Emptiness Takes Practice

Emptiness Takes Practice

A garden designed to illustrate emptiness in practice.

Emptiness takes practice. Here is the teahouse at Green Gulch Farm in California. Image by and uploaded to Wikimedia Commons via Flikr by kafka4prez.

Emptiness takes practice

In my experience,

  • emptiness is filled with light,
  • emptiness is innately refreshing,
  • emptiness is our fundamental condition.

In other words, light-filled, nurturing emptiness is available to each of us at all times if we will use our minds to observe our minds, quietly and persistently, allowing it to take its course like a wild horse that will shy from a taut, unfriendly hand that tries to pin it down but.will come voluntarily over and over to a kind, welcoming hand that gently grasps its true nature.

Meditation is no more than this.  It is other than this, yes.  But not more.  Observing our essential emptiness is powerful, deep work.

There are many kinds of meditation, contemplation, and prayer.  But opening to and being with our emptiness “counts,” is meditation too.  As the Buddha taught, here is great freedom from the confines of self.

You might also like my other post, “Empty, Ask, Receive.”

2 Comments
  • Pingback:Empty, Ask, Receive | Raising Clarity
    Posted at 22:38h, 16 February Reply

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  • Joan Friedlander
    Posted at 15:36h, 08 February Reply

    Beth, I appreciated the elaboration in this post. Just reading your bullet points:

    emptiness is filled with light,
    emptiness is innately refreshing,
    emptiness is our fundamental condition.

    caused an automatic deepening of my breath, without thought, only response. Yes, emptiness can be like that.

    I know, too, that emptiness can bring up other feelings, like fear, judgment or loneliness (the wild horses you mentioned?). Those are only temporary states, ones that can be released inside the emptiness, with quiet, deep breaths, and persistence. Lovely.

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