What do we allow ourselves to see?
This question arose in my morning practice. It continued to present itself, as most thoughts do. I hold compassion and kindness when thoughts arise in my mediation. I figure, they are arising for a reason, if they stay with me, meaning they continue to show up, I welcome them as something that I am meant to see or ponder, for they are arising from within.
Throughout my practice, I have come to accept all thoughts that arise. I do not judge them or give them value. I acknowledge them. I accept them. Sometimes I follow them, tracing how one thought leads to the next and then another and then I notice I am so far in to my thoughts I giggle and bring myself back to my breath.
It wasn’t always this way, as most things are. I can easily recall moments when I would get angry at myself for not doing it right, not stopping my thoughts, not being in silence, thinking there was a certain way that I was suppose to do this breathing, stillness thing and that I was not worthy of getting it right, that I was doing it wrong, that I would never get it. And with time, meaning as time passed, and with consistency, meaning I showed up and was committed to my practice, slowly, slowly I moved from a place of I am not doing this right, I am not worthy, to a more accepting space, I am here, there is no where else for me to be, I notice what is arising and can return to my breath.
So when these words arose in my practice this morning, I gave them space to linger. I sat with them. I accepted them. I approached them in a curious matter, why are you here? What are you leading me to see, to learn, to acknowledge?
There is always more than we see; than we choose to see; than we allow ourselves to see.
What do we hide from others?
What do we hide from ourselves?
What do we crop out?
What do we move away from?
What do we focus on?
Where do we shift our gaze?
What do we allow ourselves to see?
What is it that drives these decisions?
What is it that drives these actions?
What is it that drives choices?
Why do we do these things?
Grateful for this marvelous, mystery of life.
In love and light and with a HUGE hug,
Sara