Search
Close this search box.

Love, the Ultimate Touchstone

By 

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

Climate science predicts that as temperatures are on the rise, the atmospheric stability we have come to rely upon, take for granted, falters. This lesson can be applied to our politics, institutions and even our direct experience.

Buddhist author, teacher and activist, Thanissara encourages us to go deep in order to discover the touchstone that can see us through.

The nightworld is where we are …
And in that darkness, we remember what we love the most.
That itself is the candle.

Martin Shaw

It sounds rather cliche, but to state the obvious, the world is changing fast. Day-to-day everything we understand about ourselves and each other is being reconfigured, entrenching the feeling of groundlessness. Everything that was “out there” is now “in here” revealing that in the sphere of the mind, there are no boundaries.

While psychological boundaries are a basic mental health requirement, in reality, it seems that we are not just “selves” but an inter-being experience through which awakening consciousness is seeing and knowing itself. A glimpse of this understanding shifts everything because eventually it inducts into the only real ground we can find, which is the heart itself with its listening, present, aware, receptive knowing.

Love is the currency of life itself. All things ultimately depend on it.

© Tanja Schulte from Pixabay

As we go through a shamanic dismemberment of the global ego-self, which has been in control over millennia, we are grappling with the loss of control as runaway climate breakdown and environmental destruction threatens our collective survival. While all this is enormously impactful, turning us through an excruciating kaleidoscope of reactions and emotions, it feels there is a deeper evolutionary impulse operating here.

What is Truth? Truth is a dynamic unfolding, not a static thing that someone has written down. While there are undying truths—“hate is never overcome by hate, only by love. This is the eternal law,” as the Buddha beautifully taught—can we also be agile and tune into the ever-new and present truth of this moment? Because so often we miss it when we filter what is before us through our preconceptions.

Where is freedom? This heart of knowing, as it taps the deeper flow of the living Dharma, the intuitive intelligence of Prajna-paramita, is quantum-like. Freed up and aligned with truth, its impulse is to dissolve the constructs the mind builds while at the same time unveiling the power of the heart’s capacity for love.

How is it to Love? The small things, a bee powdering itself in the nectar of the flower, show us something about love. That it is not a ‘me’ loving a ‘you’ so much (though that is definitely special), but more that love is the currency of life itself. All things ultimately depend on it.

It is our alignment with the deeper listening heart-spirit, with love, with a freed up view, that enables quantum shifts of understanding distilled from truths unfolding. This will guide us through and gift the courage we need to be in service of truth, of freedom, of love, as protectors of the Earth and her myriad beings.

This article was originally published on Thanissara’s blog. It is reprinted here with permission.

Picture of Thanissara

Thanissara

Thanissara embodies the integration of the contemplative with the activist. Trained in the Ajahn Chah Forest Tradition, she was a monastic for 12 years. She and husband Kittisaro founded Dharmagiri in South Africa where they integrated activism on AIDS with hosting Theravadan retreats. As senior teachers at Spirit Rock, Thanissara and Kittisaro later co-founded Sacred Mountain Sangha based in California. She has an MA in Mindfulness-Based Psychotherapy from the UK, and is author of several books, including Time to Stand Up: An Engaged Buddhist Manifesto for Our Earth — The Buddha’s Life and Message through Feminine Eyes.
Share this EcoDharma
facebook
twitter
email

Related

EcoDharma
EcoDharma

A Conversation with Tim Ream

Ecodharma finds a home in fiction! Tim Ream’s novel Fallen Water is just his latest work from a life spent in service to the Earth and the Dharma.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma

What Am I Practicing For?

On the occasion of Thich Nhat Hahn’s continuation day, we invite you to listen and enjoy activist and ecodharma practitioner Alex Swain’s crisp and rhythmic engagement with the heart of Thay’s teachings.
EcoDharma
EcoDharma
How to engage the body in the social struggle without becoming entangled in trauma? After his home was bombed by white supremacists, Larry Ward traveled to Plum Village for an answer.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.