Of all the things the mind can perceive, that enable us to decide what is and what isn't. If it isn't, isn't it real? What is reality? how do we understand it? What is consciousness, our ability to be aware? This is an effort to collect some information I have stumbled upon in my amazing voyage of discovery. This is a blog about the Vedas and the String theory, the observer and the observed, the phenomenon and perception and finally about the amazing masters who saw it and their teachings.
Showing posts with label Attachment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Attachment. Show all posts

Letting go of attachment

http://tinybuddha.com/

“Most of our troubles are due to our passionate desire for and attachment to things that we misapprehend as enduring entities.” ~Dalai Lama


If there’s one thing we all have in common it’s that we want to feel happy; and on the other side of that coin, we want to avoid hurting. Yet we consistently put ourselves in situations that set us up for pain.

We pin our happiness to people, circumstances, and things and hold onto them for dear life. We stress about the possibility of losing them when something seems amiss. Then we melt into grief when something changes—a lay off, a break up, a transfer.

We attach to feelings as if they define us, and ironically, not just positive ones. If you’ve wallowed in regret or disappointment for years, it can seem safe and even comforting to suffer.

In trying to hold on to what’s familiar, we limit our ability to experience joy in the present. A moment can’t possibly radiate fully when you’re suffocating it in fear.

When you stop trying to grasp, own, and control the world around you, you give it the freedom to fulfill you without the power to destroy you. That’s why letting go is so important: letting go is letting happiness in.

It’s no simple undertaking to let go of attachment—not a one-time decision, like pulling off a band-aid. Instead, it’s a day-to-day, moment-to-moment commitment that involves changing the way you experience and interact with everything you instinctively want to grasp.

The best approach is to start simple, at the beginning, and work your way to Zen.

Experiencing Without Attachment

Accept the moment for what it is. Don’t try to turn it into yesterday; that moment’s gone. Don’t plot about how you can make the moment last forever. Just seep into the moment and enjoy it because it will eventually pass. Nothing is permanent. Fighting that reality will only cause you pain.

Believe now is enough. It’s true—tomorrow may not look the same as today, no matter how much you try to control it. A relationship might end. You might have to move. You’ll deal with those moments when they come. All you need right now is to appreciate and enjoy what you have. It’s enough.

Call yourself out. Learn what it looks like to grasp at people, things, or circumstances so you can redirect your thoughts when they veer toward attachment. When you dwell on keeping, controlling, manipulating, or losing something instead of simply experiencing it.

Define yourself in fluid terms. We are all constantly evolving and growing. Define yourself in terms that can withstand change. Defining yourself by possessions, roles, and relationships breeds attachment because loss entails losing not just what you have, but also who you are.

Enjoy now fully. No matter how much time you have in an experience or with someone you love, it will never feel like enough. So don’t think about it in terms of quantity—aim for quality, instead. Attach to the idea of living well moment-to-moment. That’s an attachment that can do you no harm.

Letting Go of Attachment to People

Friend yourself. It will be harder to let people go when necessary if you depend on them for your sense of worth. Believe you’re worthy whether someone else tells you or not. This way, you relate to people—not just how they make you feel about yourself.

Go it alone sometimes. Take time to foster your own interests, ones that nothing and no one can take away. Don’t let them hinge on anyone or anything other than your values and passion.

Hold lightly. This one isn’t just about releasing attachments—it’s also about maintaining healthy relationships. Contrary to romantic notions, you are not someone’s other half. You’re separate and whole. You can still hold someone to close to your heart; just remember, if you squeeze too tightly, you’ll both be suffocated.

Interact with lots of people. If you limit yourself to one or two relationships they will seem like your lifelines. Everyone needs people, and there are billions on the planet. Stay open to new connections. Accept the possibility your future involves a lot of love whether you cling to a select few people or not.

Justify less. I can’t let him go—I’ll be miserable without him. I’d die if I lost her—she’s all that I have. These thoughts reinforce beliefs that are not fact, even if they feel like it. The only way to let go and feel less pain is to believe you’re strong enough to carry on if and when things change.

Letting Go of Attachment to the Past

Know you can’t change the past. Even if you think about over and over again. Even if you punish yourself. Even if you refuse to accept it. It’s done. The only way to relieve your pain about what happened is to give yourself relief. No one and nothing else can create peace in your head for you.

Love instead of fearing. When you hold onto the past, it often has to do with fear: fear you messed up your chance at happiness, or fear you’ll never know such happiness again. Focus on what you love and you’ll create happiness instead of worrying about it.

Make now count. Instead of thinking of what you did or didn’t do, the type of person you were or weren’t, do something worthwhile now. Be someone worthwhile now. Take a class. Join a group. Help someone who needs it. Make today so full and meaningful there’s no room to dwell on yesterday.

Narrate calmly. How we experience the world is largely a result of how we internalize it. Instead of telling yourself dramatic stories about the past—how hurt you were or how hard it was—challenge your emotions and focus on lessons learned. That’s all you really need from yesterday.

Open your mind. We often cling to things, situations or people because we’re comfortable with them. We know how they’ll make us feel, whether it’s happy or safe. Consider that new things, situations and people may affect you the same. The only way to find out is to let go of what’s come and gone.

Letting Go of Attachment to Outcomes

Practice letting things be. That doesn’t mean you can’t actively work to create a different tomorrow. It just means you make peace with the moment as it is, without worrying that something’s wrong with you or your life, and then operate from a place of acceptance.

Question your attachment. If you’re attached to a specific outcome—a dream job, the perfect relationship—you may be indulging an illusion about some day when everything will be lined up for happiness. No moment will ever be worthier of your joy than now because that’s all there ever is.

Release the need to know. Life entails uncertainty, no matter how strong your intention. Obsessing about tomorrow wastes your life because there will always be a tomorrow on the horizon. There are no guarantees about how it will play out. Just know it hinges on how well you live today.

Serve your purpose now. You don’t need to have x-amount of money in the bank to live a meaningful life right now. Figure out what matters to you, and fill pockets of time indulging it. Audition for community theater. Volunteer with animals. Whatever you love, do it. Don’t wait—do it now.

Teach others. It’s human nature to hope for things in the future. Even the most enlightened people fall into the habit from time to time. Remind yourself to stay open to possibilities by sharing the idea with other people. Blog about it. Talk about it. Tweet about it. Opening up helps keep you open.

Letting Go of Attachment to Feelings

Understand that pain is unavoidable. No matter how well you do everything on this list, or on your own short list for peace, you will lose things that matter and feel some level of pain. But it doesn’t have to be as bad as you think. As the saying goes, pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.

Vocalize your feelings. Feel them, acknowledge them, express them, and then let them naturally transform. Even if you want to dwell in anger, sadness or frustration—especially if you feel like dwelling—save yourself the pain and commit to working through them.

Write it down. Then toss it out. You won’t always have the opportunity to express your feelings to the people who inspired them. That doesn’t mean you need to swallow them. Write in a journal. Write a letter and burn it. Anything that helps you let go.

Xie Xie. It means thank you in Chinese. Fully embrace your happy moments—love with abandon; be so passionate it’s contagious. If a darker moment follows, remember: it will teach you something, and soon enough you’ll be in another happy moment to appreciate. Everything is cyclical.

Yield to peace. The ultimate desire is to feel happy and peaceful. Even if you think you want to stay angry, what you really want is to be at peace with what happened or will happen. It takes a conscious choice. Make it.

Zen your now. Experience, appreciate, enjoy, and let go to welcome another experience.

It won’t always be easy. Sometimes you’ll feel compelled to attach yourself physically and mentally to people and ideas—as if it gives you some sense of control or security. You may even strongly believe you’ll be happy if you struggle to hold onto what you have. That’s OK. It’s human nature.

Just know you have the power to choose from moment to moment how you experience things you enjoy: with a sense of ownership, anxiety, and fear, or with a sense of freedom, peace and love.

The most important question: what do you choose right now?

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Relationships

The following is from A Conscious Person's Guide to
Relationships by Ken Keyes, Jr. (ISBN 0-915972-00-X),
Chapter 8:

8

Involvement, Yes;
Addiction, No.

To get the most from your relationship, you'll find it helpful
to distinguish between involvement with a person and addiction
to being with the person. Let's define these two kky terms.
Involvement means "l share my life with you." Addiction means "l
create the experience that I am lost without you. I need you to
be happy."

Involvement means spending a lot of time together. Addiction
means creating emotion-backed demands in my head that dictate
what my partner should say and do -- it means "ownership."
Involvement means that I choose to share a large part of my life
with my beloved and build a mutual reality together. Addiction
means that I feel insecure without someone -- l want him or her
to save me. My involvement gives me the opportunity to
experience all of the beautiful, loving things that a
relationship can bring into my life. It also lets us shoulder
together the responsibilities and problems of life and develop a
mutual trust. Addiction opens a can of worms that makes me
tarnish the beauty of my relationship. It makes me impose a lot
of emotion-backed models of how my partner should be for me to
let myself be happy.

Since involvement offers us the deeper enjoyments of a
relationship, and addiction leads to misery in a relationship,
let's look more closely at how involvement and addiction
interact. It's possible to have a relationship in which there
is:
1. Maximum involvement and maximum addiction.
2. Minimum involvement and maximum addiction.
3. Minimum involvement and minimum addiction.
4. Maximum involvement and minimum addiction.

Since these four possibilities create varying degrees of heaven
or hell in a relationship, let's find out how you can set up
your relationship so that it can be as heavenly as possible.
But first, remember that I am talking about your own involvement
and your own addictions. It does not refer to what your partner
says or does. Instead it puts the spotlight on how you are
operating your head. And this is good news. Any approach to
getting the most out of life that depends on manipulating or
changing another person is ultimately doomed to fail. But when
you know how to succeed within yourself, you have all the aces
in your hand. Actually it's only your mental habits that stand
between you and your continuous enjoyment of the melodrama of
your life.

Let's look at setup number one -- maximum involvement with
maximum addiction. In this state you have deeply involved your
life with the life of another person. You are living with your
partner, and are usually with him or her many hours each day.
You are addicted to being with this person. You have
"territorial" feelings toward your beloved; you have many
emotion-backed demands of how this person should act to fit your
models. We often call this situation "romantic love." Once the
romance is killed by addictions, what's left is just "possessive
love."

Romantic or possessive love is unstable and tends to be
emotionally explosive. Frequently heard are such statements as
"lf you really loved me you would . . . ." (fill in your
addictive demand). This romantic-possessive aspect of the
maximum involvement and maximum addiction phase keeps you yo-
yoing up and down. You're very happy when things are fitting
your addictions; you're very unhappy when they aren't. And in
this phase, love is highly conditional. I love you when you
meet my addictive models, and I'm rejecting you when you don't.
Romantic or possessive love can create beautiful feelings at
times. But it is a bumpy road-often with a washout at the end.

Now let's look at what happens when you have minimum involvement
and maximum addiction. This is when the tears get to flow in
your soap opera. It's usually called "broken heart." Minimum
involvement means that you do not spend much time (or any time)
with the other person, but you're still creating the experience
that your happiness depends on being with him or her. Minimum
involvement and maximum addiction sets you up for triggering
disillusionment, cynicism, anger, resentment and the whole
Pandora's box of separating emotions. Although you're not
involved in living together, your mind can still produce an
intense experience of jealousy.

A third type of situation occurs when there is minimum
involvement and minimum addiction. It's often called "good
friends." Since minimum involvement means that you're not
spending much time together, you're not tuning in to the richer
veins of human experience that more involvement offers.
However, you're not creating a lot of stuff either, since your
mind is not playing out heavy addictions about how the
relationship should be. With minimum involvement and minimum
addiction, your relationship is generally a light and pleasant
one.

It's the fourth state that gives you all of the goodies of a
deep relationship and none of the unhappiness. This is
characterized by maximum involvement and minimum addiction. In
this state, you consciously enjoy the relationship and
realistically play the relationship game. By living together
and having the opportunity to more deeply participate in each
other's thoughts and feelings, you have the greatest opportunity
to create all of the beautiful sharings that the relationship
can bring you. And yet by minimizing your addiction, you do not
keep the here-and-now muddied up with emotion-backed demands
that your partner say and do things differently.

In this ideal state, your love is less and less conditional.
You can communicate with your partner and tell him or her what
you prefer in the relationship. But you quickly work on
yourself to handle any addictions you are creating that can chip
away at your feelings of love. You get to cooperate in the
great adventure of life together and to contribute to each
other's well-being. Here's a chart that can be helpful in
sorting out how involvement and addiction interact to determine
the quality and quantity of your relationship.


INVOLVEMENT ADDICTION WHAT'S HAPPENING

Romantic or
Maximum Maximum Possessive Love

Minimum Maximum Broken Heart

Minimum Minimum Friends

All the Goodies
Maximum Minimum No Unhappiness

The importance of working on your addictions is spotlighted by
what I'm going to call the "law" governing relationships: IF YOU
DON'T HANDLE YOUR ADDICTIONS, YOU'LL AUTOMATICALLY DECREASE YOUR
INVOLVEMENT. From this it follows that to maintain a high level
of involvement or to increase your involvement, you must handle
your addictions. Now you've got the key to living "happily ever
after" -- or at least knowing what the problem is!

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