All day long you use words, strung together as narratives, that you use to describe the world around you. That description—those judgments—are what the Buddhist Illusion is. You start to think that your words are actual things. That your ideas about things are the truth about them. Really, if you have an idea about something, that’s just a story you’re telling yourself. Maybe it’s a story you read in a physics textbook, or maybe it’s a story your wonderful old drunk Uncle Jim told you, but that’s what egos do—they try to describe the world so they can try to define their own place within it. But that doesn’t make the stories true. It just makes them personal and true to the person telling them.
By changing the stories you tell about the world you prove that they are merely stories. Your reality is flexible. That person’s voice might be annoying, but those might also be some fabulous shoes the talker is wearing. Whether you put your attention on the irritating quality of their voice or on their shoes is entirely up to you. But understand that making that choice—the choice of what to think about that person; the choice of what to focus your attention on—that choice is what builds your reality. The sum of that choice is what you experience as reality.
Stop turning the world into a tragedy. Stop making it a horror. Use your inherent ability to focus your attention and choose to see all that’s good in life. Once it becomes a habit (which is quite quickly), you’ll begin to notice that there have always been far more sources of joy than you ever would have previously thought possible.
Head out into the world today with a positive eye. Look for the best in every person, place and thing you encounter. Use compassion and kindness in your dealings, and create a beautiful world by seeing one already in existence. Because that’s how you do it. That’s why Thoreau said, “It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.”
See you later.
peace and love, s
Scott McPherson is an Edmonton-based writer, public speaker, and mindfulness facilitator who works with individuals, companies and non-profit organizations locally and around the world.
I help people achieve better mental health by teaching them about reality.
