Fundamental Shift
Bringing our awareness to some small things can bring a fundamental shift. A fundamental shift allows for a new way of being.

Random 

Pictures

Email me
Show me where you are
Leave a comment
Random pictures
Book Recommendations

RSS feed here
Feed validator

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Subscribe via:


My iTunes 

Channel
Add to Google
My Odeo Channel
My PodNova Channel
My Podfeed Channel
My Pickle Channel
My Yahoo! 

Channel

Play Podcast:



Categories

General
Meditation
Philosophy
Rob Scott

Archives

2007
January
February
March
April
May
June
September

2006
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2005
November
December

December 2009
S M T W T F S
     
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031

Syndication

Creative Commons

Creative Commons License

This talk is meant to suggest the importance of a regular meditation practice. The pull of the world, and the normal distractions and natural egoic self builders don't remind us that we need to see that there is more than thought. There is experience. We can exist without our minds running all the time. We can train a state experience that fulfills us deeply and gives us many other perspectives on how to live, what is important, and how we can behave with one another. We need to practice daily however. We need to train the mind in this new way of understanding. If you are not training your mind, you may not see when you get lost again. You may not be as aware as you can be of your own belief structures that can limit and ultimately harm you.

Our world is aware for the first time of the entirety of itself. With our news media being global, we are able to see the natural horrors that occur from time to time. We also get to see, possibly too deeply, the unnatural horrors as well. Many people wonder what can we do about these things. What will help us understand these tragedies? We want to figure it out, with our minds. But I suggest that the best thing to do is to learn to put the mind down. Learn to sit in stillness.

As we see our own structures more and more, we are helping others resonate in that way. As humans become more aware of themselves, our language about what is important can change. The words presence, and stillness start to have more gravity. As we see ourselves, we see other people as well, and we might just notice when someone is in need of attention, or help. Disasters will continue to occur of course, but we can contextualize them, and perhaps not be as fearful of them because we can see that there is depth in sorrow, and joy in the ordinary. And that life is not set in any definite pattern.

If you are interested in self growth, I humbly suggest you commit to a daily meditation practice. The benefits are enormous. But more than that as a selling point, I want to say that if we talk about growing, but don't do the work, we may still be just as lost as those that haven't woken up at all.

Song: Soup by Blind Melon

Direct download: Do_You_Have_A_Practice.m4a
Category: Meditation -- posted at: 12:25 PM
Comments[0]