my favorite yoga teacher likes to say during the more difficult asana that "pain is a message your body sends to your mind", & you can choose what to do w/ that message; react instinctively, or dismiss it, reassuring your body you know what you're doing, that you're not in danger
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RT @michellehuang42
finally condensed some thoughts into a chart depicting one of my main learnings from my vipassana meditation practice: the ability…
https://twitter.com/michellehuang42/status/1430340537752571907
nothing, but that very same stillness you first found, only more pure, deeper, more peaceful than you imagined yourself capable of feeling
and when you come back out from the depths, you find some of that peace came back with you, keeping you balanced w/o any conscious efforts
suffering is a function of not just the outside world, but the inner as well; while we do not always have control over the former, we do the latter, much more than we are lead to believe. to become the best versions of ourselves, we must conquer our pain.
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RT @pee_zombie
an extraordinarily clear and insightful exploration of Buddhism's core insights into the nature of the self and its relationship to suffering https://twitter.com/Ma…
https://twitter.com/pee_zombie/status/1414093324731002883
you continue regularly visiting the peace within the stillness, finding it easier to dispell all the clamoring thoughts, deepening the well w/ each session; you find that more of it makes it back w/ you, feeding back into your practice. you become curious about what this peace is