Present Tense

Both Things Can Be True…

Everyone is fighting.  So much frustration, conflict, self righteousness.

My husband is reading “The Art of Happiness” by the Dalai Lama, and since I’ve dabbled a bit in Buddhism, he asked me yesterday, how can we just float along, with rainbows and unicorns? Being ever kind and tolerant and understanding. Doesn’t that make us zombies?

His point is valid. NOTHING is solved or altered or mitigated without recognizing discomfort, injustice, danger, etc. Innovation and creativity are nearly always preceded by destruction or disruption. If we ignore those things, how do we grow?

That is where “the Middle Way” comes into play. A key principle of Buddhism and a very difficult path to walk.

It’s a variation of my current mantra “Both things can be true”. The recognition that everything is not a binary choice; we don’t have to pick between A and B. There is always a middle ground, a middle way. Something that takes A and B into account and melds them as both being valid or both being invalid, I suppose.

So much right now, tries to force us into these binary choices.

For or against science. For or against one party or the other. For or against masks.

There IS a middle way. We can recognize that science is fluid and contextual. We can recognize that masks are definitely useful in many cases, but not all. We can recognize that parties have differing philosophies and look for areas where we might have a glimmer of agreement.

The Middle Way recognizes that life is both upsetting and glorious. “10,000 joys, 10,000 sorrows”. We have to always look to both sides of the path for truths and have the intellectual and emotional maturity to not ALWAYS choose sides.

Our entire society and in particular much of media and social media is designed to force us to choose one side or the other. It’s ALL about binary choices and that’s why we are feeling so epically divided and confused.

We run most everything through our political filters now. Meaning that we give up OUR authority to make decisions and value judgements. We turn it over to politicians, pundits, media outlets, websites, ‘opinion makers’, etc. And we are in denial of these influences.  We KNOW we are right and we can post the link to an article to PROVE IT.

So, yes, as mature grown-ass adults, we have to listen to our internal guides, compass, ethics, values. We have to consciously be empathetic, compassionate, open to other perspectives. If we do that, we can begin to mitigate some of our fear and anger that is in the driver’s seat.

Both things can be true. The Middle Way.

 

July 8, 2020 - Posted by | Musings | , , , , , , , , ,

3 Comments »

  1. I love this, Jane. SO true. Thank you for sharing!

    Comment by Erica | July 8, 2020 | Reply

  2. I know you are right; but as a person who is furious at #45’s injustices, lies, selfishness, & immorality I’ll have a hard time taking “the Middle Way” with him. I have work to do on this concept.

    Comment by Glenda | July 8, 2020 | Reply

    • The honest truth is that we choose to be furious. And we often seek out that information or narrative that feeds that anger. Human nature, especially now when we are so polarized and divided. I feel as if there is a whole sub culture of us who are in a way, addicted to that fury. The problem is that it is unhealthy for us physically, emotionally and spiritually. We have to make choices in what we consume and how we react and respond. We KNOW what to expect from President Trump and so, at some point, we just acknowledge it and make a choice to react differently. Or we vow to be proactive to change what we find infuriating. Yeah…it’s hard:). But doable, if we shift our perceptions and our narrative just a tiny bit at a time.

      All the best,
      jane

      Comment by janelondon | July 8, 2020 | Reply


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