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Larry Yang

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Now More Than Ever We Need Mindfulness

Posted: 12/01/2011 4:44 pm

As we already are feeling divisiveness of current politics and upcoming presidential elections...

As we feel into pain and complexity of people holding seeming irreconcilable values which actually harm each other, on topics like the economy, immigration and same-sex marriage...

As even people's intentions for doing good in the world, whether through nonviolent dissent, or simple holiday shopping to provide for a family's happiness is met with pepper spray and handcuffs...

Now more than ever we need our Mindfulness Practice.

We need the Freedom that Mindfulness invites for us -- the freedom that we do not have to follow the unconscious patterns of acute reactivity. We need to remember that it is possible to notice deeply what is happening, understand it with some wisdom, treat it with some of the compassion inherent in our humanity, and move into responses and actions that are of benefit -- that is, to move toward that which lessens suffering and creates happiness, not just for us as individuals, but us as a collective world.

Our Mindfulness practice, whether it is on the cushion paying attention to the emotions and thoughts that weave between the breath and bodily sensations, or whether it is in the world paying attention to our actions and behaviors which emerge from our emotions and thoughts, is always a reminder that in order to change any unhealthy or harmful patterns -- in order to transform any suffering -- we have to first become aware of the patterns themselves. We cannot change anything that we are not aware of. This is also true of our collective transformation into a culture that meets the needs of greater numbers of people and beings: We first have to become deeply aware of the conditions that we are living within, and then that will guide us into transforming the world into a better place to live.

On a personal level this may show up within the experience of intense emotions. Often we are driven by unconscious motivations of our emotional landscape. How often do we feel lost in the rage or the upset that sometimes arises? The powerful impact that Mindfulness brings is that the experience of being aware of the rage is not the rage itself. Being mindful of all the sensations of rage or anger is not being lost in or consumed by the fire. How often do we actually feed the experience of anger without examining what is really happening? Do you find yourself pouring fuel on the fire of rage, or even getting angry at the anger? What might be happening other than the thoughts or emotions inflaming the fuel?

If we examine closely, we will likely find that the experience of anger and rage have pleasant sensations associated with them. Pleasant sensations are always seductive. That is the nature of "pleasant." And generally, without an awareness practice, unconscious conditioning impels our human experience to desire more pleasant sensations -- without any questions asked. We begin to enjoy the sensations of feeling angry and even feed them with experiences such as self-righteousness, or a sense of "better-than," or even revenge. The deceptive nature of the pleasant feelings of rage is that the behaviors and actions which emerge do not always lead to less suffering in the world. Much of our behavior and actions in the world are driven by the immediacy of this kind of reaction toward strong emotions or acute pain. These actions often lead to more suffering -- unless there is Mindfulness.

Anger is an important barometer possibly indicating when boundaries have been crossed, or injustices have occurred or oppression has been inflicted. However, anger can also have an unconscious life of its own when it is not met with the central question of our Awareness practice, which is also a vital choice-point of Buddhist spiritual practice: Will this lead to more suffering, or will this lead to less?

Life is complicated and this is not always a clean or clear decision point. Our practice simply invites us to do the best we can -- to be as mindful, aware and kind to whatever arises, even our intense emotional landscapes. The personal mantra that I have developed to navigate through the complex dilemmas and social issues arising currently is:

Can I be mindful and loving of whatever arises.
If I can't be loving in this moment, can I be kind.
If I can't be kind, can I be non-judgmental.
If I can't be non-judgmental, can I not cause harm.
And if I cannot not cause harm, can I cause the least amount of harm possible?

Our awareness practice does not simply end with how it applies to our personal life. The Buddha did not design an individual practice that solely leads to personal salvation or enlightenment. The invitation of the Buddha's teachings is to make our Mindfulness relevant and integral to not only our personal journey towards happiness, but our collective transformation towards Freedom. It is written in the Satipatthana Sutta:

The Noble Ones abide contemplating internally, they abide contemplating externally, they abide contemplating both externally and internally.

This practice of applying awareness to our internal personal experience and the external collective experience is how we create Freedom for all beings -- it is how we become aware of what needs to be transformed. Referencing our current reality, to change the dynamic of the 1 percent and the 99 percent, we first need to become fully aware of the suffering and the disparities involved, and how these disparities actually cause harm to the 100 percent, not just the 99 percent. In addition, not everyone in the 99 percent is aware that that they are part of the 99 percent. This is a process that is beginning to expand. Some of the 99 percent might have a few more creature comforts than others (i.e. "pleasant" conditions in life); however, this does not mean that they are not oppressed by a larger system in place. Our collective consciousness is in the midst of being raised. And this collective awareness raising is not separate or different from the deepening of our personal mindfulness practice, internally and externally.

What we do on the meditation cushion to create clarity of mind, openness in our hearts, and mindfulness of our thoughts, emotions and actions is not any different than the work we do in the world to create a better life for all of us. As many spiritual masters and social activist elders have told us, from Mahatma Gandhi to Audre Lorde, "We must be the change we wish to see in the world." Mindfulness can be the practice that connects our individual spiritual path with the path of all beings. Our paths toward Freedom are the same. We are not separate from one another.

Thich Nhat Hanh writes:

When you break through to the truth, compassion springs up like a stream of water. With that compassion, you can embrace even the people who have persecuted you. When you're motivated by desire to help those who are victims of ignorance, only then are you free from your suffering and feelings of violation. Don't wait for things to change around you. You have to practice liberating yourself. Then you will be equipped with the power of compassion and understanding, the only kind of power that can help transform an environment full of injustice and discrimination. You have to become such a person -- one who can embody tolerance, understanding, and compassion. You transform yourself into an instrument for social change and change in the collective consciousness of mankind.

Thich Nhat Hanh describes one of the meanings embedded in sati, or mindfulness, and that is the capacity to remember what will lead to freedom in our lives -- remembering that our personal and collective path toward Freedom is not dependent on any external conditions. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has spoken, "We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." In his wisdom, he prepares us that Justice, as worthy a task as it is in our lives, will take longer than any of us would like. It will require the efforts of the many rather than the few. And it will require every spiritual attribute we can muster. There is tremendous injustice and unfairness in our cultures, our society and our world. And the teaching is that Freedom is not even dependent upon Life being fair or just. True Freedom does not mean to be in a place where there is no problem, struggle or oppression. True Freedom means to be in the midst of any and/or all those things, and have clarity in our minds, openness in our hearts and integrity in our actions. This is the kind of Freedom that will allow us to move through even our most difficult struggles with greater ease and benefit for us all.

Now more than ever, we need to remember this.

 
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
08:24 PM on 12/10/2011
Caption suggestion; " Hearts Of Stone, Doo Doo Wah, Doo Doo Wah "
02:57 AM on 12/08/2011
Mindfulness is essential but it must be regarded as a tool. Meditation for calm and insight can train the mind from the distorting effects of the passions so that we can being to cultivate logic, to reason as clearly and as efficiently as possible. The ethics of the "Five Precepts" are an effective guide to behaviour. Developing goodwill, compassion for all living beings, taking satisfaction in the well-being of others, and cultivating equanimity---this is what is needed if humanity is to survive and prosper. With all due respect to the insights and experiences acquired over millenia by the various Buddhist traditions, it's time to free the ideas and teachings of the historical Buddha from the trappings of "Buddhism" and develop a viable program that can go universal, freeing Buddha's quite rational teachings from religion. Perhaps the Buddha was Earth's "Surak' and the Middle Way is our equivalent of Vulcan logic. Live long and prosper!
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Jared Keith Jones
your friendly neighborhood buddhist
04:23 PM on 12/12/2011
I think between the Dalai Lama's "Secular Ethics" and my own teachers text combining the explanatory picture of Madhyamika-Prasangika Emptiness and the experimental findings of Quantum Physics (via hist personal interest and the request of H.H. The Dalai Lama) is just that sort of combination. The truth arises out of the data - compassion and emptiness. Meditation is already gaining some scientific ground, though the scientific results are still preliminary.
01:39 PM on 12/07/2011
Breathe in.....................................Breathe out.........................................
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John Ramsey001
12:09 AM on 12/07/2011
We need Jesus.
01:35 PM on 12/07/2011
And Buddha.
01:38 PM on 12/07/2011
& Buddha.
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Kirk Job-Sluder
10:35 AM on 12/06/2011
Interesting article, thank you.
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Paul Medina
Not purchased by the corporations, Still free
02:31 PM on 12/05/2011
One of the best things I have ever read. Thank you for another insight to the movement i believe in so much.
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humanbeing-rick
Born in the USA 1947
10:17 AM on 12/05/2011
Thank you for these wonderful words of wisdom! It was needed, in these times of great suffering, anger and rage. Too often we become lost in our emotions, and lose sight of the big picture.
"We must be the change we wish to see in the world."
I am grateful.
shylove2
warfare state is pathological
08:51 PM on 12/04/2011
We are getting there slowly .. we now have increased never-mindfulness of going to war for lies, misinformation and pure oil profits... next we need to give up worshipping false profits...
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henriette and hube
my goal is to live each day
02:02 PM on 12/07/2011
Well said.

fanned.....
07:29 PM on 12/04/2011
"This is the time and the need is very great"
Prophet Asa'is spoken to his followers 3,000 years ago.

"We must reap the understanding given to us from the Lords of Light or else be eternally lost in this veil of darkness."
Spoken by Avestar the Seer 1,500 years ago.

"Any day the Messiah will come. Where will he find you?"
R. Shalom ben Ari in an epistle (H. igeret) 785 years ago.

"He is here among you. You are being judged. Repent!"
Preacher Joe ( 1823)

But, the time is always now.
NoRhymeOrReason
Teach your children well...
04:27 PM on 12/04/2011
As the seed begins to grow, the soil tries it's hardest to drag it by the roots to the dark damp world of decomposition of the soil. But, the sapling breaks through the soil. The scorching sun, torrential rain and unrelenting wind try to break the sapling. But, the small plant uses these as it's food for growth. Fully grown, the tree fulfills it purpose, by giving it's fruit as food and seeds for new growth.

If only we could be as mindful as that tree.
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Jared Keith Jones
your friendly neighborhood buddhist
04:26 PM on 12/12/2011
Very nice. My own teacher says: "There is no good meditation. There is no bad mediation. There is just the struggle with your own mind. Did you struggle? Yes? Then you accomplished the goal." The seed simply struggles - with no mind at all, no conceptual elaboration of "this is good growth" or "I have lost a leaf over here!" - and it achieves its goal of bearing fruit.
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FaithIsIgnorance
God is fiction.
03:36 PM on 12/04/2011
Balancing mindfulness and conflict aversion is a problem I see in the more enlightened liberal minded community.

The liberal community has been lulled into a state that everything is ok, that certain political points of view, though disagreed with, still have value.

This kind of "mindfulness" is dangerous. It is what has allowed the insanity of the fundamentalist demagogues rise to such power and visibility.

Some political views are unjustifiable, horrific, oppressive, and aren't worthy of a podium.

I perhaps have run too far in the opposite direction of mindfulness, which I am aware of at every turn with every discussion with every angry comment I get.

But I feel, given the state of the union, I have very little choice in the matter. I didn't want to be an activist. This position was thrust upon me by force.

Someday, perhaps when the religious lunacy is quelled and separated from our government and constitution, I may find the forgiving accepting position of mindfulness a comforting place.

But I fear this will never occur in my lifetime.
researcher
researcher
04:46 AM on 12/05/2011
"Don't wait for things to change around you. You have to practice liberating yourself. Then you will be equipped with the power of compassion and understanding, the only kind of power that can help transform an environment full of injustice and discrimination"
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meeks
Perfectly my flawed self at all times
07:09 AM on 12/05/2011
I see what you are saying. Where mindfulness helps me personally however is that I can totally disagree with the idea or concept being pushed without taking the leap that the person who believes it is worthless, crazy, stupid, evil or how else I would normally label them. That is what the fundamentalist do and I don't want to be the opposite side of their coin. Mindfulness helps me not agree with someone and still consider their worth and their humanity.
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FaithIsIgnorance
God is fiction.
11:20 AM on 12/05/2011
How do you consider the worth of someone like, say, Michelle Bachmann for example?

She wields her personal, warped, damaged faith around like a weapon targeting everyone who doesn't bow her dogma. Her hate and fear mongering speech is part of the evil machine that inspires GLBT youth to kill themselves rather than face a world that so clearly hates them. She supports oppression, is a proponent of what is basically a police state theocracy.

how do you consider her worth? She has none. she has no humanity. The world would be a better place if she was dead.
08:21 PM on 12/06/2011
I humbly thank you.

We cannot afford to forget this when disagreeing.
02:48 PM on 12/04/2011
In trying to achieve political goals, our first concern must be an honest assessment of means. If we allow the grace and beauty of wisdom to guide, us we may find both peace and political defeat.

We must also be mindful of complexity.
sjaent2001
Change gets Challenged, changer gets Cross/poison
02:42 PM on 12/04/2011
PS: we should look to move forward and not backward in time for our freedoms to maintain or loose them that is the question of --------- making the right choices and moving forward and facing the challenges if it was that easy all our problems would have been solved long time ago ---- something is amiss --- and surely there is a broken link in this continuation of advent of self --- negation of self -- godliness in humans -- emptiness --- inquiry ---- philosophy --- science --- religion ----- but this whole started with religion may be -- or an accident --- but human thought process has followed a very systematic developmental process and have lived to live or strived to live with the new and not stick to the old ---- if they stayed the same i do not want to think in what state would we all be in 2011 ----- we have to find a better solution to maintain our freedoms because it is repeating what happened in the Pharohic days ---- slavery ---- it is still there but in a very different form --- we are slaves to our own progress and just in the last few years tend to have lost most or our economic glory and now looking to mend ways to regain the lost paradise that we build on this earth with real hard labor and real thinking ---- move forward and do not go back should be the motivating force for
sjaent2001
Change gets Challenged, changer gets Cross/poison
02:30 PM on 12/04/2011
''''''''' True Freedom does not mean to be in a place where there is no problem, struggle or oppression. --- This is the kind of Freedom that will allow us to move through even our most difficult struggles with greater ease and benefit for us all. Now more than ever, we need to remember this.--""""""---so goes your story-- practicing something for 4500 years has yet to produce relieve from pain and suffering ----- on the one hand it is the emptiness and the negation of the self and the void is filled with meditations----- since its advent negation of self there are other dogmas that appeared and said it is not the negation of self but the develeopment of self that leads one to better stations and fullfillness--- there seems to be a broken link --- 4500 years ago the Pharaohs took the position of living human gods so that was one extreme and when punished Moses delivered people from his rule but ended up in wilderness for 40 yea. From nothingness to godliness, negation of godliness by emptiness, then to conquer self and heavenly overtures to land on moon, and explore universe invent internet. There seems to be a broken link in our mindfulness, emptiness, negation and self achievement we need to explore how in 2011 and not gettting back to 4500+ years in time, we should look to move forward and not backward in time for our freedoms to maintain or loose them that is the question of
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Klarsonent
Semi-retired landlady, small business entrepreneur
12:37 PM on 12/04/2011
Thank you, Larry Yang, for your article, but especially your personal mantra, as follows:

Can I be mindful and loving of whatever arises.
If I can't be loving in this moment, can I be kind.
If I can't be kind, can I be non-judgmental.
If I can't be non-judgmental, can I not cause harm.
And if I cannot not cause harm, can I cause the least amount of harm possible?

I love it!!
08:25 PM on 12/06/2011
Klarsonent,

Thank you.

Your critique of my comments a few months ago has provoked me to reevaluate my course (way of thinking and of feeling and evaluating life).

Namaste
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Klarsonent
Semi-retired landlady, small business entrepreneur
10:13 AM on 12/07/2011
When the Spirit moves me, I will speak up. I'm glad you gained some understanding from what I said.