Sometimes the hardest place to live is inside our own head.
We can create a kind of private hell out of thoughts that keep arguing with reality.
We replay what has happened,
Resist what is happening,
We're afraid of what might happen,
And so we try to force life to follow the script that we have written in our minds,
Yet Much of our suffering does not come from the situation itself.
It comes from our refusal to let this moment simply be what it is.
Often we're taught,
Directly or indirectly,
That peace and happiness will arrive someday.
After we solve this problem,
After we change that person,
After we fix ourselves,
Or after we finally gain control over whatever it is that we think is out of control.
But there's a better way to live,
One that doesn't depend on perfect conditions.
It begins when we stop wrestling and arguing with reality and start gently welcoming what is here.
Welcoming what is doesn't mean approving of everything.
It doesn't mean that we become passive or that we cease to care.
It simply means that we stop adding that extra layer of suffering,
That inner voice that says this shouldn't be happening,
I can't bear this or I'll be happy and I'll be at peace once this or that changes.
That voice rarely brings wisdom or peace or happiness more often.
It keeps us trapped in resistance and in struggle.
There's freedom in being able to hear that voice and not follow it.
We can notice the mind's demands without making them our master.
We can feel disappointment without becoming despairing.
We can face uncertainty without turning every unknown into an emergency.
In that kind of spaciousness.
Something beautiful.
Starts to happen and becomes very real.
We begin to learn from life instead of.
.
.
Arguing with it instead of struggling with it.
When we choose to grow from our experience.
Rather than fight against it,
We begin to discover peace and joy in the middle of things,
Rather than trying vainly and endlessly to control or end our struggles.
Peace becomes less of a destination and more of a way of standing in the world.
Joy becomes less of a reward and more like a gentle current that can be deeply experienced and felt despite grief,
Pressure,
And unanswered questions.
This is what it means to rest in the midst of all things.
Not numb,
Not detached,
Simply present.
Steady enough to breathe without demanding that life becomes something other than it is.
It's a deeper kind of strength,
A deeper kind of happiness and peace that arises not from controlling life,
But relaxing and just meeting it honestly.
To be at peace with whatever occurs isn't passive living,
It's courageous living.
It's the willingness to stop perishing in our own thinking.
It's the willingness to stop punishing ourselves and others for being human in a world that is messy and unpredictable.
And then again and again we return to this simple truth.
This moment is here.
Reality is here.
And we can be here too.
Open.
Peaceful.
And fully alive.
Calm.
Joyful.
Relaxed.
And at rest.