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A Way of Seeing

A Way of Seeing

By Mary Cook, M.A., R.A.S.

Mary Cook, MA. R.A.S.

When I need what is not mine to receive, my ego is in charge.  When I include myself in the wonders of creation, I am not separate from what I need.  When I fight against my own pain, I add toxins to the wound.  When I compassionately feel the pain, the wound is cleansed and dressed.  Babies crying can elicit our love or resentment, depending on how we feel toward the infant inside of us.  Parched earth can lead us to water the land or embitter us to the lack of sustenance.  It depends on how much the darkness of deprivation has obscured the light of hope for us.  Someone in a rage can trigger our own anger, escalating the damage.  Or it can remind us how much suffering there is in the world and reinforce our refusal to participate.  It depends on whether we see the world as victims and aggressors or whether we see violence as a symptom of ignorance and uncontained pain.  Arrogance and self-righteousness can incite debate and divisiveness, unless we understand it is fear pretending to be pride.  To understand another, we must look deeply within ourselves.  To understand ourselves, we must see beyond what our mind thinks we are.

We begin our life depending on others for survival, thinking they are a part of us.  We communicate in cries and coos, smiles and screams.  Some needs are met and we feel whole and hopeful.  Some needs are not met and we may even be punished for having them.  Then we feel fragmented and threatened.  Our opinion of ourselves is formed from how important others treat us.  The amount of fear we experience determines the quality of our survival and sets a pattern for how we see the world.  Without tools to address painful feelings and unmet needs, we defend against them.  This creates more internal and external conflict.  Defensive responses give the original problem more power and tend to instill fear and create problems for others as well.

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We wonder why we feel chronically angry, depressed and empty.  We are flawed and our life is incomplete because it is the nature of the human condition.  Yet our mission is much larger than the human condition.  When we fail, fall or falter, we have a chance to be free of harsh judgement and unworkable expectations.  When we are beaten, bleeding and broken, we can embrace a benevolent attitude toward all suffering.  Painful admissions, emptied ambitions and broken hearts invite a larger truth.  Just as admitting powerlessness and unmanageability over addictions, invites not just a solution, but a whole new way of seeing and behaving, continual suffering and struggling in any area of our life can be transformed with a spiritual perspective.

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