Click here to read the (prettier) online version. 4 weeks ago, my uncle started feeling unwell. 3 weeks ago, he saw the doctor, who diagnosed him with terminal liver cancer. 2 weeks ago, he had tests. 1 week ago, he was told chemotherapy might extend his life by weeks—if he was lucky. He opted out of treatment, preferring to spend his remaining time without the additional suffering caused by chemotherapy. So on Wednesday, I flew with my parents from Bristol to Edinburgh to see my uncle and support my aunt and cousin. Right before we arrived at their pretty seaside suburb, they had a visit from the hospice nurse. This nurse told them how everything was going to play out from here: she told them about the practicalities of dying, and of being left behind. I felt grateful going into this situation that I’d spent so much time contemplating death. Nonetheless, if you’ve hung out with a dying person yourself—regardless of how much spiritual practice you’ve done—you’ll know how trippy it is. Here’s their form, just as it’s always been (though less healthy). But everyone sat at the table knows it will soon become still and silent. For them, there’s this vivid experience of moment-to-moment consciousness. But they know one of those moments, soon, will be their last. Death Has No Instruction ManualDespite that nurse’s best efforts, neither she nor anyone else can tell us how to die. In fact, the typical attitude toward death is to ignore it until you absolutely can’t. We’re all left to figure out our own approach to death—even though it’s the one and only certain thing about life. Many of us choose to believe in an afterlife or in reincarnation. These beliefs can be comforting. But the problem with them is precisely that they are beliefs—and so, when it comes to the climax, many people still experience doubt and, therefore, fear. It’s uncomfortable to consider the possibility that one might simply end. But avoiding that consideration robs us of the opportunity to dissolve our fear. The Zen Master’s Take On DeathNow it reveals its hidden side, and now the other, so it falls— an autumn leaf. —Ryōkan This is the famous “death poem” of Ryōkan Taigu. Many Zen masters would write these poems when they sensed death was near. I take Ryōkan’s poem to be a commentary on attachment. The leaves fall from the trees in autumn, but we don’t rush around trying to stick them back on. Yet when it comes to our own death, we feel that it’s somehow wrong. One of the main purposes of spiritual practice is to make peace with death. Let’s do a little contemplation together right now. How to Make Peace With DeathStart a fresh journal entry and consider the following prompts:
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So you find it easier to be at peace in your free time. But then you go back to work, and it seems like everything there pushes you into stress or pulls you into anxiety. Your boss makes unreasonable demands, you feel obligated to comply. Your colleagues invite you to drinks, you feel pressure to fit in. Your clients overstep boundaries, you feel afraid to be firm. And inwardly, all of this feels very different to when you’re sitting at home in meditation. But it doesn’t have to… This...
I know you want to succeed in everything you do. And the way you’ve succeeded at everything else is to try harder, longer, or both. But that won’t work here. Because when you try, you’re saying “I have to MAKE peace happen.” You’re saying “I’m not good enough as I am.” You’re saying “Awakening is in the future.” The beginner can get away with these faulty assumptions, but you’re not a beginner any more. What you must recognize is that peace is your default mode; that who you really are is...
Read the (prettier) web version here. Only 7% of Americans take their new year’s resolutions all the way to December.¹ And that figure is from a survey, which means it’s probably generous (because most people will stretch the truth if they think it makes them look better). New year’s resolutions fail because they’re about forcing yourself to do something you don’t really want to do. But what if you could come around to actually wanting things that are good for yourself and others? It’s not as...