our underdo. We don't really give ourselves care, we just stuff ourselves otherwise.
So you can see it in perhaps the most basic way when we're grasping, whether it's after food
or another person or getting somewhere on time, this energy,
of pursuing and clutching blocks our heart.
You can feel it when you're chasing after something,
when you're wanting more of something,
when there's any agenda with another person,
there's not a tenderness and receptivity in the heart.
When the wanting fear mix is in the body,
the heart is cut off some.
So we can watch it, the more the grasping,
the more there's with our relationships with others,
the more we have an agenda, the more there's manipulation.
In some way, if we have an agenda with another person,
there's going to be, we're going to try to control them
to be how we want them to be.
If you've been with me at another Thanksgiving,
you might remember this story.
It's one of my favorite examples of this.
And there's a man in Phoenix, an older man, calls his son in New York and says, I hate to ruin
your day, but I have to tell you that your mother and I are divorcing.
Forty-five years of misery is enough.
And the son screams and then, Pop, what are you talking about?
You can't do that.
And he says, we can't stand the sight of each other anymore.
So call your sister in Chicago and tell her he hangs up.
So this younger man calls his sister and tells her and she goes, like hell they are,
I'm going to call them, I'll be back to you.
I'll take care of this.
So she calls her father and she starts screaming at him and says,
you're not getting divorced, don't do a single thing until I get back there.
Both my brother and I'll be there tomorrow until then you don't do a thing.
Do you hear me?
She hangs up.
The old man hangs up his phone and turns to his wife.
Okay, he says, they're coming for Thanksgiving and they're paying their own way.
So the point of these examples and stories are that grasping and aversion go together.
You can see them together.
And inherent in grasping is, I need something different, I need you to be different, I need something more.
And often it's that you're not enough.
In relationships where they're grasping, it's like I want you, I want you to pay more attention to me,
I want you to be a certain way.
there's often, along with grasping, a deep judgment, you're not okay as you are.
So the suffering of grasping is separation, that it creates more separation.
The habit of grasping creates more separation.
A woman I heard about was, she told me, because she was volunteering at a hospice,
described being with another woman who had cancer.
and had a short time to live.
She had a large tumor on her tongue.
Could barely talk, but she loved to talk,
and she wanted to have a conversation.
So she'd talk a little.
And this woman would visit with her and be with her,
and one day she came back,
and the woman was sitting up on the edge of her bed,
and she was dressed, and she was about to go home.
Her story.
A few nights passed, she had had the worst nightmare of her life,
and she dreamt that the staff at the hospice
had told her that she was the next to die.
So she woke up at 4 o'clock in the morning paralyzed with fear.
You know, God, no, no, I can't die, I'm not ready.
And then she was flooded with this sense of separation,
not only from God, but from her husband,
because of all the resentment she had been carrying.
Ever since bringing up their children, he was never doing enough.
He was never the man that she wanted him to be.
And she had this flash of realization, it's not my time.
So she said, I need to speak and I need to let him know I love him.
So over the next two days the tumor shrunk, so she could leave and she could have enough time to speak with him
to let him know that she loved him to really speak from her true self.
And then she was able to return to the hospice and die peacefully.
So to hold back our love is probably the deepest suffering, that when we're having an agenda
that others be different.
And rather than this habit of the generosity and the appreciation, it's like you're not
who you're supposed to be.
The biggest pain of it is that our hearts aren't free in those moments.
Now, grasping for many of us is not always as obvious as
a really big agenda that others be a certain way.
Sometimes the grasping is really that we just don't have the sense that there's not enough time
and we're grasping after time and doing things and that keeps us from being in the
moment and more generous with our attention.
Does that resonate for you?
This kind of, I've got to do this, I've got to do that, I can't just really the
the deepest generosity is offering our presence.
I can't offer that.
And busyness, this grasping onto our busyness and speed,
which is probably the biggest addiction and grasping of our culture,
is probably one of the biggest ways we create separation from each other,
that we can't pause.
We can't pause and really offer our hearts.
One of my favorite examples,
our stories of this, one that gets me, I share it because it really affects me, is the Good Samaritan
study that was conducted at Princeton some years back. And some of you might remember it.
The Samarians were given the assignment, they were given a practice sermon. And half of them
were given a random Bible story and the other half were given the assignment to do a sermon
on the Good Samaritan. Okay? So that was a setup.
up. And the Samarians were then supposed to go to another building and give their sermon
and be evaluated. Now on the way to that other building, they passed a person in
doorway who was moaning in distress. Okay? So the real question for the study was, would
the Seminarians stop to help? And that was determined by how much time they thought they
had before they had to give their sermon. If they believe they would be late, they didn't
stop to help, even if they were about to give a sermon on the Good Samaritan. Now, I think
that's a really powerful study that, and it speaks to all of us, that we can deeply value helping,
deeply value being caring and kind to other people.
And if we are clutching around time, around getting something done, and how many of us are doing
that, a lot of us, that clutching and fear overrides, that habit of clutching overrides our
heart's natural capacity for generosity, for pausing. And I share that because what it tells us
is that while our capacity for generosity is innate, it requires attention. It requires a deliberate
cultivation, which is why we're taking time with it tonight. So the big question is
when we are caught in the habit of grasping around time or having agendas with other people,
how do we move that, evolve that, wake ourselves up to freeing our hearts so we can really
cultivate more of the habit of generosity?
And I thought I'd share a story with you, a woman I worked with a number of years ago,
and who came in because she had this yearning to be what she considered a better person,
but deep down be who she was.
She felt like she was a naturally loving person, but she felt completely blocked up.
And what she described was that when she was younger, she was much more joyful.
And she was into swing dancing.
She was around here.
We have this in Cap and John.
We have some great swing dancing that goes on.
She was into swing dancing and she was, but something happened that she, and sometimes
this happens, there's a window where we, you know, get into our early 20s or whatever it is
and she started overeating and getting self-conscious and shutting down.
Actually started more like when she was 19.
So she, her grasping was around food.
I mean, she just used food to kind of feel, you know, super, you know, super.
some anxiety and also in her relationships, her friendships and her, you know, different
attempts to have intimacy. The basic theme was a kind of a neediness and wanting people to be
a certain way and wanting to get a certain amount of attention and then driving people
away and then feeling a sense of huge shame and loneliness. So she would do cycles of that.
So that's a setup that she came really saying, you know, I'm caught, I'm kind of addicted
and I don't feel free.
And so the beginning, the first step really was for her to recognize the suffering in the
grasping.
That we can't begin to loosen the grip until we sense that the ways that we're pursuing
things, whether it's getting things done or even
eating more or having people be the way we want them to be, that that very pursuit and the
tension of that pursuit is blocking off our hearts.
So the first step was just to see and acknowledge the suffering of the habit she was in
and that seeing came with a really, the response to that was to begin to offer herself some
kindness. She had to, for this person, this often happens with addiction, really forgive the addiction,
just sense the pain that was underneath it. And so that I often share the mantra, I'm sorry
and I love you. And for her, that was really just to all that craving and grasping, she had to keep
on saying, I'm sorry and I love you, I'm sorry and I love you. And then just to deepen it,
so that it was just a very pure kind of kindness towards yourself.
I sometimes consider this a spiritual reparenting.
It's like whatever was missing early on
that made her have this window open up
that started the real addictive behavior,
she was beginning to offer it inward.
So just to frame it a little differently for you,
she was responding to grasping by being generous to herself.
she was offering presence to herself and that's the beginning of the turnaround.
That you sense the grasping, you sense the addictiveness and the response is not to then blame and keep on fueling the cycle but rather it's like, oh, offer kindness.
She also joined a 12-step program and so she was forgiving with herself but she actually got to,
became a sponsor that was very, very much sought after in a way because she really helped
other people get the knack of forgiving themselves for addiction, which is really big because
I have never seen anybody really heal from an addictive behavior unless there's a profound,
if not, you want to, if you don't like the word forgiveness, a profound self-compassion.
Okay.
Has to be there.
So her, both her giving to herself and then her helping others to practice that kind of forgiveness
was the beginning of very different kind of relationships with people.
And it was beginning really the habit of generosity.
She was being generous with herself and generous with others.
And she started dancing again.
The other thing I wanted to tell you, and I want to tell you, this is the quote for
Rumi that was one of her favorites that I've had in my files ever since.
Find the real world.
Give it endlessly away.
Grow rich, flinging gold to all who ask.
Live at the empty heart of paradox.
I'll dance with you cheek to cheek.
Find the real world.
Give it endlessly away.
Grow rich flinging gold to all who ask.
Live at the empty heart of paradox.
I'll dance with you, cheek to cheek."
There's something so beautiful, you know, in the Buddhist teachings, the if you had to ask
for a nutshell summary of the Buddhist teachings, it's cling to nothing whatsoever.
Just let go.
And generosity is a kind of a positive way of expressing that when we're not clinging, there's
this natural outflow.
Just give it away.
give it away, and with that a joy that our whole spirit lights up. It's like our whole spirit's
dancing. We know it when we're in that mode. When there's that sense of enough, that's joyful.
You might want to yourself just take a moment and reflect. I like to kind of pause and give you a chance
to see what's relative for you in your lives. And you might on this Thanksgiving Eve just sense
a relationship you'd like to nourish, where you'd like to have more of that habit of
generosity, perhaps a relationship where you're aware how there's some grasping. Maybe you have
an agenda where you want that person, something from that person, a certain change, behavior,
affirmation, or maybe it's a relationship where you know you get distracted,
by the pressure of doing other things, what needs to get done.
So this would be a relationship where you'd really want to be a little more agenda-free.
And just take a moment to notice where there is grasping, where there is an agenda,
where there is some of that pressure, inner pressure.
pressure, without any judgment, just to notice it, sense this is just, you can trust that if
you can see it, you begin to free it. And you might even offer a gesture of care to the place
in you that has been living with an agenda or in some ways been creating separation, just some
gesture of care. So you're beginning with some generosity towards your own being, some kindness,
however you sense yourself creating separation, just a forgiving quality of the heart.
If you can begin that way with care towards yourself, you're setting the grounds to be generous
towards that other person. And you might be curious as to what way and natural extension
of generosity could emerge. You might be curious how you might be curious how you might
feel more free and what you might offer to that person by way of presence and love.
And we're going to come back to this reflection in a bit.
But just to say that wherever in your life you're wanting to feel more free and more giving,
it is a deliberate practice.
I mean, there's one writer described it that schedule, have three unscheduled acts of generosity.
a day. Just have that intention that you're going to be looking for an opportunity and plan
to in some way, no, you're going to respond to that, in some way respond to a situation with
a generous act. I heard one story of a kindly priest who saw a little boy jumping up and down
trying to ring a doorbell. So he walks up to the little boy and he presses it for him and
he says, now what? Little boy says, run like hell. So you never know what.
spontaneous generosity will bring.
So, a story for you, a generosity story.
When I was quite young, my father had one of the first telephones in our neighborhood.
I remember Will the polished old case fastened to the wall.
The shiny receiver hung on the side of the box.
I was too little to reach the telephone,
but used to listen with fascination when my mother used to talk to it.
Then I discovered that somewhere inside the wonderful device lived an amazing person.
Her name was Information Please.
And there was nothing she did not know.
Information Pleas could supply anybody's number and the correct time.
My first personal experience with this genie in the bottle came one day when my mother was visiting a neighbor.
I'm using myself at the tool bench in the basement.
I whacked my finger with a hammer.
The pain was terrible but there didn't seem to be any reason in crying because of the
there was no one at home to give sympathy.
I walked around the house sucking my throbbing finger,
finally arrived in the stairway, the telephone.
Quickly I ran for the footstole in the parlor
and dragged it to the landing, climbing up.
I unhooked the receiver in the parlor
and held it to my ear.
Information, please, I said to the mouthpiece just above my head.
A click or two in a small, clear voice spoke into my ear.
Information.
I hurt my finger, I wailed into the phone.
The tears came readily enough now that I had an audience.
Isn't your mother home came the question?
Nobody's home but me, I blubbered.
Are you bleeding?
No.
I hit my finger with a hammer and it hurts.
Can you open your icebox?
She asked.
I said I could.
Then chip off a little piece of ice and hold it to your fingers, said the voice.
After that, I called information please for everything.
I asked her for help with my geography,
and she told me where Philadelphia.
Philadelphia was. She helped me with my math. She told me my pet chipmunk that I had caught in the
park just a day before we'd eat fruits and nuts. Then there was the time Petty, our pet canary, died.
I called information please and told her the sad story. She listened, then said the usual
things grown up say to sue the child, but I was unconsoled. I asked her, why is it that
bird should sing so beautifully and bring joy to all families only to end up as a heap of
feathers on the bottom of a cage. She must have sensed my deep concern for she said quietly,
Paul, always remember that there are other worlds to sing in. Somehow I felt better.
Another day I was on the telephone. Information please. Information now said the familiar voice.
How do you spill fix? I asked. All this took place in a small town in the Pacific Northwest.
When I was nine-year-old, we moved across the country to Boston.
I miss my friend very much. Information police belonged in that old wooden box back home,
and somehow I never thought of trying the tall, shiny new phone that sat in the table on the hall.
As I grew into my teens, the memories of those childhood conversations never really left me.
Often in moments of doubt and perplexity, I would recall the serene sense of security I had then.
I appreciated now how patient, understanding and generous she was to have spent her time on a little
little boy. A few years later on my way west to college, my plane touched down in Seattle.
I had about a half hour or so between planes. I spent 15 minutes or so on the phone with my
sister who lived there now and without thinking what I was doing I dialed my hometown operator
and said, information please. Miraculously, I heard the small, clear voice I knew so well.
Information. I hadn't planned this, but I heard myself saying, could you please
tell me how to spell fix? There was a long pause. Then came the soft-spoken answer. I guess your
finger must have healed by now. I laughed. So it's really still you, I said. I wonder if you
have any idea how much you meant to me during that time. I wonder, she said, if you know
how much your calls meant to me. I've never had any children. I used to look forward to your calls.
I told her how often I thought of her over the years and asked if I could call her again when I
came back to visit my sister.
Please do, she said.
Ask for Sally.
Three months later, I was back in Seattle.
A different voice answered.
Information, I asked for Sally.
Are you a friend, she asked?
Yes, a very old friend I answered.
I'm sorry to have to tell you this, she said.
Sally had been working part-time the last few years because she was sick.
She died a few weeks ago.
Before I could hang up, she said,
wait a minute.
Is your name Paul?
Yes. Well, Sally left a message for you. She wrote it down in case you called. Let me read it to you.
The note says, tell him, I still say there are other worlds to sing in. He'll know what I mean.
I thanked her and hung up. I knew what Sally meant. Never underestimate the impression,
the way you touch others' lives. The reason that every time I read that, the same, I read that, the
story touches me so is that we don't really recognize the way that we affect each other.
You said, like, everyone we meet wants to be seen and loved on some level.
And everyone we meet has a depth of vulnerability.
And if there was a way that we could slow down and offer,
other, what each person is seeking, that loving presence, our world truly would be a joyful,
peaceful place.
So there's a kind of dedication in cultivating generosity where we actually consider it, consider
what we want to do, offer ourselves and then actually
take pleasure in the offering. The Buddha taught this. He said that not only should we
cultivate the spirit of generosity, he talked about reflecting on the good things we've done and taking
delight in that. In other words, recalling our acts of generosity.
There's a, in Sri Lanka, children, when they first go to school,
get something called a merit book. The word is Punapotaka. Josh Cora, an American teacher,
wonderful guy, talks about how, he says that if the students kept up with the practice of writing
regularly in their merit book, what they would do is they put in whenever they did something
generous, something kind. It says eventually over the course of a lifetime, these journals
would be filled with good deeds. And naturally, the years past,
and the time would arrive when the student became old and sick,
and having reached their deathbeds,
their family members and friends would gather around
and read their merit books back to them
as a way to put their minds at ease as they face death.
It's interesting to sense.
Well, how is it that that would put our minds at ease?
But when you really reflect,
it's when you remember the giving and the kindness,
you're actually remembering who you are,
when your heart is awake and free.
And that's a remembers that connects you with really a timeless quality of being.
You can really trust who you are as spirit.
And so the death, the coming and going of these bodies,
just the way information please put it,
that there's other worlds to sing in,
you sense a kind of timeless loving presence that you belong to
that makes room for life end up.
So we begin to deepen our capacity for generosity as we actually intentionally give to others,
as we intentionally give to ourselves.
And as we intentionally give thanks.
There's one book I read called Learning to Fall, Philip Simmons, and he writes this.
He describes being in a raspberry patch.
He says, standing in the berry patch, when I attach.
When I attend to the smallest things, when I attend to the smallest things, when I hand myself
over to moss or mushroom, berry, or beetle, I myself shrink to vanishing.
This isn't as bad as it sounds, however.
In fact, it's the reason we do such things.
Anyone who spent time on our knees in a berry patch or flower bed comes to see this attention
to small things as a form of prayer, a way of vanishing.
vanishing for one sweet hour into whatever crumbs of creation we are privileged to take into our hands.
So tonight what we've really been exploring is
recognizing the habit of how we create separation, the old habits of
of grasping on to what we want, thinking I need more, not enough
trying to manage other people and this gradual shift where we more and more and
sense that and sense the suffering of it and then in that offer kindness to ourself and then there's this
natural opening the space opens up where we begin to feel our thanks for the beauty of these
branches that are celuetted against the November gray sky and the gratitude for the beings
in our life and for our breath the simple things so I'd like to close on that note
We'll just take a few moments to do a reflection.
Take a moment as you pause right now to feel yourself arriving, let your senses be awake.
Beginning the reflection with the person you might have been bringing to mind earlier
that you'd like to feel more of a flow of generosity with.
Just appreciate that that's your intention.
Just to offer to your own being some appreciation.
to sense the other, sense what you appreciate about this other person, his or her goodness,
his or her brightness, how he or she appears when happy, the humor that's there, just the beingness,
how this person shows love, and take a moment to sense tomorrow, the next day, whenever you're together,
some way that you might be generous, some way you might offer and express your loving.
For some it might be the phone call we haven't made.
For some it might be words, it might be a hug, it might be doing something for this person,
it might be mirroring this person's goodness in some way, letting them know.
But whatever you're imagining that you might do, imagine and imagine it,
and sense the impact, sense this person being touched. And as you feel your appreciation for this
person in the most simple way, you might mentally whisper, thank you. Thank you for being.
Thank you for the loving connection that's in between us and our life. Thank you. And then letting
the space of heart widen and include another person, just bringing to mind someone else that
matters to you. And again, just seeing their eyes, seeing what this person looks like when loving
when happy. And you might again just mentally whisper, thank you. And just continue in these next
few moments of silence, letting beings in your life come to mind, sensing what you appreciate.
and see what happens when you just whisper thank you.
Let your heart whisper thank you.
Sensing that heart space that's grateful,
that's thankful as being vast, radiant, timeless.
Sense how inclusive that heart space is,
that thank you to this living universe,
how inclusive and also how particular and immediate
this is Mary Oliver will close with her words
so every day
so every day I was surrounded by the beautiful crying forth
of the ideas of God
one of which was you
so every day
so every day
I was surrounded by the beautiful crying forth
of the ideas of God
one of which was you.
May we all be blessed to give thanks
to the beauty of our own hearts,
to each other, to this living universe.
Namaste.
