yep. I love this guy.
Well, I try to love everybody. But I love the way Thich Nhat Hanh thinks and speaks and acts, and that makes loving easier.
Most of what you perceive other people are doing to you isn’t about you. It’s about them. Their pain. Their suffering.
In that sense, while other people can create conditions painful for you, suffering is something we cause in ourselves.
The desire to punish is an attachment between my own suffering and the person I believe to be causing it. When I can step out of the suffering I’m causing myself in the sphere of someone else’s pain and suffering, I can detach myself from the emotional desire to reflect that suffering back to its perceived source. Detached from this desire, it becomes easier to access my compassion, and act on it. It becomes easier to help someone else when I no longer feel the need to defend or protect myself. I am detached from the mud of suffering.
How can one person stuck in the mud pull out another also stuck in the mud?
~ Buddha
It is hard to love everyone. I shared this on pinterest.
Thank you for the Pinterest share, Steve.
Every time I remind myself to love another ‘difficult’ person, I make it easier for myself to do it the next time. Why? Because each time I succeed I learn it really doesn’t cost me anything to transform my negative feeling into love. And there are always benefits, for me, and often for the person I learn to love.
Oh, and nicely done blog you have there, Steve. 🙂