When I help someone I’m not some kind of magician. I don’t make any water go away. I teach people how to swim (in their own consciousness). Even after enlightenment, the Buddha still had Mara (hell/the devil) for a companion. The water of life will always be there. But that’s no big deal once you truly accept the fundamental truth that we are all naturally buoyant, plus you can learn how to swim to wherever you want to go.
You’re trying to figure out how to get better and I’m telling you that you’re already better, you just don’t know how to enact your own natural health. By asking the questions, why am I so sad? or what’s wrong with me? we weigh ourselves down with those heavy ideas. We use words to build magnifying glasses so that we can study all of the things we don’t like about ourselves and the world. I think you can see that it’s obviously impossible to lead a good and happy life when you are choosing to focus on things that don’t make you feel either good or happy.
When you say, Scott I cannot be happy because this terrible event happened in my past, I simply remind you that you are talking about another day’s weight, today. You must work to carry that weight into today. You had to remember that story, then build it in words. In fact, the weight is made of the words. The words tell stories that create chemical reactions which you feel as emotions. If you find your words are heavy, stop creating them with your imagination. Then the natural buoyancy of your soul can carry you back to the fresh air of the surface.
Everyone argues with me. You all tell me that you cannot let go because--because I don’t understand how bad it was. And yet I do. Because all human beings are using the same chemistry to create our experiences. We’ve all cycled through the chemicals that you’re using right now. So we can be empathetic if your description of the chemical is evocative enough. You can help us to remember when we were afflicting ourselves with it. But even if we are empathetic, that won’t help you until you choose to drop the weight of the words. And if you argue, it’s just more words.
Do not hold yourself down with words. Do not drown in concepts of your own making. Do not create broken hearts and troubled souls and personal violations and betrayed trusts. All of these words will add up and they will weigh you down. Nothing is needed but your quiet self. Without the weight of your story, you will naturally float to the surface where the breathing is easier.
Go quiet. Let go. Rise naturally into peace.
I look forward to meeting you there.
Warm regards,
peace. 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.
