trust in the humour of the situation |
trust in the humor of the situation
Apprentice When you’re in a
situation where you’re experiencing ambivalence or
resistance . . . you said that I should recognise that
ambivalence as humorous . . . Is the humorous quality
there because essentially one knows one is Yeshé Tsogyel or
Padmasambhava? So there’s some trust that the resistance
isn’t the whole package?
Khandro Déchen Yes. That is extremely
important. The main point is to come to that understanding. Then you
will be kind to yourself too – because you will have your
situation: with its ambivalences; with its wanting to be like this,
yet doing wanting to do that . . . If you can be
relaxed about it, then you can say: “So here I
am . . . wanting to do this, yet doing that.” If
you’re relaxed about it – it should be amusing. It gives
you the freedom to slip, too. It does not have to be a case of:
“Oh no! Now I’ve ruined it all. I’ve
slipped.” You can say: “Oh well . . . I
guess ambivalence collapsed in a direction that doesn’t suit my
spiritual purpose.” This idea of having ruined it, and saying:
“Well, I’ve done it now – so I may as well go the
whole hog” is a trap. It comes out of seeing yourself as either
‘good’ or ‘bad’, rather than remaining in
ambivalence and saying: “So . . . I pigged out
at breakfast – but that doesn’t mean I have to pig out for
the rest of the day.” You can say: Let’s just look at the
desire itself . . . let’s just be amused by it a
little.” You don’t have to humiliate the desire –
you can be amused by my whole situation. You can have some trust in
the humour of the situation.
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