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MiG 24: Connections

Good morning everyone. Hopefully we’ve all set our intention for the day to be a good one and we’re ready for today’s meditation.

If we’re looking things to feel grateful for, society is an obvious but often overlooked choice. The other people are highly deserving of our thanks. And we could likewise benefit from their reciprocal appreciation as well.

The challenge with honouring our society with gratitude is that today’s large civic populations make our connections to each other less visible. Yet it’s those connections that weave the fabric of any society.

Without the actions of everyone around us the world does not exist nor come alive. So let’s take today to be grateful for their help, and let’s try to have this meditation become a more common one in our lives.

For subjects we can use anyone in our vicinity. For time, we can use any that isn’t occupied with things that employ our thoughts, like reading, learning or concentrating.

It’s for any time waiting in traffic, waiting in line, waiting online, waiting rooms, escalator rides, etc. Instead of getting on your phone do this.

We can then use that time to take any sample person nearby, and then imagine them as someone tangentially important to us. However subtle and indirect, we need only imagine each subject as being someone that creates value in our lives. So maybe:

That last case is there to remind us that the Buddhist sense of causality is real. These chains of effect can be long and complex. But in the end they can absolutely require small negative actions over here, in order to create big, positive results over there.

There are many hands involved with our good fortune. Each day we ride on the backs of others just as they ride on the backs of us and others. We do all truly need each other. And we’d all benefit from acknowledging that more often. To that end:

In today’s meditation, let’s use our creativity to turn the faceless people that we see each day, into the very real people that really are necessary for our life to happen.

Do this in each available time-space. Before the day is done ensure you’ve done this exercise with at least 10 people. And that applies even if you’re shut in and you needed to see them on the evening news or through social media.

Everyone feels the need for more connection. But the size and pace of modern life means that this is not as natural as it was when we lived in much smaller communities, where our interdependence was more noticeable. But that does not prevent us from making it noticeable.

If we’re going to carry any meditations forward on a daily, permanent basis, then this one and the one I’ll post tomorrow are two excellent candidates. Both help reconnect us to others while reminding us that we are also important to them.

peace, s

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