
Coming home
is entirely worth it
even if it takes “forever”

Coming home
is entirely worth it
even if it takes “forever”


What if it was all a lie?

The trust that has been placed on me by my teachers
I shall not defraud

From doing The Work on my most shameful and embarrassing thoughts I have been able to see how innocent the whole enterprise of believing my thoughts has been, how there has been no substantive reality to thoughts such as “I’m a terrible person,” “he wronged me” or “I’m ugly.” Making friends with the thoughts that would tear me down has been an incredible journey and as a result I am so much happier and relaxed.
Now, it only dawned on me recently that there was an entire class of thoughts that I was still not comfortable with and that I still secretly wished would go away: the thoughts that would tell me that “I’m better/smarter/more compassionate/more enlightened than others.” Having these thoughts, I felt, was not only wrong but actually proof that I had not learned anything in all these years of dutifully practicing self inquiry of this or that type. My resistance to those thoughts was such that I did not even want to look at them, let alone question them. To push them away, that’s what I’d do with them.
One day, however, I began to notice this very fact and that felt really humbling. I can see them now and humor them, accept that they are there, when they are there. “What have they got to do with me/with what’s real?,” I tell me. It’s such a good feeling, to befriend what is, and what is sometimes looks like thoughts I would label as those only an arrogant person would have.
And is that true?
…
My answer to this question brings me closer to the realization that it is OK to have the thoughts that I have. It really is OK. It’s only a problem if and when I believe them, and I have The Work for that.
It’s a good thing, the workings of it all.
Sometimes I tell my story to stay identified.
Sometimes I tell my story to free myself from it.
Can I tell the difference?

The ways that you love me
Leave me to myself
Thank you

Caught in a self-centered dream, only suffering.
Holding to self-centered thoughts, exactly the dream.
Each moment, life as it is, the only teacher.
Being just this moment, compassion’s way.
-From the Ordinary Mind Zen school chant book

Life makes a beautiful mosaic
out of the broken peaces

A happy guy in the room
and all of a sudden
This Wound
this wonderful, delicious wound.
Alarm bell, bearer of life
all consumed in a sudden blow
without resistance.
Not even the ashes remain.
…
A happy guy in the room again

This is amazing!
I am finally Home.
All the more amazing: I never was not.
Is it time wasted, when I think otherwise?
Or does it help me see every part of my life in a most wondrous light?