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Tara Brach

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Imperfection Is Not a Problem

Posted: 10/22/2012 12:50 am

After graduating from college, I moved into an ashram -- a spiritual community -- and enthusiastically devoted myself to the lifestyle for almost 12 years. I felt I had found a path through which I could purify myself and transcend the imperfections of my ego -- the self and its strategies. We were required to awaken every day at 3:30 a.m., take a cold shower, and then from 4 a.m. until 6:30 a.m. do a sadhana (spiritual discipline) of yoga, meditation, chanting and prayer. By breakfast time I often felt as if I were floating in a glowing, loving, blissful state. I was at one with the loving awareness I call the Beloved and experienced this to be my own deepest essence. I didn't feel bad or good about myself, I just felt good.

By the end of breakfast, or a bit later in the morning, my habitual thoughts and behaviors would start creeping in again, and those ever-recurring feelings of insecurity and selfishness would let me know I was falling short. Unless I found the time for more yoga and meditation, I would often find myself feeling once again like my familiar small-minded, not-okay self. Then I'd go to bed, wake up and start over again.

While I touched genuine peace and openheartedness, my inner critic continued to assess my level of purity. I mistrusted myself for the ways I would pretend to be positive when underneath I felt lonely or afraid. While I loved the yoga and meditation practices, I was embarrassed by my need to impress others with the strength of my practice. I wanted others to see me as a deep meditator and devoted yogi, a person who served her world with care and generosity. Meanwhile, I judged other people for being slack in their discipline and judged myself for being so judgmental. Even in the midst of community, I often felt lonely and alone.

I had the idea that if I really applied myself, it would take eight to 10 years to release all my self-absorption and be wise and free. Periodically I would consult teachers I admired from various other spiritual traditions: "So, how am I doing? What else can I do?" Invariably, they would respond, "Just relax." I wasn't exactly sure what they meant, but I certainly didn't think it could be "just relax." How could they mean that? I wasn't "there" yet.

Chogyam Trungpa, a contemporary Tibetan Buddhist teacher, writes, "The problem is that ego can convert anything to its own use, even spirituality." What I brought to my spiritual path included all my needs to be admired, all my insecurities about not being good enough, all my tendencies to judge my inner and outer world. The playing field was larger than my earlier pursuits, but the game was still the same: striving to be a different and better person.

In retrospect, it is no surprise that my self-doubts were transferred intact into my spiritual life. Those who feel plagued by not being good enough are often drawn to idealistic worldviews that offer the possibility of purifying and transcending a flawed nature. This quest for perfection is based in the assumption that we must change ourselves to belong. We may listen longingly to the message that wholeness and goodness have always been our essence, yet still feel like outsiders, uninvited guests at the feast of life.

What has helped me the most since then is to remember that imperfection is not our personal problem, nor is it a "problem" at all. It is a natural part of existing. We all get caught in wants and fears, we all act unconsciously, we all get diseased and deteriorate. If we can learn to relax about imperfection, we no longer lose our life moments in the pursuit of being different and in the fear of what is wrong.

The renowned seventh-century Zen master Seng-tsan taught that true freedom is being "without anxiety about imperfection." This means accepting our human existence and all of life as it is.

While the trance of feeling separate and unworthy is an inherent part of our conditioning as humans, the good news is that so too is our capacity to awaken. We free ourselves from the suffering of trance as we stop the war against ourselves and, instead, learn to relate to our lives with a wise and compassionate heart. When we learn to cultivate and embrace our lives with what I call Radical Acceptance -- accepting all the natural imperfections -- we begin to rediscover the garden: a forgotten but cherished sense of wholeness, wakefulness, and love.

Here is a short talk on the topic titled: "Flowering From Within."

Adapted from Radical Acceptance (2003).

For more by Tara Brach, click here.

For more GPS for the Soul, click here.

 
 
 
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After graduating from college, I moved into an ashram -- a spiritual community -- and enthusiastically devoted myself to the lifestyle for almost 12 years. I felt I had found a path through which I co...
After graduating from college, I moved into an ashram -- a spiritual community -- and enthusiastically devoted myself to the lifestyle for almost 12 years. I felt I had found a path through which I co...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
khanti
Cultivator
10:42 PM on 10/28/2012
Life is never about perfection. It is about accepting, recognizing and dealing with our imperfections so that they do not cause suffering to others and ourselves. A purified mind is free from suffering is not a perfect mind. The Budha is a perfect human in the sense that he is perfect in the Ten Paramis. Dealing with our source of unhappinessems and finding the root causes; having found the root cause we then let go of the source of our suffering.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Ed and Deb Shapiro
03:30 PM on 10/27/2012
Beautiful article :-)
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Imago1122
Hurry up, we're dreaming
12:07 AM on 10/24/2012
Accepting imperfection is getting one step closer to freedom. The freedom to be me, a creation of God, of the universe, or whatever it out there. There is only me. It is the best person I can be. I cannot be someone else. But I do not forget in my imperfection that there are people I've hurt, mistakes I made I wish I hadn't, and that there are better ways of becoming whole.
09:30 AM on 10/23/2012
Jesus is the way, the truth and the life. His instructions are to love Him with all our heart, mind and soul and to love each other as we love ourselves. So focusing continually on yourself and your physical welfare and feelings will always lead you astray. Jesus fills our emptiness with real eternal love.
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1waitasec
jesus isn't the only truth or the only life
11:31 PM on 10/23/2012
seems to me if you don't learn how to love yourself first, you can't love others
02:46 AM on 10/23/2012
It's such a relief to be reminded to accept imperfection. Yes, I'm imperfect, and yes, I am alive. Deep sigh.
06:08 PM on 10/22/2012
Thank you, Tara. I like your idea that the energy you can reclaim from stopping the self-judgment can be redirected towards making change - but only after you accept yourself for WANTING things to change.
06:02 PM on 10/22/2012
Loved this Tara....thanks! I especially like the line, "What has helped me the most since then is to remember that imperfection is not our personal problem, nor is it a "problem" at all. It is a natural part of existing." If we can simply accept that, than some of our struggles stop.