I'm on an email list from an author, Dr. Rick Hanson, who wrote a book called Buddha's Brain. He's worth looking into. Anyway, his email list is called "Just one thing".
Our minds and how we perceive things can change. With depression everything looses it's joy, even the things that used to bring us happiness. Everything is a burden.
This one is called "Step into the Cloud":
Juggling bricks?
The Practice
Step into the cloud.
Why?
I had a lightbulb moment recently: I was feeling stressed about all the stuff I
had to do (you probably know the feeling). After this went on for a while, I stepped
back and kind of watched my mind, and could see that I was thinking of these various
tasks as things, like big rocks that were rolling down a hill toward me and which
needed to be handled, lifted, moved, fended off, or broken into pebbles. As soon
as I dealt with one thing-y boulder, another one was rolling toward me. Shades
of Sisyphus.
Seen as brick-like entities, no wonder these tasks felt heavy, oppressive, burdensome.
Yuch!
But then I realized that in fact the tasks I needed to do were more like clouds
than things. Clouds are made up of lots of vaporous little bits, those bits come
together for a time due to many swirling causes, and then they swirl away again.
Meanwhile, the edge or boundary of a cloud blurs into other clouds or the sky itself.
There is a kind of insubstantiality to clouds, and a softness, a yielding.
For example, take writing an email message: It has lots of little parts to it (the
points you need to take into account, and the words and sentences), it is nested
in a larger context - your relationship to the receiver, the needs that prompted
the email - that (in a sense) calls it forth, and it emerges and passes away. This
email, this task, links to other tasks, sort of blurs into them. Fundamentally,
the email is a kind of process, an event, rather than a thing. It's like you could
put your hand through it.
When I considered my tasks in this way, I immediately felt better: relieved, relaxed.
Tasks felt fluid, like streams or eddies I was stepping into and influencing or
contributing to as best I could before they swirled on and became something else.
Not so weighty or full of inertia; not so resistant, so controlling of me; not bearing
down on me, but instead, something I was flowing into. Then I didn't feel weary
dealing with them. They became fun, lighter; there was more freedom in moving through
them.
And it's not just tasks that are clouds. In a way, everything is a cloud. Everything
is made of parts ("compounded"), everything arises due to causes (so nothing has
absolute self-existence - even "I"), and everything passes away eventually. Everything
in your experience and everything "out there" in the universe is a cloud: every
sensation, thought, object, body, job, career, activity, relationship, rock, raindrop,
planet, galaxy, and moment.
This doesn't mean that clouds are meaningless or that they don't have consequences.
In fact, when you relate to the world in this way, you feel more connected to it,
more a part of it, more tender toward it, and more responsible for it. You love
the cloud!
How?
Start by noticing how everything is continually changing: both what's in your inner
world of thoughts and feelings and in your outer world of people, tasks, and physical
stuff. Pay attention to endings and beginnings. And even if something persists,
know that this is only temporary. Your own body is a cloud, continually changing.
Also recognize how everything is made up of parts. For example, our reactions have
parts (e.g., body sensations, emotions, viewpoints, wants), kitchen tables have
parts, relationships have parts (e.g., history, aspects in different situations),
and tasks have parts.
Appreciate how these changing parts arise and pass away due to many causes. Everything
really is an eddy in the river of reality, emerging and changing and ending because
of 10,000 causes upstream.
Try to feel these facts - impermanence, compoundedness, interdependence: the fundamental
cloudiness of everything - intuitively, emotionally, and in your body, not just
conceptualize them with your mind.
Then consider a task or situation that weighs on you in this light. Reflect on its
many parts, on some of the causes that brought it into being, and on its inherent
transience (even if it's a painfully long transience!). Try to see it more as a
cloud than a brick.
Notice how your mind tries to turn clouds into bricks. To help us survive, the brain
continually tries to make fluid processes (hard for lizards, mice, and monkeys to
deal with) appear to be static entities (much more manageable). It does this through
forming labels, categories, and concepts - and through presuming that everything
is a thing-in-itself rather than only passing frothy foam on a transient wave in
our ocean of a universe.
Enjoy the clouds. Relax. Flow into the clouds of your responsibilities, relationships,
and roles. A cloud yourself, flow into them, through them, beyond them.
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