A solid place

Be strong then, and enter into your own body; there you have a solid place for your feet.
Kabir says this:

just throw away all thoughts of imaginary things,
and stand firm in that which you are.

Kabir, 1398 – 1518, I said to the wanting-creature inside me

Release from suffering

Suffering arises when we say ‘this is me, this is mine.’

Release comes when we see: there is no owner, only the flow of experience.

Andrew Olendzki, The Roots of Mindfulness

Enjoy the ride

Rather than being disheartened by the ambiguity, the uncertainty of life,

what if we accepted it and relaxed into it?

What if we said, “Yes, this is the way it is; this is what it means to be human,” and decided to sit down and enjoy the ride?

Pema Chödrön, Living Beautifully with Uncertainty and Change

The inner arrival of Spring

There is a latent potential hidden in the dark days of winter and of our lives – “new beginnings” awaiting, much like snowdrops pushing up through frozen ground.

May the dew of dreams
Fresh on the fields of night
Revive your courage
To take the first steps
Towards what you love.

May your mind stay clear
To sense the secret bounty
Waiting in the bleak
And brilliant moments of your life.

May your spirit risk
The slow excitement
Of a new beginning
That will take you home
To a place you have never known.

John O’Donohue, For the New Year


Sunday quote: Life is preparing to emerge

The first day of Spring in the Celtic calendar. The Celtic celebration of Imbolc: Trust in the timing of life.

Sitting quietly, doing nothing;
Spring comes, and the grass grows by itself.

Matsuo Basho, 1644 – 1694

trust in the present moment

When you let go of all the noise and busyness in the mind, you discover a profound stillness. And in that stillness, there is bliss – not the worldly happiness that depends on conditions, but an unconditioned joy that arises from simply being at peace.

This bliss isn’t something you create; it’s always been here, hidden beneath the clutter of thinking. Like the sun behind the clouds, it’s revealed when the obstructions fade. You don’t need to chase it. You only need to soften, to release, and to trust in the present moment.

As the mind grows quieter, you’ll feel it: a radiant warmth, a lightness, as if the body is smiling from within. This is piti (rapture), the first flavor of bliss. If you don’t grasp at it, it deepens into sukha – a serene, unshakable contentment that needs no reason to exist.

Ajahn Brahn, Mindfulness, Bliss, and Beyond