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buddhaismyhomeboy · 8 months
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 9 months
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Namaste to that.
Perfect answer
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 1 year
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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“You are the One (detached observer) watching the one (imagined, separate self) that struggles, feels stressed and suffers in life. Realize the truth: You are already enlightened, only pretending that you are not.” 
~Anon I mus (Spiritually Anonymous)
There is no ‘individual’ with free will or personal doer-ship that can attain ‘enlightenment’. You must wake up from the hypnotic sensory dream of separateness into the full realization that you are not a ‘person’ (body-mind). You are the ever-present field of universal intelligence that has chosen to momentarily live the ‘human experience’ through a unique vantage point. You do not have a personal life; you are the Life itself (at the deepest level).
*Subscribe to Anon I mus Youtube channel @ https://www.youtube.com/user/SpirituallyAnonImus http://egoawarenessmovement.org
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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Had to repost to remind myself. I have adhd so this blog is essentially a place I keep teachings I want to reinforce to myself as well as share with you beautiful sentient beings. 🥰. It’s like my Buddhist diary. Heehee
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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The RAIN acronym is an ancient Buddhist mindfulness tool to cope with hardship. When life throws you a curve ball -- a weighty life decision, a problem at work or even a moment of anxiety that you can't put your finger on -- how do you react?
RECOGNIZE
ALLOW
INVESTIGATE
NON-IDENTIFY
R stands for recognizing what is happening in this moment. Someone just walked too close to you on the sidewalk or didn’t give you what you feel is your “right of way,” and boom, you’re angry. The “R” is simply to notice what is happening, to be present enough to know that something is happening. This is not a small thing. Many people are immediately reactive—and worse, they blame the other person for causing their reaction. The point is to be awake, to pay attention.
A stands for accepting. This does not mean that you wanted what just happened to happen. It simply means that you acknowledge that it did. You name it: for example, “anger is here.” The idea is that although you are not going to indulge the emotion or thought with further thinking or righteousness or another emotion, neither do you resist or avert or distract yourself from what’s happening. You simply acknowledge and name what is happening. You are willing to be open to whatever it is.
I stands for investigating the sensations in the body. This step is primarily a physical noticing. What does anger feel like? The heart beats faster, there can be a flush of energy and heat and a tightening of certain muscles. These physical events are what we label as “anger.” This energetic emotional component has to be willingly and thoroughly felt until the body returns to open relaxation. You breathe and wait and breathe and feel the body, at first tight and then slowly changing, relaxing and opening, letting go. If this is not thoroughly done, then we haven’t really felt the emotion that was triggered by the initial thought, and that energy gets stuck in the body and adds to the conditioned structure that was triggered in the first place. This openness to the physical event is what integrates the energy, dissipates it, and—if it is practiced over and over— eventually dissolves that particular egoic structure, which has no concrete core. The realization that the egoic system will eventually dissolve if we don’t add more thought or energy to it is a wonderful one when first experienced, and a real taste of the potential freedom to come if we continue with practice.
N stands for not identifying. There’s no need to identify a “me’” in what just happened. It was just a passing mental and emotional event, like watching a scene in a movie or the clouds as they move through the sky. We don’t have to build and rebuild a “me” on the passing content of the body-mind. Instead, we can stand as the observer. This not-identifying is tricky, but when the first change of identity shifts from the content of mind to the observer, we can see that the content is not who we are. This is the first real shift of freedom. Eventually identification as “the observer” drops away as well, but to simply make the shift is a good place to start.
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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Ayishat_Akanbi
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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Something to remember today 😊
An experiment was conducted to see if greyhounds could compete with the speed of a cheetah.
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When the cages opened, people were shocked that the cheetah didn't move.
They asked the race coordinator what had happened and why the cheetah didn’t move.
His response:
“Sometimes trying to prove that you're the best is an insult to your self-worth.
There is no need to lower yourself to other people’s level to make them understand your skills, qualities and contributions.
It is better to save your energy for more worthy endeavours.
A cheetah uses its speed to hunt, not to prove to dogs that it is faster and stronger.
Don't waste your time and energy proving your value to people who simply don’t possess the skill set to appreciate your value and worth.
Move on.”
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buddhaismyhomeboy · 2 years
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RIP my teacher. It was his book, “The Heart of the Buddhas Teachings” that changed my life 20 years ago. May your energy flow free of suffering, my beloved Thich Nhat Hanh.
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