THE HERETIC

A kind of loneliness comes from being misunderstood by your family. My mother wants me to do Sandhya Vandanam. Chant the Gayatri Mantra. Face east. Fold my hands the right way. She wants a performance she can witness and take credit for. I understand this. I refuse to comply. I am too tired and too old for rebellion. I call it self-preservation, a refusal to hollow out what little interior life I have managed to build by filling it with someone else's beliefs. They call me a heretic.. a […]

https://ridiculousbharath.wordpress.com/2026/05/13/the-heretic/

I care too much and do to little. #overwhelmed #contemplation

LE SIMPLE CHEMIN DE MOOJIBABA QUI MENE A L’EVEIL

Une contemplation quotidienne:

Choisis d’être seul·e et de rester tranquille pendant quelques minutes. Détache-toi de tout ce qui surgit dans le mental ou à travers les sens.

N’essaie pas de contrôler quoi que ce soit. Contente-toi de demeurer tranquille, vide et conscient·e. Ne fixe ton attention sur rien en particulier. Laisse ce qui vient et va, venir et aller.
Reste simplement détaché·e et non impliqué·e.
Reste simplement conscient·e d’être conscient·e.

Petit à petit, il deviendra clair et évident que tout vient et va spontanément.
Et aussi, que rien ne peut se fixer sur l’espace immuable dans lequel tout apparaît.

Sache que cet espace dénué de forme et pourtant vivant est ton propre Soi et ton Être, naturellement paisible, content et non affecté par le trafic du mental, des sens et du monde.
Découvrir vraiment Cela à l’intérieur du Cœur mène à l’aboutissement de toute recherche.
Cela est la Vérité.

Repose-toi dans cette joie et cette paix naturelles.

~ Mooji

https://mooji.org/the-simple-path-to-awakening-fra

#Mooji #éveil #contemplation #joie #paix

A quotation from Edward Morgan

A book is the only place I know in which you can examine a fragile thought without breaking it, or explore an explosive idea without fear that it will go off in your face. It is one of the few sources of information left that is served up without the silent black noise of a headline, the doomy hullabaloo of a commercial. It is one of the few havens remaining where a man’s mind can get both provocation and privacy.

Edward P. Morgan (1910-1993) American journalist
Essay (1955-08-15), “The Literary Bug Doesn’t Bite,” ABC Radio

More about this quote: wist.info/morgan-edward/72251/

#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #edwardmorgan #edwardpmorgan #book #commercial #consideration #contemplation #ideas #literature #message #reading #solitude

Morgan, Edward - Essay (1955-08-15), "The Literary Bug Doesn't Bite," ABC Radio | WIST Quotations

A book is the only place I know in which you can examine a fragile thought without breaking it, or explore an explosive idea without fear that it will go off in your face. It is one of the few sources of information left that is served up without the…

WIST Quotations

What we really are

We pay attention to our own true nature and by becoming fully conscious of the union of our nature with Christ, we become fully ourselves. 

John Main, Word into Silence, p.18

The idea of time has many expressions, from chronological to biological, emotional to cosmic. We sometimes feel we have lived a lifetime in a moment. We can feel time as a crucifixion or as a resurrection. The vast figures measuring cosmic time in an expanding universe can seem overwhelming but the few years of a human life can seem more significant and precious. Time and mortality live out the drama of birth and death and the painful mystery of separation. In the light of faith we come by stages to see the all-pervading mystery of union…

This consummation of union, whether it is called nirvana, liberation from rebirth, enlightenment, moksha or heaven is part of the common ground of all religious wisdom when we understand religion in its mystical dimension. It refers to the experience of oneness, the transcendence of the ego’s centre of consciousness, the transformation of the dualistic mind, the movement from the mind’s self-mirroring complexities into the simplicity and pure vision of the heart, the non-duality of the spirit. With a silent passion deeper than their words and differences, all religions point to this. If they do indeed teach this way and not just pay lip service to it, religion offers our often sad and battered humanity a reasonable and empowering hope.

We both lose and find ourselves in the otherness of ultimate reality. This is easy to say but it is a hard paradox to wrestle with. It demands a deepening faith commitment. When the master class of life has taught us enough, commitment meets detachment and solitude, the recognition and acceptance of our uniqueness becomes more attractive and even easier. We gradually withdraw from unnecessary activity and distraction. We become freer from compulsions and addictions.

Laurence Freeman, First Sight: The Experience of Faith, p.76-77

What we really are is this. We are not what we think we are, frail isolated intelligences trapped in a zero-sum game of mere survival, creatures of allegiances and enmities, just barely hanging on. We belong. We are part of it all, wavelets on a limitless ocean of grace.

We must… make a clear distinction between belief and faith, because, in general practice, belief has come to mean a state of mind which is almost the opposite of faith. Belief, as I use the word here, is the insistence that the truth is what one would “lief” or wish it to be. The believer will open his mind to the truth on the condition that it fits in with his preconceived ideas and wishes. Faith, on the other hand, is an unreserved opening of the mind to the truth, whatever it may turn out to be. Faith has no preconceptions; it is a plunge into the unknown. Belief clings, but faith lets go. In this sense of the word, faith is the essential virtue of science, and likewise of any religion that is not self-deception.

Alan Watts, The Wisdom of Insecurity p.24

Faith is no more, perhaps, than this radical open-heartedness, this helpless surrender to what is, in David Jones’ words, “actually loved and known”. All our practice, all our patience and all our prayers come down to this simple oneness. What we used to be is dispersed, patched and rotted through with light. None of the old certainties can hold. They don’t need to: this trackless brightness beyond the memory of shorelines is the waking heart itself, nothing more.

#AlanWatts #awakening #contemplation #faith #JohnMain #LaurenceFreeman #prayer #stillness #union
Word into Silence: A Manual for Christian Meditation eBook : Main, John: Amazon.co.uk: Books

Word into Silence: A Manual for Christian Meditation eBook : Main, John: Amazon.co.uk: Books

Quote of the day, 5 May: Père Jacques

Let us be aware that God is here, present among us. Let us gaze upon him in and around us.

Let us likewise place ourselves in the presence of the Virgin Mary, our model of contemplation, who listened faithfully to God throughout her life. Let us ask her to teach us how to listen to God, to grasp his words, and to live them out.

Servant of God Jacques de Jésus

Conference 1, Solitude, the Essence of Carmel

Jacques, P 2005, Listen to the silence: a retreat with Père Jacques, Murphy, F (trans. & ed.), ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Featured image: Vittore Carpaccio (Italian, c. 1465–1525), The Virgin Reading, oil on panel transferred to canvas, c. 1505 (detail). It comes from the collections of the National Gallery of Art (public domain).

#contemplation #PèreJacquesDeJésus #prayer #presence #VirginMary
Once more I got the revelation that nothing I do makes me feel whole. It leaves me sad every time and I don’t know what needs to change for me to feel again. Feel better or something at all at least. #sad #emptiness #contemplation

Quote of the day, 30 April: Aloysius Deeney, ocd

To seek the face of God

This element expresses the content of the Promises [of the Discalced Carmelite Secular Order]. I could rephrase this element in various ways: “to pray,” “to meditate,” and “to live the spiritual life.” I have chosen this one (to seek the face of God) because it is scriptural and expresses the nature of contemplation—a wondering observation of God’s word and work in order to know, love, and serve him.

The contemplative aspect of Carmelite life focuses on God, recognizing always that contemplation is a gift of God, not an acquisition as a result of putting in sufficient time.

This is the commitment to personal holiness. The OCDS wants to see God, wants to know God, and recognizes that prayer and meditation now take on a greater importance. The Promises are a commitment to a new way of life in which “allegiance to Jesus Christ” marks the person and the way this person lives.

The personal life of the Secular Carmelite becomes contemplative. The style of life changes with the growth in the virtues that accompany the growth in the Spirit. It is impossible to live a life of prayer, meditation, and study without changing.

Is the essence of Carmel prayer? Many times I have heard or read that affirmation. I am never sure just how to answer that. Not because I do not know what prayer is or because prayer is not of great importance for any Carmelite, but because I never know what the speaker or writer wishes to justify by the statement.

If the person means by prayer personal holiness and the pursuit of a genuine spirituality that recognizes the supremacy of God and of God’s will for the human family, then yes, I agree. If the person means that I as a Carmelite fulfill my entire obligation as a Carmelite by being faithful to my prayer and that there is nothing else that I need do, then no, I do not agree.

Personal holiness is not the same as a personal pursuit of holiness. For a baptized member of the Church, holiness is always ecclesial, never self-centered or self-content. I am never the judge of my own holiness.

Aloysius Deeney, o.c.d.

Testing and Discerning a Vocation to the Secular Order

Deeney, A 2009, Welcome to the Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites, ICS Publications, Washington, DC.

Featured image: Detail from Afternoon – Yellow Room by Frederick Carl Frieseke (American, 1874-1939), oil on canvas painted in 1910. Image credit: Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields (Public domain).

#AloysiusDeeney #contemplation #OCDS #spiritualLife #TeresianPrayer