April 26, 2008

"I Need Your Love—Is that True?"

by Byron Katie

Book Description:
I Need Your Love—Is That True? examines a universal, age-old source of anxiety: our relationships with others. In this book, Katie helps you question everything you have been taught to do to gain love and approval. In doing this, you discover how to find genuine love and connection.

I Need Your Love—Is That True? helps you illuminate every area in your life where you seem to lack what you long for most—the love of your spouse, the respect of your child, a lover’s tenderness, or the esteem of your boss. Through its penetrating inquiry, you will quickly discover the falseness of the accepted ways of seeking love and approval, and also of the mythology that equates love with need. Using the method in this book, you will inquire into painful beliefs that you’ve based your whole life on—and be delighted to see them evaporate. Katie shows you how unraveling the knots in the search for love, approval, and appreciation brings real love and puts you in charge of your own happiness.

This book takes a close look at what works and what doesn’t in the quest for love and approval. It will help you find a way to be happier in love and more effective in all your relationships. What you learn here will bring fulfillment to all kinds of relationships, including romantic love, dating, marriage, work, and friendship.

Memorable Quotes:

Love is wonderful—except when we are searching for it, trying to hold on to it, or missing it.

Your most intimate relationship is the one you have with your thoughts. The way you relate to your thoughts determines everything else in your life, and in particular how you relate to other people.

...the most universally held beliefs about what you need to be liked, loved, or appreciated are untrue, and that they lead to a false and stressful life.

There's nothing left now between you and love except what you haven't resolved inside yourself.

“...when you do question your thoughts, you find out that the world is a much kinder place than you had imagined, and there's no need to go to sleep in fear or wake up anxious. When you really start to look, the world is full of love, and there's plenty to go around.” John Tarrant

...seeking love and approval is a sure way to lose awareness of both.

Most people are so busy making improvements (to their lives) they don't notice they've stepped out of heaven.

There's no reason to believe that thoughts match reality.

Anxiously focusing on the other person, checking for approval or disapproval, leaves nobody at home in yourself, nobody noticing your thoughts or taking responsibility for your feelings. This cuts you off from the source of real contentment.

When you say or do anything to please, get, keep, influence, or control anyone or anything, fear is the cause and pain is the result. Manipulation is separation, and separation is painful. Another person can love you totally in that moment, and you'd have no way of realizing it. If you act from fear, there's no way you can receive love, because you're trapped in a thought about what you have to do for love. Every stressful thought separates you from people.

My experience is that I need no one to complete me. As soon as I realize that, everyone completes me.

We don't know that we can simply love, and that we can simply ask for what we want, with no strings attached.

When you no longer put your energy into seeking approval, you can open your arms to criticism and see it as a gift.

Without the stressful thoughts that separate us from one another, there is only one mind, and it's everywhere.

This is about your own empowerment, your ability to see things as they really are, through the eyes of love.

Yes, every single human being is trying his best. We're all doing the best we can. But when we believe what we think, we have to live out those thoughts. When there's chaos in our heads, there's chaos in our lives. When there's hurt in our thinking, there's hurt in our lives. If I hate someone, I'm mistaking them for me, and solutions remain hidden.

The word need suggest a permanent state of mind. But if you look at your experiences clearly, you'll see that there aren't any permanent states of mind.

Once a painful concept is met with understanding, the next time it appears you may find it interesting. What used to be the nightmare is now just interesting. The next time it appears, you may find it funny. The next time you may not even notice it. This is the power of loving what is.

“Oh shit!” marks the point where reality and your plan parted ways. Things don't seem to be going your way, and to the best of your ability you're going to fight reality, even if all you can do is swear, kick a rock, or give someone you love a hard time. The more you stick to the belief that you're in control, the more of these moments there are in your life.

Questioning the thought that arises when you hit a bump in your life can radically change the quality of your whole existence.

“What I need is what I have.” This is not something to believe, it's the way things are right now, whether you believe it or not.

Noticing and counting the beautiful reasons unexpected things happen for ends the mystery. ...”counting the genuine ways that this unexpected event happened for me, rather than to me” isn't a game. It's an exercise in observing the nature of life. It's a way of putting yourself back into reality, into the kindness of the nature of things.

One of the most loving acts you can do for yourself, and for everyone else, is to ask, “Right now, in this moment, whose business am I in?”

There is no more loving way to be with someone than to stay out of his or her business mentally.

...whenever you suffer, inquire, look at the thoughts you're thinking, and set yourself free. Be a child. Know nothing. Take your ignorance all the way to your freedom.

This inquiry isn't manipulation. It's going inside yourself for the love of truth and finding your own answers. If you have any trouble loving yourself, your work isn't done.

The truth is no respecter of spiritual concepts. “I should love myself”—ugh, on what planet? Love is not a doing. There is nothing you have to do. And when you question your mind, you can see that the only thing that keeps you from being love is a stressful thought.

I am reality: this means that I am the perfect one to be me and no one else can be it. ...there are no mistakes in this perfect world (universe), which is a tapestry of pure delight and beauty when seen through the eyes of someone who isn't arguing with what is.

There are two ways of being me: One is to hate it or love it. Which will it be? Okay, I'll be me, and question my thoughts about me until I see me as perfect in every way, even sweeter than perfect. Someone has got to be happy in this world. Good that's me. I definitely volunteer.

“Should” is the story of a past or future, and it's hopeless to ague with what is.

If you say one single thing that I have the urge to defend, that thing is the very pearl waiting inside me to be discovered.

When you don't believe your stressful thoughts, all that's left are love and laughter.

Love is what you are already. Love doesn't seek anything. It's already complete. It doesn't want, doesn't need, has no shoulds. It already has everything it wants, it already is everything it wants, just the way it wants it.

Love wouldn't deny a breath. It wouldn't deny a grain of sand or a speck of dust. It is totally in love with itself, and it delights in acknowledging itself through its own presence, in every way, without limit. Love is so vast within itself that it will burn you up. It's so vast that there's nothing you can do with it. All you can do is be it.


Other books by Byron Katie:
Loving What Is
Question Your Thinking, Change the World
A Thousand Names for Joy

April 19, 2008

"Crossing the Desert"

Learning to let go,
see clearly, and live simply
by Robert J Wicks

Publisher Comments:
Crossing the Desert is the first book to offer a psychological perspective on the early Christian monastic movement of the Desert Fathers and Mothers. Dr. Wick's insights on the dynamics of letting go and living freely draw directly on their spiritual wisdom. He explores the ancient desert monks and nuns through a psychological lens, using their wisdom to guide readers towards humility and freedom. In the same way the desert sages never gave answers, but always asked questions, Crossing the Desert presents readers with the four desert questions that will lead them to take three steps to inner freedom.

Memorable Quotes:

There is nothing so strong as gentleness and nothing so gentle as real strength.

“Reclaiming our true self requires a total transformation. It requires a long and often slow process in which we enter more and more into the truth.” Henri Nouwen

...our psychological arms are full of so much that is unnecessary and harmful to our sense of simplicity and peace.

...our challenge will be to recall the question: Am I still truly serious about seeking what will free me?

“Am I taking enough risks to fully enjoy what I already have?”

...a spirit of humble gratitude slows us down to recognize the need to pace our life differently so we can see ourselves, life, and our surroundings in a new way.

We must be willing to constantly sit on the edge of mystery and unlearn what has helped guide us in the past but is no longer useful now.

1. What am I filled with now?
2. What prevents me from letting go?
3. How do I empty myself?
4. What will satisfy me yet leave me open to more?

Every day the goal is to increase our wisdom and be more natural and free in our compassion.

A listening spirit is also important because it allows us to be open enough to be surprised by life.

“Smooth seas do not make skillful sailors.”African proverb

“When you die God will hold you responsible for all the gifts you have been given that you didn't enjoy.” The Jerusalem Talmud

“You are all perfect as you are. But you could all use a little improvement.”Zen Master Shunryu Suzuki


Other books by Robert J Wicks:
Seeds of Sensitivity: Deepening Your Spiritual Life
Touching the Holy: Ordinariness, Self-Esteem & Friendship
Riding the Dragon: 10 Lessons...
Simple Changes: Overcoming Barriers...
Sharing Wisdom: ...Giving & Receiving Mentoring
Living Simply in an Anxious World
Living a Gentle, Passionate Life
After 50: Spiritually Embracing Your Own Wisdom Years

April 12, 2008

Next Canada, then Mongolia!

Yes, I will be biking across Canada this summer, then in September I will be teaching English for a year in Mongolia.

Mike, my friend and frequent bike partner, has been planning our bike trip across Canada ever since we got back from our New Zealand bike trip back in 2006. Our plan is start June 8th in Vancouver, British Columbia, on the west coast, and spend the summer biking to Halifax, Nova Scotia, on the eastern seaboard. Basically our route will follow the border between Canada and the USA. Mike has several alternate routes, so I'm not exactly where we will be traveling for sure. Never fear, I will be posting my daily journal and hopefully lots of pictures.


I should be flying back home before August 28th. And then, less than two weeks later, I should be flying to Ulaanbataar Mongolia.

Through the monks at Nalanda Monastery in France, I found out a Buddhist center was looking for volunteers to teach English in the the capital city of Mongolia. Even after I sent a ton of emails full of questions, the center was still delighted that I wanted to come and help out. I am currently taking a TESL (Teaching English as a Second Language) Certification course to better prepare me for my position in Ulaanbataar. I will be in Mongolia for a year.


Below are links to some Mongolia info sites plus a few blogs:

Links:

World Fact Book: Mongolia
World Atlas: Mongolia

Shedrup Ling Center is where they teach English
Dolma Ling Community Center: Soup kitchen and clinic
FPMT Mongolia website

In order to better understand what it's like living and working in Ulaanbataar, I have been following a few blogs of Peace Corps Volunteers currently in Mongolia.

Blogs:

My Peace Corps Adventure: Robin has been in Mongolia since June'07 and now works at the Aimag Children Center in Ovorhoungai

Roughing it in Mongolia: Emily is a community economic development volunteer working in a RASP (Rural Agribusiness Support Program) office of Mercy Corps.

Cady and Peter in Mongolia: Peter is teaching English, and Cady works in the Business/NGO-Community in Economic Development in Darkhan

Alli and Mike in Mongolia are Peace Corps teachers in Hovsgul

Why live on the edge...jump off instead!: Kim is in her second year in Mongolia

Mongolia:

The Mongolia Messenger: Mongolia's First English Newspaper
UB Post: Independent Weekly News in English

Mongoluls.net: A passion for Mongolia
Mongolia FAQ: about Mongolia and Mongolians

Lingua Mongolia: promotes the study of the Mongolian language
Mongolian Language: Introduction & Tutorials
The FunkyMongolian: interactive Mongolian tutor
English-to-Mongolian online dictionary

April 6, 2008

"What Should I Do with My Life?"

by Po Bronson

Book Description:
In What Should I Do with My Life? Po Bronson tells the inspirational true stories of people who have found the most meaningful answers to that great question. With humor, empathy, and insight, Bronson writes of remarkable individuals—from young to old, from those just starting out to those in a second career—who have overcome fear and confusion to find a larger truth about their lives and, in doing so, have been transformed by the experience. What Should I Do with My Life? struck a powerful, resonant chord on publication, causing a multitude of people to rethink their vocations and priorities and start on the path to finding their true place in the world. For this edition, Bronson has added nine new profiles, to further reflect the range and diversity of those who broke away from the chorus to learn the sound of their own voice.

Memorable Quotes:

Nothing seemed more brave to me than facing up to one's own identity, and filtering out the chatter that tells us to be someone we're not.

Curiosity is a raw and genuine sign from deep inside out tangled psyches, and we'd do well to follow the direction it points us in.

“Fear is like a wound within our emotions,” (Za Rinpoche) said. You heal a fear much like you heal a cut on your hand. If you ignore a cut on your hand, it will get infected. But it will heal itself if you pay attention to it and give it time. Same with fear. First, recognize its existence-what kind of fear is it? Is it fear of poverty, of loneliness, of rejection? Then use common sense. Don't let the fear get infected. Often we burn 70% of our emotional energy on what we fear might happen (90% of which won't happen). By devoting our energy to our other emotions, we will heal them.

Tell them it's okay not to have an answer, but it's not okay to stop looking for one.

People who don't have passions don't struggle.

...your place in life. It's not a puzzle that can be figured out on paper. You have to try something, see if it works, and learn from it.

The right question is, How can I find something that moves my heart, so that the inevitable crap storm is bearable?

Being guided by the heart is almost never something an intellectually motivated person chooses to do. It's something that happens to them - usually something painful.

...mistaking intensity for passion. It's a common mistake. Intensity is external; passion invokes something inside you. It's a call-and-response with your soul. It's not just adrenaline.

We all have our ways of looking at the world, and we have to ask, “Am I looking through my own eyes, or am I looking through glasses I don't even realize are there?”

Inevitably, getting into an environment of like-minded people – inevitably, it means you have to ditch your old support system, family or friends or coworkers or dorm-mates. You have to inflict pain on people who love you. Oh, they can still be your friends, still love you – but the seat you've saved for them at your Inner Circle has to be given to someone new. And this is never done without the sting of rejection and the collar of guilt.

Traveling can take you away from all those influences (deadlines, parents chirping in your ear, friends wanting you to go out), quiet their din, and allow you a kind of silence to consider who you are as an independent entity.

“And when you start to think that you haven't been the pilot of your life for a long, long time, you have no other choice but to hear what your soul is saying.” unknown

Traveling without a plan is a way to rehearse the improvisational approach, and open your mind to the sense of adventure. You learn to trust the laws of chance.

Don't doubt your desire because it comes to you as a whisper...

The things we really want to do are usually the ones that scare us the most.

It's okay if you don't have it figured out, as long as you don't stop figuring.