Tara Brach - Three Blessings in Spiritual Life - Part 3 - The Mirror (2017-08-09)

Episode Date: August 11, 2017

Three Blessings in Spiritual Life - Part 3 - The Mirror - This 3-part series explores three capacities we all have, that when cultivated, bring spiritual awakening and serve the healing of our world. ...Drawing on an ancient teaching story from India, we explore together the power of a forgiving heart, the inner fire that expresses as courage and dedication, and the inquiry of "who am I" that reveals our deepest nature. Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Greetings. We offer these podcasts freely, and your support really matters. To make a donation, please visit tarabrock.com. Namaste and welcome. There's a story in which there's a shipwreck and three men end up being stranded on a desert island and they managed to keep themselves alive for a couple of weeks but it's getting really tough. But their good fortune was they find one of those lamps that has a genie that comes out and says, well, each one of you gets a wish. So the first one says, I want to see my wife and children, I want to be back home. Vush, he vanishes. Second one says, oh, me too, my dog, my work, send me back.
Starting point is 00:01:07 Vush, he vanishes. And the third one goes, I'm lonely, I want my friends back. We are on the third of a three-part series that really has. has to do with three wishes, but they're all granted to one person. The theme is coming from the Upanishads, an ancient teaching tale that I've always loved, and I once a year, every couple of years, like to build a talk around it, because it's a live one for me. So in this particular story, Nachi Keta, who's the protagonist, gets into an altercation with his father, and there's a really deep conflict and he's also just lost some friends so he's in a pretty much of a crisis his father
Starting point is 00:02:00 basically says go to hell which in their languages go to lord yama the lord of death so natchikato makes the grand journey and goes through fatigue and goes through all sorts of hardship to get to the land of lord yama and lord yama is so impressed with his um with this perseverance that he grants Natchikata three wishes. And Natchikata, in contrast to our friends on this desert island, is really deeply in touch with what we might call the wisdom of impermanence. He's very aware of the fleetingness of life, and so his wishes, his aspirations reflect that wisdom.
Starting point is 00:02:49 His first wish is the wish for a forgiveness, giving heart because he recognizes that to be free, to be able to really live fully, we need to let go of the armoring that encases our hearts. And it's that same understanding that we can imagine if we're at the end of our life or with someone at the end of their life, so much of the pettiness and the resentments can fall away given what we see in those moments. So, Natchie Keta had that wisdom and he was granted that wish. The second wish is the wish for what's called Inner Fire.
Starting point is 00:03:33 And Inner Fire is being aligned with our true aspiration. It's that longing to really know truth and to live from love. The inner fire is that energy that really propels us on the spiritual path. And the understanding is that for each of us, and we can look at today, and yesterday to see if it bears true for us, we get waylaid. We forget what most matters to us and we get caught up in all sorts of pursuits just to be more comfortable or obsessive fantasies or defenses or judgments. We lose track of really what matters. In some way we're grasping onto what you might think of it. The surface waves are kind of swishing us.
Starting point is 00:04:23 around, we're not living from our depths. I think Julia Child sums it up in her own way. She says, in department stores, so much kitchen equipment is bought indiscriminately by people who just came in for men's underwear. We get waylaid. So getting aligned. The third wish that Natchie Kata had was to really know the truth of who we are, to know them. himself. In response to this wish, Lord Yama said, I can't tell you that or show you that, but he gave him a mirror and he said, really it's learning to look back into your own heart and mind that'll reveal the truth of reality. So that was the third wish. And this is what we'll be exploring for this final class, is this process of really discovering the nature
Starting point is 00:05:24 of reality, who we are. This third wish and all the wishes correspond with our most evolved capacities. They correspond with the most recently evolved part of our brain that has a relational network in it that is capable of compassion and empathy and forgiveness, that has the capacity to reflect and see the big picture and remember what matters, not get so hijacked by fears and wants. And then this third, this mirror, we have what's called reflexive awareness. And what that means is that rather than living inside our thoughts, inside a kind of movie of this life, we have the capacity to look back and notice what's happening. Oh, the thoughts are there, but I'm not my thoughts. That's the depth and level of it, that we can see what's going
Starting point is 00:06:25 on and not be hooked. When we don't have that, when we're living in what you might call the trance of believing our stories, our lives get very small and confined. In fact, if there's anywhere in your life you're aware of suffering, it's because you're believing in in limiting thoughts and ideas and stories about yourself with all the emotions they bring up. You're not living from the truth of that mindful awareness. An illustration, this is written by Bruce Holland Rogers. It's a little bit longer, so you might sit back as you listen. When he was very young, he waved his arms, gnashed the teeth of his massive jaws,
Starting point is 00:07:20 and tromped around the house so that the dishes trembled in the china cabinet. Oh, for goodness sake, his mother said, you're not a dinosaur, you're a human being. Since he was not a dinosaur, he thought for a time he might be a pirate. Seriously, as father said at some point, what do you want to be? A fireman then, or a policeman or a soldier, some kind of hero? But in high school they gave him tests and told him he was very good with numbers. Perhaps he would like to be a math teacher. That was respectable.
Starting point is 00:07:49 or a tax accountant. He could make a lot of money doing that. It seemed like a good idea to make money what was falling in love and thinking about raising a family. So he was a tax accountant. Even though he sometimes regretted that it made him, well, small, and he felt even smaller when he was no longer a tax accountant but a retired tax accountant.
Starting point is 00:08:12 Still worse, a retired tax accountant who forgot things. He forgot to take the garbage to the curb, forgot to take his pill, forgot to turn his hearing aid back on. Every day it seemed like he had forgotten more things, important things like which of his children lived in San Francisco and which of his children were married or divorced. Then one day, when he was out for a walk by the lake, he forgot what his mother had told him.
Starting point is 00:08:41 He forgot that he was not a dinosaur. He stood blinking his dinosaur eyes in the bright sunlight, feeling the familiar warmth on his dinosaur skin, watching dragonflies flitting among the horse tails at the water's edge. We get lost in a trance of who we think we are or who we think we're supposed to be. And you can sometimes look back at your life and see that really clearly, certain seasons when you're very caught up in a certain reactivity, might have been around a conflict or a loss.
Starting point is 00:09:26 are an infatuation, or a love. But we can see it sometimes in retrospect how caught we were. Well, in the kind of the view that we're exploring in this class, we're caught a lot in an idea about life and our stories but not in the immediate experience of what's really going on and what's really here and who am I. So, from the evolutionary perspective, it's totally natural to get identified as a separate self with the stories that keep us limited. That's completely natural.
Starting point is 00:10:10 And we learn who we are through our culture and our parents. So to get into the trance is natural. And I sometimes describe it as a space suit that we take on to make it through a difficult environment, we have a story about ourselves and we have defenses and approaches and strategies to make things work. And most of us forget that we're not the spacesuit. And that's actually part of our developmental design to think, okay, that's, I am the ego. And it's also part of our evolutionary design to go beyond that, to recognize who's looking through the mask, to recognize that tender heart space, that that which is listening, that which is looking
Starting point is 00:10:58 through your eyes right now. So this is the developmental potential and if we stay arrested at the level of believing in the separate self with the stories and limitations, we suffer. What we discover as we start looking closer at what happens when we're suffering is usually it fits into one bucket or the other. We're either suffering because we have this feeling like something's missing. Like you're on your way to something and life isn't okay right now, but maybe if only this happens or that happens the partner or the losing the weight or the right job or getting over the sickness, then we'll be okay.
Starting point is 00:11:48 So there's the something's missing. And then the other, which is they're completely interrelated, is something's wrong. Something's wrong. And scan for yourself, check this out, how often when you're moving through the day, there is a background idea that there's a problem and that something's wrong. I think of Joseph Campbell and he said that the beginning of every religion is the cry help.
Starting point is 00:12:27 So developmentally this is part of what unfolds is sensing I'm separate and something's wrong and I need help. Rabbi Alan Liu says this is real and you are completely unprepared as he talks about this life that we're in. There's that existential angst that comes with feeling like a separate self developmentally. And when it's there, we can't deeply relax.
Starting point is 00:12:59 We can relax some, but we don't deeply relax. And we don't feel a deep sense of intimacy with the world around us. We can't really feel unconditional love because there's that defendedness. and that anxiety about what's going to happen. On some level, our system is being driven by fight, flight, freeze, or grasp. We're trying to control versus that receptivity and openness that comes when we step out of trance. Most moments, and that you can ask this question, there's a sense that I'm not enough. I need to be more.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Or else, as I mentioned, life's not enough. So in one story, a shepherd's on a hillside in, he's watching sheep, playing the guitar, you know, just really enjoying the clouds drifting over the valley. And along comes an American tourist. You know, you could really turn this into something, buy a bit more land, more sheep, owner slaughterhouse, export the meat, you know. And then the shepherd says, well, what would that do for me? well then you could take time just to relax and play the guitar and enjoy the clouds.
Starting point is 00:14:22 You get the idea, right? So I think of it metaphorically as, you know, an ocean, that we're an ocean of being and we have these waves of experience. And in daily life, when we're caught in a trance, we're really getting identified and washed around by the surface waves. and the spiritual path, and this is where Natchikato was pointing, is to begin to look in the mirror and recognize who we are beyond the surface waves. Who are you beyond the daily stories that you tell over and over against yourself?
Starting point is 00:15:02 That cocoon of familiar thoughts about where you have to be and by when and what can happen and what shouldn't happen. the poet Wei Wu-Wai says, why are you unhappy? Because 99% of what you do is for yourself. And there isn't one. So some part of us gets it that we are awfully organized,
Starting point is 00:15:36 very centered around this sense of noir and that there's more of a world. And then it's a big hook because the needs feel very compelling and the sense of identity feels very solid. And in fact, we've been outfitted through evolution to pay attention to the needs that are here we're supposed to. We can't survive unless we notice what this self wants and needs.
Starting point is 00:16:08 And again, it's just that it's not the end of the story. you can continue to take care of and attend to the needs of a separate self and realize a more timeless presence in the background that's truly a refuge. That's where we're going right now. It's a both-end. We're not trying to extinguish what we need to do in daily life to get by. to take care of these bodies and take care of our finances and so on. But it's just that's not the whole of our life.
Starting point is 00:16:47 There is a presence, a wakefulness, a love that's possible to open into that doesn't have to be hitched to the stories we're regularly circling around in. This is a story told by Rachel Naomi Raymond. about one of her she actually includes it in one of her books about a doctor whose father died of Alzheimer's and here's what he writes he says with the last 10 years of his life
Starting point is 00:17:23 she writes this part Tim's father had Alzheimer's disease despite the devoted care of Tim's mother he had slowly deteriorated until he had become a sort of walking vegetable who was unable to speak and was fed, clothed and cared for as if he was a very young child. One Sunday while Tim's mother was out doing the shopping,
Starting point is 00:17:45 his brother then 15 and him 17 watched football as their father sat nearby in a chair. Suddenly he slumped forward and fell to the floor. Both sons realized immediately that something was terribly wrong. His color was gray and his breath uneven and rasping. Frightened Tim's older brother told him, to call 911. Before he could respond, a voice he had not heard in 10 years, a voice he could barely remember,
Starting point is 00:18:18 interrupted. Don't call 911, son. Tell your mother that I love her. Tell her that I'm all right. And then Tim's father died. So Tim is cardiologist, and he describes this, and that the law required an autopsy, and that his father's brain was almost entirely destroyed by the disease and he writes, for many years I've asked myself, how could he have spoken?
Starting point is 00:18:49 Who are we really? I've never found the slightest help from any medical knowledge. Much of life cannot be explained, it can only be witnessed. So I share that with you because there's a mystery behind all of this and when our minds are fixated on our stories we miss out on that. There's a Tibetan teacher, Sogiel Rimpichet who puts it this way. He says, if everything changes, then what is really true? Is there something behind the appearances, something boundless and infinitely spacious in which the dance of change and impermanence takes place? Is there something
Starting point is 00:19:42 of fact we can depend on that does survive what we call death? So this, inquiry turns us to the refuge of pure awareness. This is where we start saying, okay, how do we use this mirror? How do we look back and begin to discover what we miss out on so often in our day-to-day life? And we can sense that if our experience of who we are is hitched just to this temporary form, this body or these particular thoughts, this kind of patterning of our mind, we're going to live with ongoing fear and resistance of what's around the corner because we know that these bodies and minds are impermanent. When we recognize the timeless, the ocean,
Starting point is 00:20:36 then we're not afraid of what's around the corner. It said that if you know you're the ocean, you're not afraid of the waves. And of course, if you don't know you're the ocean, you're going to be seasick every day. So when there's that intuition of a timeless presence, we're not spending our life trying to defend ourselves against death. It frees our hearts to love. In fact, my experience is that the more I get really, really awake to mortality,
Starting point is 00:21:15 the more absolutely unconditional love feels. that there's a complete inseparable dynamic that has to do with opening to death and opening to love. This from Kafka, or it's actually a story about Kafka. So when Kafka was an older man, he spent time sitting in a park, and one day a little girl walked by him and she had tears running down her face and he asked her to stop and tell him what's wrong, and she told him that her doll was missing,
Starting point is 00:21:53 and she was lost and she didn't know what to do. They looked around together and couldn't find the dolls. So he said, come back again. I'll see if I can find her. A few days later, the little girl returns, and Kafka's there, and there's no doll, but there's a note, and he reads it, and the note says, I've gone off to travel some around the world.
Starting point is 00:22:15 please don't worry about me, I'm fine. The girl's somewhat relieved, and she returns to the park every week or so, and Kafka's there with another note from the doll, and the girl's too young to read, so he would read and tell her about the doll's adventures. Fast forward a bit, Kafka's much sicker, and he went to the park one last time, and this time he had brought a doll, and he handed it to the girl, and said, the travels had really changed her. So some years later the girl is a young woman
Starting point is 00:22:53 and she found that there was this little note that had been rolled up and placed in the doll's hand that she hadn't seen and she opened it up and here's what it read you will lose everyone you love but the love will always return in new forms so this is a gift of looking in the mirror that as we begin to sense
Starting point is 00:23:18 that space that kind of timeless presence, it really gives us room for life to come and go, but to sense the love that really shines through all these different forms. So we're going to explore now the how-toes, because it is a practice, really, how we learn to look within. And I think of it as two primary domains of training in terms of looking in the mirror. And the first is one that we do a lot together as we approach. practice mindfulness here. And that is that we look into our body and our heart and our mind
Starting point is 00:23:57 and we notice what you might call the waves. You know, we notice the changing forms. We notice, oh, a wave of thought and oh, wave of feeling in my heart and, oh, sensations in my hands. And these are, we're looking back and sensing the changing forms. And this is a really important part of practice. And it's not an easy part. Because when we first begin to look in inside ourselves and we start quieting the busy mind, what often happens is the parts of us we've been running from become more available. We de-repress the shadow as they say in psycho-babel language, but you get the idea that the stuff we haven't been paying attention to is more available to us. So, often there's a layering of waves that we encounter that are
Starting point is 00:24:49 unfaced fears or loneliness, or places of jealousy or fears of failure that we just haven't been really looking at. I remember when I first went to meditate at the Insight Meditation Society, there was a little sign up front and it said self-knowledge is not necessarily good news because we start paying attention and that's sometimes the first that we get when we're looking in the mirror, the waves of kind of what we might call our unfelt life, the parts of our lives that need to be included in awareness. Lily Tomlin puts it this way. She said, I always wanted to be somebody, but now I realized I should have been more specific. So, domain one, as we look at the waves, and it's really unwise and not helpful.
Starting point is 00:25:54 if the waves are intense and sticky and demanding your attention to say, oh, I don't want to look at the waves, I want to see the ocean, I want to be one with timeless presence. Now, how come that's not so wise? It's an avoidance. We're trying to actually push away part of life, and we might have some ideas of that vast, timeless presence that we catapult ourselves into,
Starting point is 00:26:19 but there's going to be a subtle level of tension in our system that actually makes it so it's not really a liberating presence. It's very much of a kind of false refuge. Okay? So if the waves are strong, the teaching is, start where you are, turn the mirror in, just be with the waves. And being with the waves, as many of you know,
Starting point is 00:26:41 really has to do with befriending. That there is some deep commitment to not pushing away the waves. that the only way to transform when we turn the mirror and look at the waves is a full presence with them. The gift is when you're fully present with the different ways of experience it will reveal the ocean. Okay?
Starting point is 00:27:14 Now as you're going to see when you're fully present and open and occupying the ocean, it allows you to fully love the waves. So this goes both ways. So how do we be with the waves? I'm going to talk about this briefly because this is what we spend a lot of time in the talks I give, exploring. But I'll give you an example of how the waves reveal the ocean with one couple that I was in close contact with, especially over this last season as we were leading up to the fall elections here in the United States. And as with a number of couples and families around the country, this couple was divided.
Starting point is 00:28:01 And I'm sure many of you, if not in your own lives, know of where this has come about, really divided in what their beliefs were, what was right. And there was a real deep sense of anger. and alienation. I was more in touch with the woman and she was saying how horrible it was to not be able to talk about all the stuff that was unfolding nationally
Starting point is 00:28:27 and express her feelings with her partner because they were so at odds. And there was a feeling and she felt like they both were experiencing where they were disrespecting each other. And if you look at the research for couples, disrespect is the key feature that can drive a wedge in a relationship.
Starting point is 00:28:45 relationship. So it was very painful. It was really crippling. So we practiced, how do you bring mindfulness and heartfulness to the waves? How do you turn the mirror and look and see what's happening and be with it? Using, as many of you know, the acronym Raine, which is really a way of systematically bringing mindfulness and heartfulness. So she recognized the anger and our reign is to recognize. A is to allow. So she said, okay, these are the waves of the moment. I'm not going to pretend they're not here.
Starting point is 00:29:24 I'm not going to try to get rid of them. I'm not going to judge them. Just allow them to be here. And then she began to investigate. I is investigated. And she found that under the waves, first of all, there was a belief that was cooking, that in some way he was betraying her.
Starting point is 00:29:41 That in some way she had this notion that they were on the same views or had the same values and he was betraying values. So just a belief, not forget the right wrong, but this is just what she was believing. And then the sense, I can't trust you if I can't trust your view. So there was mistrust. And as she continued to investigate, she felt real fear, real fear that they were going to lose their connection, fear and the pain of separation. This is investigate.
Starting point is 00:30:12 Now, the N is to nurture. And the nurture means in a very deep way to bring a kind and accepting and gentle presence to what's there. She used the words, this belongs. In other words, this fear, it's part of me, it belongs, not to try to get rid of it. You might try this at some point when you're feeling fear, or hurt because we so quickly make it wrong like it shouldn't be here.
Starting point is 00:30:49 The most nurturing thing we can do is, oh, this is a wave in my ocean right now, it belongs. Just by saying it belongs, there's a dissolving of the resistance that actually keeps our identity hitched to it. Does that make sense to you? Releasing the resistance. So that was her way of practicing to just say. send this message to the place of the pain of separation, okay, this too. The words this two are really helpful, not to push it away, this belongs, and then to deepen
Starting point is 00:31:23 and bring real compassion to it. And as I often teach for her hand on the heart and just bringing care and kindness to that part of her that was scared, scared she was going to lose a relationship that she had valued. As she brought the nourishing of rain to that place, she began to feel more spacious and more tender. And this is the shift that happens with presence, that we begin to occupy a larger space. Rather than being caught in the fearful self or the angry self, she was becoming that presence, that ocean, that was including the waves. It was a larger sense of being. She wasn't so threatened.
Starting point is 00:32:15 And that's when she could begin to, and this, by the way, not one round, it's never one shot. That's kind of a fantasy. A number of rounds. But she began to then sense her husband and imagine that he was caught in the same kind of bind, of feeling the separation, a feeling in some way the mistrust and the distance and the hurt at that and the fear. And so when she could imagine that he too was in some grip that she had already been in touch with, she could start naming what was going on and that invited him forward. They could name together their pain, which of course brought more of a field of compassion.
Starting point is 00:32:59 The edge didn't go away, but there's more space that they have to work with it. I don't want to pretend that everything gets happily ever after. But there was more capacity by learning how to be with the waves. to discover that space, that ocean space, they could make room for what was going on with them, that they could work it out. Or they're in process. It's still fresh. When we are fully with the waves that arise,
Starting point is 00:33:34 we turn the mirror and we see them, open to them, recognize, allow, investigate, nurture, we discover in the space that opens up the oceanness that the waves are made of. Now, there's a second domain that I want to make time for here with you. There are times when we're not stirred up with a lot of waves. We kind of turn the mirror and yeah, there's different thoughts or there's some feelings, but there's some space between the thoughts and it's somewhat quiet in there.
Starting point is 00:34:08 And those are times when we can deepen the exploration and look not just to the waves, the separate forms, but start sensing the presence of the ocean itself. Here's the way you might think about it. Imagine what it's like to be in a movie theater and how it is when the movie's going on and you're kind of sitting back and you're looking at the screen and you get kind of entranced and you're really in the story and involved with the whole movie. and then it might happen sometimes that there's some gaps in the action that you notice. You know how it slows, and all of a sudden you become aware of, oh, I'm in a movie theater and I'm sitting here and I never finish my popcorn.
Starting point is 00:34:57 Then you might even become aware inside of, oh, I'm a little bit tired. And then so you start beginning to be more aware of what's going on inside you. Well, in a similar way, you can keep turning the attention backwards when you're at that theater instead of looking at the thoughts in your mind. Remember, this is the movie of the mind. If you turn the attention back, you start noticing a series of changing images that are created by the beam of light on the screen. And you start noticing the light itself, like just turning back and seeing the projector at the back of the movie theater. And then if you really keep attending, you can sense the mind of the being that created the movie.
Starting point is 00:35:42 awareness. So rather than fixating on the story, you're turning the attention back to sense the awareness and light that's really looking, the one who's looking. I hope that's a helpful metaphor in this looking in the mirror because for me that really, it's like we are spending most of the time in the theater looking at the movie of our mind. And this is saying, oh, shine a light backwards. sense the one who's looking, the awareness itself. Now, if it sounds esoterror, you can try this out. This is one of my favorite exercises,
Starting point is 00:36:23 and it doesn't matter if you've done this a lot of times. I do this all the time just because it kind of flashes me awake a bit. So close your eyes for a moment. Okay, this is an exercise that you're going to be doing for 15 seconds. For the next 15 seconds, try not to be aware. Try not to be aware. Try not to be aware. Okay, that's enough.
Starting point is 00:37:10 You can open your eyes. So, how many were successful? Can I see? Okay. What we notice is awareness is always here. Usually we're fixated on the objects of awareness. Okay?
Starting point is 00:37:29 We're fixated on the thoughts, the stories, the feelings, the waves. So we don't notice that wakefulness. we don't notice that it's here. There's a, I think it was Aldous Huxley, who described it as a reducing valve of awareness, that to survive, our consciousness reduces the amount of information we take in to primarily that which is causing threats
Starting point is 00:37:56 or might give us some satisfaction or give us a way to connect or whatever it is that we're wanting or fearing. It tells us about that. But it leaves out a whole lot else. So what we're doing is, as we evolve, we're using, looking in the mirror to reopen to the whole domain of awareness, the background of awareness that we have been missing.
Starting point is 00:38:24 Now, again, if we turn the mirror and we get a lot of waves, then the message is, start with the waves. Start by bringing your meditation practice to your waves. but if it's quieter and maybe some of you have noticed this when you're meditating that there's a kind of sense of a ghost self in the background there's kind of a sense of a background
Starting point is 00:38:48 someone who's meditating you can kind of almost sense that when it's quieter you can begin to turn the mirror and look at that now we're going to practice this together tonight and for some of you it's going to seem confusing and not too relevant
Starting point is 00:39:05 and to others it might even seem a little bit like jarring and to others it'll be oh wow it's not like a hierarchy it's better to say oh wow it's that we're in different mind states at different times and things are useful at different times in our life and you'll find that even if it doesn't serve right now it's something you can come back to with some interest oh, so let's look back at the projector and let's look back at the light that's the one who's
Starting point is 00:39:39 paying attention. There's an attitude that really makes a difference as you are practicing turning the mirror. And John O'Donohue described it this way, he said, what you encounter, recognize or discover depends to a lot of the light of. large degree on the quality of your approach. When we approach with reverence, great things decide to approach us. So when you turn the mirror, one way to sense reverence is a profound interest and openness and care. Just what is this really a sincerity? In our culture, we tend to strive like, okay, what is behind the mirror? What am I seeing? What's there? it's got to be more receptive, more laid back, more relaxed.
Starting point is 00:40:43 So one way that we begin is that we start where we are with the senses awake and then we turn back to what's behind that wakefulness. So we'll practice now. Take a moment to find a way of sitting that's comfortable. Keep it very simple. These will be short explorations and then you might choose to explore more on your own. So as you close your eyes and bring your attention inward, feel your breath and relax with
Starting point is 00:41:27 your breath. Notice if there's any part of your body that wants to let go a little bit right now. And as you relax with the breath, you might notice whatever changing waves are going on inside you. And by that I mean, whatever you're aware of. sounds right now. Maybe you're aware of the sensations of breathing or maybe you're aware of sensations in your hand. So be aware of whatever experiences are calling you. You might ask yourself, what is aware of this right now? What's aware of these sounds or these feelings? What's witnessing?
Starting point is 00:42:49 Can you find the witness? Can you sense the part of you that's aware, witnessing, sound and sensation? Is there a place that you're aware of witnessing from? Is there a felt sense of witnessing? Then you might ask, and what's aware of this? What's aware of the witnessing? Just relax back. Just be awareness, sometimes described as the backward step, noticing what's happening. Where's the witness to that? And what's even aware of that witness? one teacher describes as you watch your mind, you discover yourself as the watcher. When you stand motionless only watching, you discover yourself as the light behind the watcher. The source of light is the source of all knowledge and love.
Starting point is 00:44:45 That source alone is. Go back to that source and abide there. or Sargadata. Now again, be aware right this moment. What's calling your attention? Maybe sounds, feelings. So you're turning the mirror and noticing the waves. What is witnessing the sounds and the feelings? What's aware of that? As you watch your mind, you discover yourself as the watcher. When you stand motionless, only watching, you discover yourself as the light behind the watcher. The source of light is the source of all knowledge and love. That source alone is. Go back to that source and abide there. When you sense the awareness that's aware, what are the qualities of awareness?
Starting point is 00:46:40 When you turn the mirror on awareness, what do you notice? Become familiar with the quality of presence, this background of awareness that's here. Can you sense that it's wakeful? You sense that awareness is awake. There's a cognition, there's a knowing. Can you sense that awareness is wide open? There's no center, there's no boundary. You sense that whenever awareness becomes aware of waves, there's a tenderness, a natural tenderness
Starting point is 00:47:39 that includes. These are the three qualities, often described as the essence of awareness, wakeful, open, and tender. There's nothing more vast and mysterious and loving than the awareness that's your nature. It's a refuge. If you want to open your eyes at any point you can, we're going to take the last few moments to, as we conclude, to say that the same awareness that we usually are not so aware of that's in the background because we're kind of fixated with our attention on the movie screen,
Starting point is 00:48:37 the same awareness is shining through the eyes and living through the hearts of every being you meet. It's the source of every being. And yet if you look to see it, you'll see their face or your hear of their words. It's not like you can land on a something. In fact, the Tibetans describe it that the true seeing is a seeing of no thing and yet you can experience it. This is Juan Ramon Jimenez, how he describes it. He says, I unpedaled you.
Starting point is 00:49:19 you like a rose to see your soul and I didn't see it. But everything around, horizons of lands and of seas, everything out to the infinite, was filled with a fragrance enormous and alive. I unpedaled you like a rose to see your soul and I didn't see it. But everything around, horizons of lands and of seas, everything out to the infinite. it was filled with a fragrance enormous and alive. So we're coming back now, this is a conclusion really, to say that when we open to that ocean, that timeless awareness, it absolutely has us fall in love with every facet of this living
Starting point is 00:50:14 world. And in our journey with these three gifts that Natchikata developed really, these innate capacities revolving consciousness, we start discovering that each of them is absolutely essential for that freedom. That in order to be free, if our hearts have any blame, any judgment, we're divided. We're divided from ourselves. Our experience of who we are become small and tight. others become other. So the first gift, can we let go of the blame and anger, the judgment, the resentment.
Starting point is 00:51:00 The second gift, if we're way late, if we're distracted, if we're chasing after this and that, and we can't remember what most matters to us, our days will be actually lost in a spin of trance. So we keep coming back, what really matters? And then the third, can we look within and sense that background of awareness that allows us to celebrate this life? And I'll read you at the end of the story of Natchukato. We see the young man bowing to Lord Yama a final time totally at peace.
Starting point is 00:51:37 Then as if by magic, the landscape of the kingdom of death changes to the spring rice fields of his native India. In this, a last secret is revealed to him. and birth are not separate. Renewal comes by dying when we have faced death and aloneness. When we've realized the formless, we're unafraid to live and light flowers under our feet. Everywhere we go becomes holy ground. Natchikata knew this in his heart and walked off toward his home to embrace his father and start a new life. So we'll just end with a moment of silence coming in. We're please, if you will, closing your eyes. We'll just take these few moments to feel in our own
Starting point is 00:52:37 hearts and bodies the blessings of these three gifts, the first of a forgiving heart. Just sense this moment if there's anything you're holding against yourself. There's any judgment at any level, any thoughts, anything you're holding from the last hour or day or week. and have the intention to forgive. You might just gently put your hand on your heart and just say, forgiven, forgiven. And notice how even that intention of forgiving softens. It's when we begin to soften our heart
Starting point is 00:53:32 that we can remember most what matters to us to take these next few moments to sense as you move into whatever's next today, your life. what's the quality of heart and presence that really matters to you? What do you want to live from? What do you want to express? The sign of inner fires, you'll feel kind of sincerity, like you're really lined up with who you are.
Starting point is 00:54:05 This is what matters to me. As if you could look into a mirror back into your own heart and mind, just sense the source of that, sense the awake, tender presence. That alert inner stillness in the background that's here now, that's always here, the loving awareness that's our true home. So as we close together, those sitting right here, those joined in the field through the podcast, we can sense that loving presence and sense the vastness of it and how it can include
Starting point is 00:54:57 our own life and those that we know, those we don't know. that we can hold the earth our mother in our lap and all beings in our heart and we close with that simple prayer may all beings everywhere remember and trust the loving awareness that's our source may all beings everywhere live in natural and great peace may we touch true joy in living may all beings everywhere awaken
Starting point is 00:55:30 and be free. Namaste and blessings. For more talks and meditations, and to learn about my schedule or join my email list, please visit tarabrock.com.

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