There is a double aspect to this work: standing back to see and change the process of the process, and stepping right in, deeper and deeper, to become the living heart of the process. Eventually both happen naturally and together. It requires real maturity and equanimity to manage this. This is what I mean by intelligence. I remember Jeremy telling me that his piano teacher at the RCM, Yonty Solomon, in their first lesson together, started to work on his posture at the piano. "I've had a bad posture all these years", he said, "why has it taken until now for someone to tell me?" Because he wouldn't have had the maturity to either take it or work on it correctly any earlier I suspect. The fact is that there is constant instruction there all the time and we're either too dull or too busy or too frightened to feel it. The temptation is always to see the world through the fog of your own conditioning. Stepping out of this just long enough to catch a glimpe of the way things really are is all that is necessary. As my teacher once said, "My life has been a life of glimmers."
He had written the
fog as it billowed
before everything
made it new
free from
dreams and
exalted surges.
I feel I am truly a
great man.
I have been asleep.
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Pausing for realignment.
Recentring in heart.
Dispelling habitual morbidity (morbid habit).
Mindful of motive rather than thought.
Gathering delight.
Mustering courage.
Remembering the teaching.
Sapping the source.
Eradicating guilt.
Reconnecting.
Taking a leak.
Plugging the gaps.
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