Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta filosofía. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta filosofía. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 18 de febrero de 2025

Peaceful living, Mary Mackenzie Mejorar las relaciones como objetivo primario

from Peaceful Living
by Mary Mackenzie

I am not easily frightened. Not because I am brave but because I know that I am dealing with human beings and that I must try as hard as I can to understand everything that anyone ever does.
–Etty Hillesum in Etty: A Diary 1941–1943

Day 4: Improving Relationships as a Primary Goal

Nonviolent Communication suggests that improving the quality of our relationships is a primary goal. Indeed, that connection with ourselves and other people takes a higher priority than being right, winning, making more money or looking good to other people. If you focus on improving the quality of your relationships through deeper connections, you will improve the state of your life, enhance the peace and love in your life, and feel better about yourself.

I learned this through personal experience. I worked from time to time with a business colleague. Over the years, our relationship deteriorated to the point where we had no civil connections with each other. Our association was worst just as I was starting to look at how I contributed to the angst in my relationships. As a result, I started to focus more on my connections with people rather than trying to be right or to win arguments.

Within a remarkably short time, my colleague was telling me how much she admired the change I was making and how much she enjoyed her relationship with me. We both expressed our sadness for our earlier behaviors. Today, we are close colleagues who work together in a variety of projects and easily call each other a friend.

When you shift your focus to valuing your connection with other people, you improve the quality of your life and your relationships. Everyone who crosses your path will benefit from this shift of focus. It is inevitable.

Be aware today of the times when your priority is to win or to be right rather than to connect, then shift your focus to connection with others.


Un ejemplo de la aplicación de la Comunicación no violenta en la vida diaria, básicamente concentrarse más en la conexión con los otros que en tener razón o "ganar" una discusión.  

miércoles, 22 de enero de 2025

Je viens je ne sais d´ou..Martinus von Viverach y Clement Rosset

 El filosofo francés Clement Rosset  cita en varias de sus obras, al hablar de la alegría "loca" y el estar loco de alegría este adagio medieval, que algunos atribuyen a un monje alemán (Martinus von Viverach) para defender que el sentimiento de alegría no necesita realmente explicación ni causa, ya que siempre hay algo de absurdo y de gratuito en esa  "alegría, casi milagrosa, de vivir" de la que hablaba otro escritor francés, Albert Camus. 


Aquí va la cita


 

"Je viens je ne sais d´ou,

je suis je ne sais qui,

je meurs je ne sais quand

je vais je ne sais ou,

Je m´etonne de etre 

aussi joyeux"


..Y me extraño de ser tan dichoso"

lunes, 14 de octubre de 2024

La clase de griego. Han Kan

Han Kang 
La clase de griego (fragmento)

"No es propio de ella mirarse en el espejo, pero ahora ya no siente ninguna necesidad de hacerlo. Seguramente la cara que más se imagina y dibuja mentalmente una persona a lo largo de la vida es la suya propia. Sin embargo, ella ha dejado de evocar su aspecto, por lo que se ha ido olvidando de cómo es. Cuando por casualidad se encuentra con su reflejo en un vidrio o un espejo, se queda observando con fijeza sus ojos, pues esas nítidas pupilas parecen ser el único canal de comunicación entre ella y ese rostro desconocido. A veces no se siente como una persona, sino más bien como una sustancia, una materia sólida o líquida en movimiento. Cuando come arroz caliente, se siente arroz; cuando se lava la cara con agua fría, se siente agua. Al mismo tiempo es consciente de no ser ni arroz ni agua, sino que se siente como una materia dura y rígida que nunca se mezclará con ningún ser, vivo o no. Las únicas cosas que reclama con todas sus fuerzas al gélido silencio son la cara de su hijo, con el que se le permite pasar una noche cada dos semanas, y las palabras muertas en griego que escribe apretando con fuerza el lápiz. 
(...)
Aunque he estado alguna vez en Suiza, nunca he ido a Ginebra, pues no me apetecía visitar la tumba de Borges para verla con mis propios ojos. En su lugar, recorrí la biblioteca de la abadía de San Galo, que de seguro habría provocado en el escritor argentino una fascinación sin límites si la hubiera conocido. Hasta me parece sentir en este momento la aspereza de las zapatillas de fieltro que nos hicieron calzar para proteger el suelo de madera de mil años de antigüedad. Luego tomé un barco en el embarcadero de Lucerna, que navegó por el lago hasta el atardecer bordeando la costa de los valles alpinos cubiertos de nieve. "



Dos párrafos de un libro que alterna capítulos breves en los que se alterna la historia de una mujer que ha perdido la voz y su trabajo, que se ha divorciado y ha perdido la custodia de su hijo después de varios juicios y que se ha refugiado en una clase de griego clásico a la que asiste vestida de luto por la reciente muerte de su madre y en absoluto silencio y  la voz en primera persona de un compatriota que pasó los años de su juventud en Alemania donde aprendió latín y griego en el instituto y que ahora enseña en Seúl, su ciudad de origen. 

Vive ocultando que se está quedando ciego para no perder su trabajo, lee textos budistas y filosofía  y le fascina esa alumna que no habla ni sonríe ni hace ningún intento por salir de su aislamiento pero que anota todas las palabras en griego antiguo que él escribe en la pizarra para que sus alumnos las lean. 

Y de fondo, el ruido y las calles de Seúl. 

   

lunes, 26 de junio de 2023

Cleaning as self care by Leo Babauta. El autocuidado y la limpieza




Cleaning as Self-Care

BY LEO BABAUTA

The other day, I returned home from a short trip, and immediately unpacked and washed my clothes, putting everything away. It felt nice.

The next morning, I was feeling a bit unsettled. So I started cleaning. I cleaned in the kitchen, outside in the yard, swept the garage. I felt so good.

I’ve come to realize that cleaning, organizing, decluttering … for me, it’s a form of self-care. It helps me feel settled, makes me feel like I’m taking care of my life.

Yes, cleaning and organizing can be overwhelming, and is often avoided. But it doesn’t have to be. Take a small corner to tidy up, and let yourself just enjoy the cleaning. Get lost in it. Feel the niceness of making things nicer.

Yes, there’s always more to do. But that’s a disempowering way to think about it. Why does it matter that there will always be more to do? That just means there’s more self-care available, always. Just do a small portion right now, and enjoy it. A good analogy is that there will always be more tea to drink … but I only need to focus on this single cup of tea, and enjoy it fully.

As you clean, you might feel things getting cleaner. As you organize, you might feel the progression of settledness of things. As you declutter, you might feel the slight liberation with everything you toss out.

And of course, we can extend this self-care of cleaning and organization into every part of our lives — today I worked on organizing my finances. I’ve been fixing little things around the house. This morning I deleted a bunch of apps on my phone, and turned off a lot of notifications, to simplify my phone experience. I also unsubscribed from a bunch of newsletters and started clearing out my email inbox.

You can think of taking a task from your task list as a form of this self-care. One item at a time, taking care of your life.

It can be overwhelming and dreaded … or it can be nourishing and lovely. It’s a choice, and I choose to feel the care that I bring to every sweep of the broom or rake.

sábado, 19 de diciembre de 2020

How to be resilient. Stanford Magazine. Rebeca Beyer

Un artículo en el que se proponen varias respuestas a las inevitables situaciones complicadas con las que todos nos encontramos a lo largo del día. 

Para empezar, saber que no estás solo. Que puedes contar con personas en las que confiar cuando se quiere compartir algo que nos preocupa y que todavía no sabemos como enfocar.

Reconocer las señales de nuestro cuerpo, nuestras emociones, la rabia, la culpa, el estrés que puede que estén afectando nuestro sueño, lo que comemos, como actuamos...

Hacer una pausa para pensar y tomar perspectiva. Tranquilizarnos y pensar en el resto de cosas que sí funcionan en nuestra vida y ver que no somos el centro del universo. Buscar posibles salidas. 

Ocuparse de lo importante. Es imposible reaccionar adecuadamente ante un problema cuando se duerme poco, se come mal, no se hace ejercicio o no se tiene un tiempo para recuperarse del cansancio haciendo algo que realmente nos gusta. El autocuidado siempre tiene que ser algo prioritario en el día a día, cambiando ciertas rutinas por otras más adecuadas. 

Ser fiel a nuestros valores y no sacrificarlos por conseguir el éxito a toda costa. Admitir que las dificultades son parte de la vida y del aprendizaje. Perdonarnos si no conseguimos resolver alguna y no juzgarnos con dureza por ello ni adoptar actitudes de pesimismo ante el futuro. 

Y más... en el artículo original de Rebeca Beyer en el Magazine de Stanford, lleno de propuestas para gente curiosa. 




https://stanfordmag.org/contents/how-to-be-resilient?mc_cid=3ff6f68f75&mc_eid=5c2a511f07 

viernes, 10 de julio de 2020

Espejos de lo invisible. Bill Viola

La exposición que puede visitarse, con cita previa, en la Fundación Telefonica de Madrid se exhibió con anterioridad en Barcelona, en la icónica La Pedrera de Gaudí.

Un marco quizá más atractivo que el que se encuentra el  visitante en el que si quiere alguna información sobre lo que ve o sobre el autor tiene que descargársela en su teléfono.

Que esa sea la única opción (ya que no hay ni un solo panel informativo sobre Bill Viola ni las obras expuestas ) resulta curioso y puede que se deba al deseo de que los visitantes no se demoren demasiado y que se lo lean todo en casa. Es lo que tiene lo que llaman nueva normalidad.


Bill Viola ha superado la seducción de la tecnología y trata de llegar a algo más allá. Le interesa la espiritualidad y sus viajes le han llevado tanto a Japón, Java, los desiertos de California y de Australia como a conocer los frescos de la Toscana italiana, el zen y la meditación.

Su obra trata de profundizar en el misterio de la condición humana y el paso del tiempo. La imagen sin palabras es un medio para conectar con personas de distintos países, religiones o cultura gracias a la conexión emocional.

Trata de que el espectador aquiete la mente gracias al recurso a la ralentización de la imagen y al montaje en bucle.

Sus obras han sido expuestas tanto en museos como en iglesias. Creó por encargo para la catedral de St Paul en Londres una obra llamada Mártires donde vemos a cuatro personas asociadas a los elementos del aire, fuego, tierra y agua que turban su inicial tranquilidad. En su emplazamiento original el marco es obra de Norman Foster.

https://www.abc.es/cultura/arte/abci-tratado-pasiones-gran-humanista-bill-viola-202002060139_noticia.html









Un curioso estudio sobre las influencias de pintores como Zurbarán, Goya, los primitivos flamencos... en el trabajo de Bill Viola.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMI4OIAjOMg

jueves, 4 de junio de 2020

Consumimos el dolor ajeno pero no soportamos el propio. Las pasiones de la modernidad


Recuerdo escuchar a alguien que  decía que el dolor más fácil de soportar es siempre el dolor ajeno. 
Una entrevista de hace unos años, que habla de las pasiones de la modernidad y del dolor, a un profesor universitario, Javier Moscoso,  que publicó entonces una "Historia cultural del dolor

..." Al igual que existía en la Edad Media, ahora existe un consumo muy grande de dolor ajeno y una notable (y esto no existía en la Edad Media) falta de resistencia ante el dolor propio. Es decir: se consume tanto el dolor ajeno como se pretende evitar el propio con un uso masivo de fármacos.
-P: Si tuviera que hacer una radiografía del dolor del español actual, ¿Cuál podría ser? ¿Cuáles son los temas que nos causan más dolor a los españoles?
-R: Mi impresión es que el mayor problema sigue siendo la injusticia, a todos los niveles. Y esto lo que yo creo que produce un desencanto tanto desde punto de vista social como político. Se puede aceptar el dolor cuando va regulado o va seguido por una situación de esperanza, o bien se considera que es inevitable, pero lo que se tolera muy difícilmente es el dolor que se considera injusto o evitable.
Y desde el punto de vista político y social, es difícilmente tolerable la injusticia presente todos los días en los medios de comunicación, bien sea en casos de corrupción o en otro tipo de asuntos de naturaleza más social aflora permanentemente. En realidad nuestro mundo contemporáneo podría ser perfectamente definido como un ansia permanente de justicia.
-P: ¿Y cuáles son las pasiones de la modernidad, un tema en el que ha trabajado durante los últimos años?
-R: Las pasiones en las que yo trabajo son sobre todo pasiones de la rivalidad como la ambición, la envidia, los celos, el resentimiento… Son pasiones que en general van ligadas a la ambición, no tiene, por qué ser necesariamente emociones o pasiones negativas, que han tenido un exponente a lo largo de nuestro mundo contemporáneo. Estas son algunas de las pasiones de la modernidad, lo cual no quiere decir que no existieran antes, sino que han eclosionado y conquistado la forma en la que se construye el mundo contemporáneo.
-P: ¿Qué mueve más a la humanidad el amor o el odio?
-R: Prefiero pensar que el amor, por eso me da la impresión de que a pesar de todo, en algunas cuestiones se avanza, aunque el odio está muy presente y hay comportamientos humanos que no  pueden explicarse desde ningún otro punto de vista.
-P: ¿Es la indignación una seña de identidad de la sociedad actual?
-R: Sí, la indignación es una seña de identidad del mundo contemporáneo a partir del momento en el que hay un conjunto de promesas, que establece ya la Revolución Francesa, que son promesas incumplidas. Tienen que ver con una mayor democratización de los Estados, una mayor igualdad, ausencia de la injusticia que supone que la procedencia, la geografía, o el oficio de los padres influya en los desarrollos y las recompensas que tienen los seres humanos. Todo esto, como se sigue comprobando  hoy en día,  han sido promesas rotas la mayor parte de las veces.
La idea tan meritocrática,  de que podíamos llegar a una sociedad justa en sus fines y ética en sus medios,  se ha visto desbaratada muchas veces. Así pues, la indignación  o el resentimiento es una opción emocional y política, que aflora en distintos momentos de la historia. Ahora vemos, hemos visto y seguimos viendo uno de ello

https://edit.um.es/campusdigital/javier-moscoso-existe-un-consumo-muy-grande-de-dolor-ajeno-y-una-notable-falta-de-resistencia-ante-el-dolor-propio/


sábado, 21 de marzo de 2020

And the people stayed home. Y la gente se quedó en casa. Kitty O´Meara




So many choices lie before each of us in the time of pandemic: practical, challenging, and agonizing choices. Our medical professionals are already overtaxed. Let’s be responsible and take what burdens we can from their shoulders.

IN THE TIME OF PANDEMIC


And the people stayed home. And they read books, and listened, and rested, and exercised, and made art, and played games, and learned new ways of being, and were still. And they listened more deeply. Some meditated, some prayed, some danced. Some met their shadows. And the people began to think differently.
And the people healed. And, in the absence of people living in ignorant, dangerous, mindless, and heartless ways, the earth began to heal.
And when the danger passed, and the people joined together again, they grieved their losses, and made new choices, and dreamed new images, and created new ways to live, and they healed the earth fully, as they had been healed.
https://the-daily-round.com/2020/03/16/in-the-time-of-pandemic/#comments







“Y la gente se quedó en casa. Y leía libros y escuchaba. Y descansaba y hacía ejercicio. Y creaba arte y jugaba. Y aprendía nuevas formas de ser, de estar quieto. Y se detenía. Y escuchaba más profundamente. Algunos meditaban. Algunos rezaban. Alguno bailaban. Algunos hallaron sus sombras. Y la gente empezó a pensar de forma diferente.
Y la gente sanó. Y, en ausencia de personas que viven en la ignorancia y el peligro, sin sentido y sin corazón, la Tierra comenzó a sanar.
Y cuando pasó el peligro, y la gente se unió de nuevo, lamentaron sus pérdidas, tomaron nuevas decisiones, soñaron nuevas imágenes, crearon nuevas formas de vivir y curaron la tierra por completo, tal y como ellos habían sido curados".




viernes, 20 de julio de 2018

Thrive in turbulence. Use pain, sadness, chaos for growth . Leo Babauta

How to Thrive in the Midst of Personal Turbulence

BY LEO BABAUTA
Two people wrote to me recently (a stranger and a good friend) who are going through some pretty turbulent times in their lives.
The stranger is going through family chaos and health issues, just barely keeping their head above water, just trying to survive.
The good friend is going through a time of feeling down, tightness around their head, a feeling of overall sadness, despite making a lot of positive changes in their life.
It’s tough when you’re going through difficulty, struggle, turbulence … it can feel like your world is falling apart, or you can feel hopeless. My heart is with you if you’re feeling this way.
But I firmly believe two things:
  1. It will pass!
  2. It is also your path to spiritual transformation.
The second part is the key. If you see your turbulence as an opportunity for incredible growth, you are about to experience some amazing things.
Many of us just want to get out of the turbulence and pain, want to be free of it, want to find a place of peace. That’s natural, but that’s a rejection of your experience right now, and it’s a huge missed opportunity.
Let’s dive in and find out more.

Use Pain, Sadness, Chaos for Growth

In Zen, there’s a saying, “Let everything be your teacher.” It sounds trite, but if you practice it, it’s quite profound.
Imagine if every single person you met were your teacher — you could see each of them as an opportunity to practice, each as an opportunity to connect your open hearts, each as a way to see your interconnectedness. Each person becomes an opportunity to practice compassion, presence, consciousness.
Imagine if everything around you were teaching you about the preciousness and overwhelming beauty of life.
Imagine if every turbulent, painful time in your life were your teacher — showing you how to stay present in the midst of fear and pain, how to open your heart to the experience, how to be fearless in the midst of wanting to shut down.
In this way, pain and fear become your path to transformation — if you can find the courage to touch them, to feel them fully, to open to them with love.
Here’s a practice, if you want to use your turbulent time as a teacher and path to transformation:
  1. Notice what you’re experiencing right now. Not the story about it in your head, but the sensations in your body. Just be curious about what it feels like to be alive right now, inclusive of any pain, sadness, fear or groundlessness in you. Just explore, and stay with it.
  2. Allow yourself to fully feel it. Touch the pain or fear. That means allow your awareness to land gently on the sensation of pain or fear, to feel it. Now open your heart to feeling it fully, with its full power, letting go of fears that you can’t handle it. You can. This might be allowing yourself to yell in rage, to cry in anguish, to run around in a tizzy, to shake with fear. Fully feel it, instead of hiding from it.
  3. Let your tender heart feel the pain, joy, sadness … and let yourself feel the heartbreak of it all. This is what it’s like to be fully alive — you’re open to the heartbreak of the world, not afraid to feel the joy and sadness at the same time.
  4. Let yourself fall in love with this experience. This moment, filled with pain and sadness and beauty, is heartbreakingly gorgeous. It is filled with life, energy, light and joyful sweetness. Fall in love with it, opening your heart to the experience, no matter how much sadness or pain the moment contains. It’s all worthy of your love, just as it is, without needing to change.
Imagine practicing this throughout your time of chaos and sadness, turbulence and pain. Fully feeling, fully opening, fully falling in love with each moment.
It would change your life.
You would thrive.
I would love this for you.

Some Additional Practices

If you want more (and we all want more), here are a few other things you can do:
  • Tell yourself it’s not a problem, it’s an experience (read more)
  • Practice seeing your basic goodness, and resting in it (read more)
  • Let go of what is keeping you from resting in peace (read more)
  • Practice resting in stillness in the middle of chaos (read more)
  • Practice seeing everything as sacred (read more)
And then come practice with me in my Fearless Training Program. We’re going to train in this together.



viernes, 15 de junio de 2018

Una pérdida no la cura el tiempo sino la comprensión. Aitor Barrenetxea







Una entrevista al psicoterapeuta Aitor Barrenetxea acerca de las pérdidas vitales (la muerte, el envejecimiento, el dolor, el apego... ) que son el tema central de su último libro publicado en la editorial Carena.


http://www.lavanguardia.com/local/paisvasco/20180608/444187768980/aitor-barrenetxea-muerte-piscoterapeuta.html

miércoles, 2 de mayo de 2018

The only emotions worth having. Ayya Khema

Ayya Khema on cultivating loving-kindness, compassion, sympathetic joy, and equanimity — "the only emotions worth having."



"True love exists when the heart is so broadly trained that it can embrace all human beings and all living creatures."
When we think of love, we have ideas that are purely personal and, on the whole, quite fanciful. They are based in general on our desire to be loved, from which we expect fulfillment.
In reality love fulfills only the one who loves. If we understand love as a quality of the heart, just as intelligence is a quality of the mind, then we won't deal with love as people customarily do. As a rule, we divide our hearts into different compartments, for lovable, neutral and unlovable people. With that sort of divided heart, there's no way we can feel good. We can be "whole" only with a heart united in love.
Every moment we spend on the training of our hearts is valuable and brings us a step further along the path of purification.
True love exists when the heart is so broadly trained that it can embrace all human beings and all living creatures. This requires a learning process that is sometimes hard, above all when someone turns out to be very unfriendly or unpleasant. But this condition can be reached by everyone, because we all have the capacity for love within us.
Every moment we spend on the training of our hearts is valuable and brings us a step further along the path of purification. The more often we remember that all our heart has to do is love, the easier it will be to distance ourselves from judgments and condemnations. But that doesn't mean we can no longer distinguish between good and evil. Naturally we know what is evil, but hatred of evil needn't forever be stirring in our heart. On the contrary, we have compassion for those who act in a way that does harm.
Most of our problems are concerned with interpersonal relations. To address these, we can direct our view to the teachings on the four highest emotions. These are called in Pali the brahmaviharas; or four divine abodes. They are loving-kindness, compassion, sympathetic joy and equanimity.
If we had only these four emotions at our disposal, we would have paradise on earth. Unfortunately that's not how it is, and so we rarely experience any paradisiacal feelings. Most of the time we torment ourselves with difficulties in the family, in our circle of friends, and on the job. Our mind constantly tells us about all the things that don't suit it; and it usually fingers the guilty party, the person who's bothering us, who doesn't want things the way we want them. But let's remember: whenever somebody else says or does something, it's a matter of his or her karma alone. Only a negative reaction on our side creates our own karma.
This is what we absolutely have to understand: who is doing the loving—myself or the other? If I myself love, then I have a certain purity of heart. But if the love is dependent on this or that person or situation, then I'm passing judgment and dividing people into those I think lovable and those I don't. We're all looking for an ideal world, but it can exist only in our own heart, and for this we have to develop our heart's capacity so that we learn to love independently. This means that we increasingly purify our heart, free it from negativity, and fill it with more and more love. The more love a heart contains, the more love it can pour out. The one and only thing that holds us back is our thinking, judging mind.
We're all looking for an ideal world, but it can exist only in our own heart, and for this we have to develop our heart's capacity so that we learn to love independently.
So the only thing that matters is to incline one's own heart to love, because the person who loves is by nature lovable too. Yet if we love only because we want to be endearing, we succumb to the error of expecting results for our efforts. If an action is worth doing, then it doesn't lose this value, whether we get results or not. We don't love as a favor to another or to get something. We love for the sake of love, and so we succeed in filling our hearts with love. And the fuller it gets, the less room there is for negatives.
The Buddha recommended looking upon all people as one's own children. Loving all men and women as if one were their mother is a high ideal. But every little step toward this goal helps us to purify our hearts. The Buddha also explained that it was quite possible that we already were mothers to all the many men and women. If we keep this fact before our eyes, it'll be much easier to get along with people, even those who don't strike us as lovable.
If we observe ourselves very carefully—and that's the point of mindfulness—we will find that we ourselves are not one hundred percent lovable. We will also observe that we find more people unlovable than otherwise. That too can bring no happiness. So we should try to turn this around, and find more and more people lovable. We have to act like every mother: she loves her children even though they sometimes behave very badly. We can make this sort of approach our goal and recognize it as our way of practice.
The Buddha called this kind of love metta, which is not identical to what we call love. "Craving" in Pali is lobha, which sounds rather like the English word for love; and because the entire world revolves around wanting-to-have, we also interpret love this way. But that's not love, because love is the will to give. Wanting to have is absurd, when we think of love and yet degrade it to this level. Although a loving heart without wishes and limits opens up the world in its purity and beauty, we have made little or no use of this inherent capacity.
The far enemy of love is obviously hatred. The near enemy of love is clinging. Clinging means that we're not standing on our own two feet and giving love; we're holding on to someone. It often happens that the person we cling to doesn't find it especially pleasant and would be glad to get rid of this clinger, because he or she can be a burden. And then comes the great surprise that the love affair isn't working—but we clung so devotedly! Clinging is thus called the near enemy, because it looks like real love. The big difference between the two is the possessiveness that marks clinging.
When no one is there to whom we can give love, that doesn't in the least mean that no love exists. The love that fills one's own heart is the foundation of self-confidence and security, which helps us not to be afraid of anyone.
Such possessiveness proves, time and time again, to be the end of love. True, pure love, so famed in song and story, means that we can pass it on and give it away from the heart without evaluation. Here we have to be on the lookout to recognize the negativity within us. We're always searching for its causes outside ourselves, but they're not there. They always lie in our gut and darken our heart. So the point is: Recognize, don't blame, change! We must keep replacing the negative with the positive. When no one is there to whom we can give love, that doesn't in the least mean that no love exists. The love that fills one's own heart is the foundation of self-confidence and security, which helps us not to be afraid of anyone. This fear can be traced back to our not being sure of our own reactions.
If we meet someone who has no good feelings to bring our way, then we already fear a corresponding reaction on our side, and so we prefer to avoid such situations in advance. But if the heart is full of love, then nothing will happen to us, because we know that our reaction will be completely loving. Anxiety becomes unnecessary when we've realized that everyone is the creator of his or her own karma. This feeling of love, which is aimed not at only one person, but forms a basis for our whole interior life, is an important aid in meditation, because only through it is real devotion possible.
The second of the four divine abodes—the highest emotions—is compassion, whose far enemy is cruelty and whose near enemy is pity. Pity can't give others any help. If someone pours out her heart to us and we pity her, then two people are suffering instead of one. If by contrast we give her our compassion, we help her through her trouble.
It's very important to develop compassion for oneself, because it's the precondition for being able to do so for others. If someone doesn't meet us lovingly, it will be easier for us to give this person compassion instead of love. It's easier because now we know that this person who comes to meet us unlovingly is angry or enraged, is most definitely unhappy. If she were happy, she wouldn't be angry or enraged. Knowing about the other's unhappiness makes it easier for us to summon up compassion, especially when we've already done so with respect to our own unhappiness.
Unfortunately we often deal with our own suffering in the wrong way. Instead of acknowledging it and meeting ourselves with compassion, we try to escape our trouble as quickly as possible by developing self-pity or getting distracted or making someone else responsible for it.
Here compassion is the only possibility for meeting our difficulties. We experience exactly what the Buddha teaches: in this world suffering exists. That's the first Noble Truth. Then we can try to acknowledge what we really want to have or get rid of, and thus make suffering our teacher. There is no better one, and the more we listen to it and find a way into what it's trying to make us understand, the easier the spiritual path will prove. This path aims to change us so emphatically that in the end we may not even recognize ourselves.
Suffering is a part of our existence, and only when we accept that and stop running away from it, when we've learned that suffering belongs to life, can we let go—and then the suffering stops. With this knowledge it's much easier to develop compassion for others, for suffering strikes everyone, without exception. Even the so-called badness of others can't bother us, because it only arises out of ignorance and suffering. All the evil in this world is based on these two things.
The third of the four highest emotions is sympathetic joy, whose far enemy is envy, consisting of greed and hatred. The near enemy is hypocrisy, pretending to oneself and others, which we believe is sometimes necessary. We think: these are just little white lies that can readily be forgiven.
Sympathetic joy is rightly understood when we see that there's no difference between people, that we're all a part of whatever is momentarily existing in the world. So if one of these parts experiences joy, then its joy has come into the world and we all have reason to share in it. The universal will replace the individual when we have experienced and tasted it in meditation. Our problems won't let up as long as we try to support and secure the "me." Only when we begin to put the universal over the individual and to see our purification as more important than the wish to have and get, will we find peace in our hearts.
The Buddha called the fourth and last of these emotions the greatest jewel of all: equanimity. It's the seventh factor of enlightenment, and its far enemy is excitement. The near enemy is indifference, which is based on intentional unconcern. By nature we take an interest in everything. We would like to see, hear, taste and experience everything. But since we have often been disappointed by our incapacity to love, we build an armor of indifference around us, to protect us from further disappointment.
But that only protects us from loving and opening ourselves to the world of love and compassion. What clearly distinguishes equanimity from indifference is love, for in equanimity love is brought to a higher development, while in indifference love is not felt at all or cannot be shown. Equanimity means that we already have enough insight so that nothing seems worth getting worked up over anymore.
How did we reach this understanding? We've learned that everything—above all ourselves—comes into being and then passes away. When we get too excited, instead of recognizing the fullness of life, we don't yet have a loving heart. Only a loving heart can realize the fullness of existence. The understanding we get through meditation clearly shows us that the end of this life is constantly before us. Teresa of Avila said: "Not so much thinking—more loving!" Where does thinking get us? To be sure, it landed us on the moon. But if we have developed love in our hearts, we can accept men and women with all their problems and peculiarities. Then we'll have built up a world where happiness, harmony, and peace are in control. This world can't be thought up; it must be felt. Only meditation can present us with this ideal world, in which it is absolutely necessary to give up thinking. This heals us and gives us the capacity to turn more to our heart.
Loving-kindness, compassion, sympathetic joy, and equanimity are the four highest emotions, the only ones worth having.
Since equanimity is a factor of enlightenment, it is based on understanding, above all on the realization that everything that takes place also passes away again. So what do I lose? The worst that can happen is the loss of my life. But I'll lose that in any event—so what's all the excitement about? In general, the people who cause problems for us don't exactly want to kill us. They just want to confirm their ego. But that's not our business; it's wholly and entirely theirs. So long as we meditate and win new insights, it will always be simpler to recognize that all desire for self-affirmation, all aggression, all claims for power, all wanting to have and be are intertwined with conflict. So we have to keep trying to let go of willing and wishing, in order to return to equanimity. You can't meditate at all without equanimity. If we are excited or absolutely want to get or get rid of something, we can't come to rest. Equanimity makes both everyday life and meditation easier.
That doesn't mean that conscience should simply be set aside. We need only understand that this judge in our own heart creates nothing but conflict. If we really want to have peace, then we have to strive to develop love and compassion in our heart. Everyone can achieve this, because ultimately the heart is there to love, as the mind is there to think. If we renounce thinking in meditation, then we sense a feeling of purity. We develop purity on the spiritual path. If only one person develops it in himself or herself, the whole world will be the better for it. And the more people purify their hearts, the greater the gain for everyone. We can do this work every day from morning to night, because we are constantly confronted with ourselves—with all our reactions and with the mulishness that keeps us busy, because it has such a solid hold on our inner life. The more observant we are, the easier we'll find it to let go, until the stubbornness has disappeared, and we've become peaceful and happy.
This work compensates us with great profit and with a security that can be found nowhere else. At bottom we all know about the factors that make up the spiritual life, but acting in accordance with them is very hard. Loving-kindness, compassion, sympathetic joy, and equanimity are the four highest emotions, the only ones worth having. They bring us to a level on which life gains breadth, greatness, and beauty and on which we stop trying to make it run the way we want it to—on which we even learn to love something that we may not have wanted at all.
The Buddha spoke about a love that knows no distinctions. It's simply the quality of the heart. If we have it, we'll find a completely new path in life.
From Visible Here and Now: The Buddha's Teachings on the Rewards of Spiritual Practice, by Ayya Khema. Published by Shambhala Publications. Translated by Peter Heinegg; edited by Leigh Brasington.

sábado, 9 de diciembre de 2017

Marguerite Yourcenar quote





"When two texts, or two assertions, perhaps two ideas, are in contradiction, be ready to reconcile them rather than cancel one by the other; regard them as two different facets, or two successive stages, of the same reality, a reality convincingly human just because it is complex."
-  Marguerite Yourcenar 

sábado, 25 de noviembre de 2017

Ben Sidran "Picture Him Happy" - El mito de Sísifo para los amantes del jazz







ABOUT BEN SIDRAN

Ben Sidran is widely recognized as the host of National Public Radio’s landmark jazz series “Jazz Alive”, which received a Peabody Award, and as the host of VH-1 television’s “New Visions” series, which received the Ace Award for best music series. A pianist, producer, singer and composer, he has recorded more than thirty solo albums, including the Grammy nominated Concert for Garcia Lorca, and produced recordings for such noted artists as Van Morrison, Diana Ross, Michael Franks, Rickie Lee Jones, Mose Allison and Steve Miller (with whom he co-wrote the hit song “Space Cowboy”). He is the composer of the soundtrack for the acclaimed film Hoop Dreams, and scored the documentary Vietnam: Long Time Coming,which won both the Aspen Film Festival audience award and an Emmy.  Sidran has authored two books on the subject of jazz, Black Talk, a cultural history of the music, and Talking Jazz,a series of conversations with inspirational musicians. He holds a PhD. in American Studies from Sussex University, Brighton, England, but has studiously avoided the academic life, preferring instead to spend his time performing, producing and writing.  






Escuchar la introducción de sus canciones al pianista de jazz Ben Sidran es en este caso una auténtica declaración de intenciones sobre los malos tiempos y la actitud con la que nos enfrentamos a ellos.

El personaje mítico de Sísifo es el tema de "Picture him happy". Imaginarle feliz a pesar del castigo que no acaba nunca empujando una gran piedra una y otra vez bajo el sol ardiente.

Picture Him Happy  (B. Sidran, Bulldog Music)

A man and a rock and a real steep hill
Sun so hot even the shadows can kill
He keeps right on pushing try to get to the top
But the forces of nature try make a man drop
He’s down on his knees in a world full of pain
But time after time, he gets back up again
You got the picture
You got to picture him happy

The sun is the truth and there’s no place to hide
The rock is time passing and time will abide
The hill is the shape of all things to come
The man he’s just suffering in the heat and the sun
Tryin' to find some meaning in a world that don’t care
But the rock won’t talk and the hill don’t share
You got the picture
You got to picture him happy
Picture him happy

It aint what you do it’s the way that you do it
It aint where you go its the way that you go through it
Desperate times call for desperate actions
Desperate minds need desperate distractions

The sun is so hot that you can’t breath the air
It’s an eye for an eye and everything is fair
Try to find a reason in a world where there’s none
There’s just this rock and this hill and this god awful sun
Now there’s change for a dollar and change for a dime
You wanna change your world you gotta change your mind
(2X) But when he gets near the top there’s a terrible thrill
He sees another man and another rock going up another hill
You got the picture
You got to picture him happy

martes, 14 de noviembre de 2017