10/ Love is the (temporary) answer because it alleviates the burden of self. When we experience it, we gladly find our attention and interest on life itself, not our own obsessive fictions.
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11/ It is, sadly, temporary because people for the most part cannot maintain a loving state — the old addictions return, and when they do, they begin again to conflict with each other.
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12/ The most curious aspect of this disease is that is is unnecessary. One can go about their daily existence perfectly fine without having to reference their experience (actual or mental) to a secondary, imagined point of reference that is construed to be 'the self'.
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13/ That point of reference already exists - You are here. The story also exists. You are it. It goes on without 'you'. Just stop thinking for a moment and observe, as if you stopped existing.
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14/ Reality goes on perfectly fine without you having to project an idea of yourself onto it. It is unnecessary. This is the meaning of the Zen proverb 'Sitting quietly, doing nothing, spring comes and the grass grows by itself.'
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15/ The wonderful thing is that once you catch your mind in the old habit of creating a self, and drop it, you are instantly freed to engage with life, reality and the moment as it occurs. In that sense only can you then feel, and be, your 'true self'.
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16/ Shunryu Suzuki had this wonderful quote "The world is its own magic". And it truly is. But if you are addicted to a fantasy and have conditioned the mind to be divided and to neurotically have to refer to it, you stand to miss it.
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17/ And that may be said to be what ultimate suffering is : missing life. The only thing that's truly you, and truly yours.
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18 / “Develop an interest in life as you see it; the people, things, literature, music - the world is so rich, simply throbbing with rich treasures, beautiful souls and interesting people. Forget yourself.” — Henry Miller
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Replying to @mistermircea
This was really interesting.
Can you recommend me a book or two to explore this idea further?1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
Mircea Macavei Retweeted Mircea Macavei
Thank you. I can recommend the following Easy : 1. Anything by Osho ("Courage" and "Maturity" are perennial favorites) 2. Anything by Alan Watts ("The way of Zen", "Become What You Are") Difficult : 3. https://twitter.com/mistermircea/status/885513006024675328 … 4.https://twitter.com/mistermircea/status/876573633526865920 …
Mircea Macavei added,
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Replying to @mistermircea
I knew you were an Osho fan the moment I found myself loving this series of tweets!
0 replies 0 retweets 2 likesThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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