Regard all experiences as dreams.
From the Lojong for the Layperson booklet:
This
statement should not be mistaken for a doctrine of nothingness – things aren’t literally a dream. Judy Lief explains
that this slogan helps us “face up to our desire to make everything solid,”
which we are apt to interpret as security. Yet everything is in a state of
transition; even a mountain changes from day to day. Our thoughts and emotions
are insubstantial too. The anger and rage we had toward the careless driver
last week are now only a dim memory. As Pema Chodron states, “Every situation
is a passing memory.” What we perceive is not in a fixed position but a state
of flux. Pretending otherwise is like an attempt to, in Traleg Kyabgon’s words,
“scoop water with a net.”
Photo: Smoke from Palo Santo incense in an abalone shell.
Do you remember the mood rings from the 1970s? The glass stone had heat-sensitive liquid crystals in a strip beneath it that made it change colors based on the temperature. The first one I bought seemed to show no color change - it stayed black no matter how hard I stared at it. Eventually I forgot about it and got busy with other things. I was surprised to discover later it had turned a lovely shade of green. We all have moments when our emotions seem so intense and overwhelming; our thoughts tell us life will never change and will always be this way. But nothing is rigid and fixed, whether thoughts, emotions or circumstances. Like the wispy smoke in the card, they may appear permanent, but we are just observing one phase of an ongoing procession.
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