Dropping Judgement, Accepting Consequences
Dropping Judgement, Accepting Consequences requires a certain maturity, and willingness to stop automatic behaviours through mindful attention.
Wayne C. Allen - a simple Zen guy - writes about living and relating elegantly
Dropping Judgement, Accepting Consequences requires a certain maturity, and willingness to stop automatic behaviours through mindful attention.
Self-responsibility is the ceaseless action of walking a path. The wise path, the one path, in all cases, is dropping the ego.
You might think of what you’ve read in the other 2 category articles as leading to or finding their fulfillment in Attentiveness.
Many times we’ve mentioned how people operate out of a skewed view of how life is, and who they are. This view is embedded into our sub-conscious minds through the normal growing up and learning process — something I call the ego development project.
One of the earliest teachings of the Buddha concerns the nature of life, and is often called the Four Noble Truths, or perhaps more clearly, the 4 Preeminent Realities.
I’ve been thinking lately about how conditioned we are. Let me quickly set a couple of parameters about this — Normal, Marginalized, and the Fringe