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Peter

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  • in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459321
    Peter
    Participant

    Todays Richard Wagamese Meditation seems appropriate

    Me: Tell me about love.
    Old Woman: It is our only real choice. The only thing that we can truly give.
    Me: How do we do that?
    Old Woman: Choose it above all else. Love is you leading me back to the highest possible version of myself. It’s me leading you back to who you were created to be. It is the most important choice we can make for each other.
    Me: Those closest to us, you mean.
    Old Woman: No everyone. Everything. Widening your circle at every opportunity.
    Me: Sounds hard.
    Old Woman: So is being born. But we all do it.

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459320
    Peter
    Participant

    So, I don’t have to do anything to earn love. I already am. 🙏 I also will rest in that…

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459307
    Peter
    Participant

    Anita, that is the exact same question I found myself asking: *What if I could see that in people, more often…?*

    It has also led me to a second question as I enter the fourth quarter of life. What if I’ve been asking the wrong things all along? For so long, the questions have been: *What will I do?* and *How will I do it?*

    Perhaps the truer question is simply: **How do I wish to Be?**

    I wonder if we anchor ourselves in that state of *Being* first, in that dropped-luggage presence, the *what* and the *how* will resolve themselves naturally.

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459301
    Peter
    Participant

    Thanks Alessa that was nice to hear.

    Hi Anita – thanks for the invitation to answer or not, to be candid its a question I often ponder and suspect its something that can only be answered-experienced for ourselves, a answer that likely can’t be defined by words.

    Your question “Without any heavy bags, not even an ounce of a heavy bag, who would you be now Peter?” arrived as I was reflecting on an experience I had over the weekend.

    I was talking with someone who was caught up in their stories, tangled in frustration because their love/words were getting distorted and coming out and received in ways they didn’t intend. But as I sat there and really, truly listened, something shifted. The words they were using became ‘transparent’. For a moment beneath the noise of their defense and baggage, I “saw” them. I saw how much love they held, how deeply they wanted to express it, and just how beautiful they were, if they could only ‘know’ it. My heart broke… open.

    And that’s when it happened to me, too.

    When their words became transparent to me, my own luggage slipped to the floor. I didn’t vanish; instead, my own rigid boundaries dissolved… allowing grace to shine through…

    “When we drop the luggage of our defensive words, we finally arrive “Home.” We step into that collective “now” beating in our chests, where we can engage in the simplest things with what we finally recognize as love.”

    Without any heavy bags, not even an ounce of a heavy bag, who would you be now, Peter? … I would Be. Love, Presence

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459212
    Peter
    Participant

    I have to laugh at myself reading back through this. I taken Richards soft and gentle words and treat this putting down of luggage as some monumental, difficult spiritual exercise. Yet, when we return home from a long trip, we naturally just drop our bags on the floor, slump against the wall, and eventually unpack them. Handling the contents one by one, calmly, until the suitcase is empty and slid under the bed out of sight.

    It isn’t a grand technique; it’s just the natural movements of coming home. Thank you all for sitting on the floor with me for a bit.

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459211
    Peter
    Participant

    Anita 🙏 😊

    in reply to: Just Love is Enough #459209
    Peter
    Participant

    “We are map-makers by nature. The “Way” a realization that the map-maker is also part of the territory. Every time we “return”, whether through a lifetime work or a moment of “seeing”, we are just the Tao waking up to itself.”

    Once, every word was alive. A spark. A gesture toward the unsayable… Language rising like mist before the mind wakes. Words form, dissolve, return, shadows trying to touch the light…. Watching the watcher quietly, you can see thought building its small rooms, naming each wall as “me.”… Yet… in the stillness between one word and the next, there is a different kind of knowing, the space between seeing and seer dissolves… fear softens, concepts loosen. The soul reminds of its own transparency…

    And language, freed from its duty to define, becomes a simple gesture, a leaf floating on a river that was always moving without needing a name

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459086
    Peter
    Participant

    Thank you, Alessa.
    Perhaps the nuance is knowing when to put the map down. We need it to find the ocean, but we don’t carry it into the water when we swim.

    Thomas, you caught it exactly. The thought that we have “failed” at sitting is heavy piece of luggage. Yet the floor remains beneath us.

    in reply to: Home is the slumping drop of luggage on floors.. #459065
    Peter
    Participant

    Thank you all.

    I’m realizing that if I try to list what I’m dropping, or try to measure whether this home is positive or negative, I’m packing new bags to carry.

    Thomas asked if it feels good to be home. The truth is, the moment I try to label the feeling, it slips into form… and the shadow slumping in the corner starts to get up.

    So I think I’m just going to sit here quietly on the floor for a while, next to the luggage, and listen to the room…

    in reply to: Why enlightenment is walking backwards for the mind? #459059
    Peter
    Participant

    “You don’t need to define the sky to live under it. You just have to be willing to sit still long enough to belong to it.” Anonymous

    in reply to: Unconditional Love #457744
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi 🚶‍♀️ Anita,
    It’s powerful to hear how you’ve reclaimed your ability to move and become ‘the walker’ in your own life. We all have different ways of relating to and finding the ground beneath us. I’m glad you found a way to stand and keep moving forward.

    in reply to: Unconditional Love #457725
    Peter
    Participant

    🌄 Anita – to close the loop

    It is the great irony of the human condition: we work tirelessly for that which no work requires. We treat being present (and so love) as a destination to be reached, a ‘how-to’ to be mastered, forgetting that the question itself is a measure of time, while ✨️presence✨️ is eternal. We are already the canvas; we are already the still point.

    As T.S. Eliot suggested, the end of all our exploring is to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time. Perhaps ‘unconditional love’ is simply the name we give to that arrival. When we stop trying to ‘be’ present and simply recognize that we are presence, the burden of performance vanishes. Language, with all its metrics and conditions, finally falls away. We are no longer managing a relationship or meeting a standard; we are simply home. We have returned to the origin, seeing for the first time that the love we were trying to achieve was actually the ground we were standing on all along.

    in reply to: Unconditional Love #457707
    Peter
    Participant

    We have come full circle!

    If presence is the still point, the silent canvas upon which the messy paintings of our lives are layered, then the ‘quiet tension’ of unconditional love finally resolves. We see that love is not a feeling we generate or a benchmark we hit, but a sustaining reality we simply inhabit.

    To say that presence is our destiny is to admit that we are moving toward a total transparency, where the ‘smoke and mirrors’ of our evaluations finally clear. In this light, the ‘I’ and the ‘You’ aren’t separate entities negotiating a contract; they are the intimate immediacy of a single, infinite gift. We are being poured out into one another. When we are truly present, we aren’t just observing the other person, we are returning to the love that was our origin all along.

    in reply to: Unconditional Love #457706
    Peter
    Participant

    🙂

    in reply to: Unconditional Love #457693
    Peter
    Participant

    The phrase unconditional love has always carried a quiet tension for me. (so I thought I’d try dancing with the words to see where they might land)

    In my observation, the pursuit of being “unconditionally loving” all too often leads to immense pressure. The moment we ask for unconditional love, from ourselves or others, we turn it into a rigid benchmark, a condition one must meet in order to be considered “good” at loving or even being loved. In this way, unconditional love can quickly become one heck of a condition.

    Part of this comes from the nature of language itself. The moment we say “I love you,” we create an “I” and a “you.” Love slips into relationship, and relationship easily becomes evaluation. “I love you because…” becomes the contract. Then comes the moral correction: “I must love you without…” Now love is no longer something lived, it becomes something managed.

    We begin watching ourselves: “Am I being unconditional enough right now?”

    In that moment, a split forms. We are no longer with the other person; we are standing beside ourselves, judging our ability to love. What began as connection turns into performance.

    What if, instead, we understood ‘unconditional love’ as Presence?

    Not a standard to achieve, but a way of being.

    When love is Presence, the pressure eases. It is no longer about maintaining a moral ideal, but about arriving—again and again—at what is actually here. To be present is to see the other person as they are: their habits, their evasions, their peculiarities, the parts we don’t fully understand. And to meet that without the immediate reflex to fix, improve, or measure them against who they should become.

    Presence is not passive. It is attentive, responsive, quietly engaged. It allows care to arise without forcing it into shape. In that kind of seeing, conditions temporarily fall away, not because they’ve been solved, but because they aren’t being imposed. The past loosens its grip. The future softens. There is only this person, as they are, in this moment.

    Of course, none of us can live there all the time. We are human. Our nervous systems scan, compare, react. We evaluate constantly.
    But perhaps the practice shifts here. Not toward perfect, unconditional love, but toward a willingness to notice when we’ve left presence and to return.

    The “condition” is no longer that love must be flawless. It becomes the willingness to come back when we’ve drifted into judgment.

    Seen this way, unconditional love is not a free pass for harmful behavior that it to often becomes. Presence does not blur clarity, it sharpens it. When we are not clouded by resentment or idealization, we can see another person more honestly, both their limitations and their beauty.

    And from that clarity, a different kind of choice becomes possible: not “How do I love you perfectly?”, but something quieter and more grounded – Is this a reality we can stand within?

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 1,406 total)