One thing
There is
an enormous tendency to separate spiritual training from our ordinary
life. To see them always as two different and distinct things, but so
many times it has been said by Dhamma masters, that they are always
one.
Our spiritual life is our worldly life, and our worldly life
is our spiritual life. We do not need to be meditating in a monastery
or a cave in the Himalayas to train, we need only to raise the
intention to change how we live. In this respect, the teaching is
always around us.
So, as a spiritual discipline the development
of patience can often be seen as something beautiful and even
romantic, but in our everyday life not really something useful or
even practical. However, according to our Dhamma tradition, the
Buddha has said that ‘patient endurance is the highest teaching’,
and this highest teaching is to be found in every moment of our
life.
To surrender into the reality of the moment is what will
ultimately free us from the suffering of the moment. To be with
things ‘as they are’, and ‘to be here now’, are all
manifestations of the power of patience. If we are stuck in traffic
or waiting for an appointment, being angry and impatient will not
help us or the situation, but patient endurance will. This does not
mean giving up our turn in the queue, but it does mean changing our
attitude from ‘waiting’ to ‘simply being’. To cultivate
patience by surrendering into the moment is the highest practice.
On
one retreat I was leading some years ago in Thailand, the temperature
in the afternoon was so high that the only thing we could do
individually and as a group, was to surrender into it. To sit in
meditation and feel the endless streams of perspiration, beginning on
the face and slowly trickling down the body to be caught in the
waistband of our trousers, was a wonderful practice. Not romantic or
spiritual, but eminently practical. To give up our idea of how it
should be and be with the conditions as they are.
Without
patience our life becomes and endless series of frustrations and
irritations as we continually give our power away to conditions that
we cannot change. In this place we are easily able to hurt and upset
others as our compounding frustration means that we are no longer in
control of ourselves. This is not the way of pure Dhamma, which is
established in love and awareness, peace and joy, but is the way of
the world, established only in desires and impatience.
May all beings be happy.

Comments
Post a Comment