ROBERT BEATTY
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The Blog

Bodhisattva Vow for Therapists (and other kind humans)

10/12/2022

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​Bodhisattva Vow*
            *Truncated and rewritten for therapists, adapted by CSW
May I be an advocate for those who need a voice,
And a guide for those who wish to know better their own minds and hearts.
May I provide healing space for those who feel stuck and tight,
And containment for those who feel unmoored and adrift in confusion and pain.
May I remember and respect always
The autonomy and messy humanness of those with whom I sit,
May I offer patience and ruthless compassion 
To those who fall, again, and again, and again. 
May I understand the difference between offering unconditional love,
And enabling harm done to others, to self, and to me. 
May I know well my own elastic boundary,
And allow it to expand and contract to best meet whatever circumstances
In which I find myself, and those to whom I have dedicated my energy, and my heart. 
May I help people everywhere who are hurting, as well as myself
To remember to look at the sky when the sun and the moon are setting, and rising, 
To smell the air just before it rains, when the sky is swollen purple,
To taste the sweetness and bitterness of every breath,
To savor the touch of loved humans, animals, and even the softness of leaves, and flowers, and blades of grass,
To listen to the humming song of cars going by on the endless road, of wind through the bare and supple branches of the trees, of the music of their—our—own voices, speaking our truths, and our pain, and our healing. 
Until every being finds their truest way of moving through the endless world, may I return
To sit in solace and solidarity with any who want or need to sit with me.
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A Still Forest Pool

10/11/2022

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​A Still Forest Pool  
 
"I said to my teacher Achan Chah I I still have very many thoughts, my mind wanders a lot, even though I'm trying to be mindful.
 
He said:Don't worry about this, try to keep your mind in the present. Whatever there is that arises in the mind or the heart, just watch it, let go of it. Don't even wish to be rid of thought, then the mind will reach a natural state, no discriminating between good and bad, hot and cold, fast and slow, no "me" and no "you", no self at all, just what there is.
 
When you walk, no need to do anything special, simply walk and see what there is. No need to go to a cave or cling to isolation. Wherever you are, know yourself by being natural and watching. If doubts arise, watch them come and go. It's very simple. Hold on to nothing.
 
It's as though you're walking down a road, periodically you run into obstacles. When you meet difficulties, see them and overcome them by letting go. Don't think about the obstacles you've passed already, don't worry about the ones you haven't seen yet. Stay in the present. Don't worry about the length of the road or a destination either.
 
Everything is changing. Whatever you pass, do not cling to it, and eventually the mind will reach its natural balance where practice becomes automatic and effort becomes effortless. All things will come and go of themselves.
 
Sitting hours on end is not necessary. Some people think that the longer you sit the wiser you must be. I've seen chickens sit on their nests for days on end.
Wisdom comes from being mindful in all postures. Your practice should begin as you awaken in the morning and continue until you fall asleep. What is important is only that you keep aware, whether you're working or sitting or going to the bathroom.
 
Each person has their own natural pace. Some of you will die at age fifty, some at age sixty-five, and some at age ninety. Don't think or worry about this. Try to be mindful and let things take their natural course. Then your mind will become quieter and quieter in any surroundings, like a still forest pool. All kinds of wonderful, rare animals will come and drink at the pool. You will see clearly the nature of all things in the world. Many wonderful strange things come and go, but you will be still. This is the happiness of the Buddha"
 
Jack Kornfield  from “A Still Forest Pool”
 
 
 
 
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David Whyte:  Rest.

8/25/2022

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​David Whyte 
 
REST is the conversation between what we love to do and how we love to be. Rest is not stasis but the essence of giving and receiving. Rest is an act of remembering, imaginatively and intellectually, but also physiologically and physically. We often hate ourselves for our procrastination, when it is often only the deeply disguised need to rest deeply enough to reconstitute and reimagine our approach. To rest is to become present in a different way than through action, and especially to give up on the will as the prime motivator of endeavor, with its endless outward need to reward itself through established goals. To rest is to give up on worrying and fretting and the sense that there is something wrong with the world unless we put it right; to rest is to fall back, literally or figuratively from outer targets, not even to a sense of inner accomplishment or an imagined state of attained stillness, but to a different kind of meeting place, a living, breathing state of natural exchange…
...
The ability to take real rest is almost an art form; strangely, almost a discipline: the discipline of putting things aside, especially putting aside the will, and the false self, supported by endless endeavour: this is not to give up on the will but to invite it back again as a good servant to the soul's desires instead of the heartless and exhausting task master it becomes when we push it to the leading edge of our identity. DW
 
 
...
‘REST’ 
From 
CONSOLATIONS: 
The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning 
of Everyday Words. © 2015 David Whyte
 

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Planning Ahead:  Aaron Freeman

8/25/2022

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​Planning Ahead Can Make a Difference in the End
Aaron Freeman
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4675953
 
“You want a Physicist to speak at your funeral. You want the physicist to speak to your grieving family about the conservation of energy, so that they understand that your energy has not died. You want the physicist to remind your mother about the first law of thermodynamics; that no energy gets created in the universe, and none gets destroyed. You want your mother to know that all of you energy, every vibration, every BTU of heat, every wave of every particle that was her beloved child remains with her in this world. You want the physicist to tell your weeping father that amid energies of the cosmos, you gave as good as you got.
And at one point you would hope that the physicist would step down from the pulpit, and walk to your brokenhearted spouse there in the pew and tell him that all the photos that ever bounced off her face, all the particles whose paths were interrupted by your smile, by the touch of your hair, hundreds of trillions of particles have raced off like children, their ways forever changed by you. And as your widow rocks in the arms of a loving family, may the physicist let her know, that all the photons bounced from you were gathered in the particle detectors that are her eyes, that those photons created within her constellations of electromagnetically charged neurons whose energy will go on forever.
You can hope your family will examine the evidence and satisfy themselves that the science is sound and that they'll be comforted to know your energy's still around. According to the law of the conservation of energy, not a bit of you is gone; you're just less orderly."
 

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The Last Time: Author Unknown.

8/18/2022

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Picture
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Buddha Museum: Trauben-Traurbach Germany

8/8/2022

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​https://www.dropbox.com/s/obybjin4nylblaw/Buddha%20Museum%3A%20Trauben%20Traurbach%20Germany%3A%20Robert%20Beatty%20%3A%20Frank%20Leder.m4v?dl=0
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This Moment is All.

8/5/2022

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​Now think about yourself.  You think you are a separate and independent individual. But you are not. Without your father and mother you would not be. Without their fathers and mothers, your father and mother would not have been and you would not be…. And so we can go back endlessly to the origin of the human race and before that and before that. You, at this moment, are the apex of the great triangle formed by all these previous individual lives. In you they all exist today. They live in you today as truly as they lived individually in what we call time.
 
But, in addition, just as you live today by virtue of all the other individuals and existences in the world at this moment – your body is sustained by the food cultivated and processed by innumerable persons throughout the present world, your body is covered by clothing produced by innumerable persons throughout the present world, your activities are conditioned by the activities of innumerable persons living in the present world, your thinking is conditioned by the thinking of innumerable persons living in the present world – [just] so the bodies, the actions, the thinking of all your ancestors who form the great triangle of which you are the present apex, have in their turn been dependent upon and conditioned by the innumerable persons existing in the world at the time they individually lived.
 
But this is not all. From you will come your children and their children’s children; from your actions will come the results of your actions and the results of those results; and from your thoughts will come the future thinking and the thinking resulting from that thinking, ad infinitum. 
 
And this is true for each sentient or non-sentient being in the universe. In you and in each one of them at this moment is all time and all space. [In other words, this moment is all.]
 
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Pema Chodron: Begin with Yourself

6/24/2022

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​“We start with ourselves.  We make ourselves right or we make ourselves wrong, every day, every week, every month and year of our lives.  We feel that we have to be right so that we can feel good.  We don’t want to be wrong, because then we’ll feel bad.  But we could be more compassionate toward all these parts of ourselves.  When we feel right, we can look at that.  Feeling right can feel good; we can be completely sure of how right we are and have a lot of people agreeing with us about how right we are.  But suppose someone does not agree with us?  Then what happens?  Do we find ourselves getting angry and aggressive?  If we look into the very moment of anger or aggression, we might see what wars are made of.   This is what race riots are made of: feeling that we have to be right, being thrown off and righteously indignant when someone disagrees with us.  On the other hand, when we find ourselves feeling wrong, convinced that we’re wrong, getting solid about being wrong, we could also look at that. The whole right and wrong business closes us down and makes our world smaller.  Wanting situations and relationships to be solid, permanent, and graspable obscures the pith of the matter, which is that things are fundamentally groundless. 
      Instead of making others right or wrong, or bottling up right and wrong in ourselves, there’s a middle way, a very powerful way.  We could see it as sitting on the razor’s edge, not falling off to the right or the left.  This middle way involves not hanging on to our version so tightly.  It involves keeping our hearts and minds open long enough to entertain the idea that when we make things wrong, we do it out of a desire to obtain some kind of ground or security.  Equally, when we make thins right, we are still trying to obtain some kind of ground or security.  Could our minds ad our hearts be big enough just to hang out in that space where we’re not entirely certain about who’s right and who’s wrong?  Could we have no agenda when we walk into a room with another person, not know what to say, not make that person wrong or right?  Could we see, hear, feel other people as they really are?  It is powerful to practice this way, because we’ll find ourselves continually rushing around to try to feel secure again – to make ourselves or them either right or wrong.  But try communication can happen only in that open space. 
      Whether it’s ourselves, our lovers, bosses, children, local scrooge, or the political situation, its more daring and real not to shut anyone out of our hearts and not to make the other into an enemy.  If we begin to live like this, we’ll find that we actually can’t make things completely right or completely wrong anymore, because things are a lot more slippery and playful than that.  Everything is ambiguous; everything is always shifting and changing, and there are as many different takes on any given situation as there are people involved.  Trying to find absolute rights and wrongs is a trick we play on ourselves to feel secure and comfortable. 
      This leads to a bigger underlying issue for all of us: how are we ever going to change anything?  How is there going to be less aggression in the universe rather than more?  We can then bring it down to a more personal level: how do I learn to communicate with someone who is hurting me or someone who is hurting a lot of people?  How do I speak to someone so that some change actually occurs?  How do I communicate so that the space open s up and both of us begin to touch in to some kind of basic intelligence that we all share?  In a potentially violent encounter, how do I communicate so that neither of us becomes increasingly furious and aggressive?  How do I communicate to the heart so that a stuck situation can ventilate?  How do I communicate so that things that seem frozen, unworkable, and eternally aggressive begin to soften up and some kind of compassionate exchange begins to happen?
      Well, it starts with being willing to feel what we are going through.  It starts with being willing to have a compassionate relationship with the parts of ourselves that we feel are not worthy of existing on the planet.  If we are willing through meditation to be mindful no only of what feels comfortable, but also of what pain feels like, if we even aspire to stay awake and open to what we’re feeling, to recognize and acknowledge it as best we can in each moment, then something begins to change. 
Compassionate action, begin there for others, being able to act and speak in a way that communicates, starts with seeing ourselves when we start to make ourselves right or make ourselves wrong. At that particular points, we could just contemplate the face that there is a larger alternative to either of those, a more tender, shaky kind of place where we could live.  This place, if we can touch it, will help us train ourselves throughout our lives to open further t whatever we feel, to open further rather than shut down more.  We’ll find that as we begin to commit ourselves to this practice, as we begin to have a sense of celebrating the aspects of ourselves that we found so impossible before, something will shift in us.   Something will shift permanently in us.  Our ancient habitual patterns will begin to soften, and we’ll begin to see the faces and heart he words of people who are talking to us.
      If we begin to get in touch with whatever we feel with some kind of kindness, our protective shells will melt, and we’ll find that more areas of our lives are workable.  As we learn to have compassion for ourselves, the circle of compassion for others – what and whom we can work with, and how – becomes wider. 
Pema Chodron.
 
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Belonging and Othering : June 15

6/12/2022

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PIMC and The Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee, teachers and board members cordially invites the PIMC Sangha to community evening June 15th at 7:00-9:00. “Belonging and Othering” will be a Zoom session with guest teachers from Common Ground Meditation Center in Minneapolis, Mn. PIMC teachers and board have met several times with Shelly Graf in person and are so happy to have them join us again to help us keep shepherding our interest in DEI and Belonging. This presentation of well known guest teachers is an evening not to miss! Join Mark Nunberg and Shelly Graf for a meditation period, Dharma talk and Q&A about Understanding and Relating Wisely to Individual and Group Identities. We will reflect about the social dynamics of “belonging and othering” How do we train the mind to use concepts of identity as skillful means to connect with others and to illuminate biases. There is no way to function in the world without views about this and that. The relevant question is how can one use views and ideas about self and others without planting seeds of suffering? We can discuss the skillful use of identity in our lives.There will be small group discussions as well as concluding with open discussion,

Q&A.
https://zoom.us/j/8548302542?pwd=RHhYclg3UnRpYmJub0tEblZKakJLdz09
6:00 - 6:30 welcome and guided sit
6:30 - 7:10 mark gives a talk about relating wisely to identities 5-7 min break
7:20 - 7:30 shelly introduces small groups
7:30 - 7:45 small groups - exploring the skillful and unskillful ways we relate to identities
​7:45 - 8:00 large share out about what we've learned and what it means for PIMC and closing.

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Gibran on Talking

6/12/2022

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​Talking:
You talk when you cease to be at peace with your thoughts, and when you can no longer dwell in the solitude of your heart, you live in your lips, and sound is a diversion and a pastime.
There are those among you who seek the talkative through fear of being alone.
The silence of aloneness reveals to their eyes their naked selves and they would escape. 
And there are those who have the truth within them, but they tell it not in words. In the bosom of such as these, the spirit dwells in rhythmic silence

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