8 Zen Sayings For 8 Of Life’s Shittiest Moments
Oct 4, 2016 • Jica Lapena
Oct 4, 2016 • Jica Lapena
Life will inevitably throw curve balls your way. It does not matter whether you’re Steve Jobs or Martin Shkreli, shitty situations that make you feel like the universe is conspiring against you catches up on all of us.
When life gives you lemons and you’re so down on your luck that you can’t even make lemonade, you can comfort yourself with some Zen-like words of wisdom for some very specific misfortunes, such as…
There’s no disputing that sleep is an important part of life. So important, in fact, that we would literally die without it. But those pesky forty winks can sometimes get in the way, like it did for Brendan Zammuto who missed his own trial, was convicted even if he wasn’t there to defend himself, and ended up going to jail.
In the same vein, if you slept through an important meeting or missed a major life milestone because you were catching some zzz’s (serious neurological disorders aside), just think, as Chinese Zen Master Huang Po said, “The past has not gone; the present is a fleeting moment; the future is not yet to come.”
Not just an irony of life turned popular 90s song, rain on one’s wedding day is a big concern for many a bride (and groom, it can be assumed)–not only because it means you’ll get wet when you don’t want to be, but because when it rains, everything else that’s shitty just follows, like floods, bad traffic and people cancelling on you because the rain can be such a downer.
When it rains on your parade or some other major event that’s supposed to be the highlight of your year, just take it all in stride like this bride did, despite having just recently lost her dad and then promptly having the weather turn for the worst on her wedding day.
As the philosopher Alan Watts said, “The art of living… is neither careless drifting on the one hand nor fearful clinging to the past on the other. It consists in being sensitive to each moment, in regarding it as utterly new and unique, in having the mind open and wholly receptive.”
Some of life’s shittiest moments are those that involve actual shit. For example, the horrifying poop-in-purse story which was live-tweeted by a woman from Toronto earlier this year. In the end, her quick-thinking, self-deprecating sense of humor, and even the toilet, triumphed.
Considering pooping is something that everybody does every day, it should not be as embarrassing a thing as it is, whether you’re going to talk about it or acknowledge that it will be or has been done. Know that “there is no mistake in nature,” as American self-help author Byron Katie said.
A faux pas in itself makes things especially awkward and embarrassing but when it’s witnessed by many people, possibly on live television as it was when Steve Harvey announced the wrong Miss Universe 2015, that embarrassment is multiplied tenfold.
In such situations, bear in mind that to err is human. You have to put your chin up. Swami Vivekananda said, “The whole secret of existence is to have no fear. Never fear what will become of you.”
Never mind your critics. When repeatedly bashed, one can look to Rumi, saying this about meeting in a neutral-ground field that is between neither right nor wrong: “Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing there is a field. I’ll meet you there,” said the poet.
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