
We can always return to our deepest belief by stilling ourselves till
our heart—of its own weight—sinks below the noise of the world, below
the advice of others, even below our own expectations. Once our heart is
still, our mind can relax and we suddenly have the chance to hear what
is natural. For, below all the useful instructions, below the many steps
we're so anxious to follow, are the timeless ways of being that ready
us to meet life when it calls.
Once the heart is still, we can meet our deepest beliefs by practicing
openness. Consider how a flower knows when it's time to bloom. Rather
than preparing itself for a particular moment, it seems that a flower
stays true to a life of leaning toward the light and to a life of
continually opening in the presence of light. The way to our deepest
beliefs is the same. For the life of the soul opens like an unseeable
flower we carry within that is always leaning toward the light, whether
we want to or not. Though we have the choice whether to open ourselves
to that light or not.
So when losing track of what we believe in, when wondering what work we
are called to do in the world, we can still our heart till we sink below
the noise of the world, and ask ourselves: Where is the light coming
from today? What do I have to do to put myself in its path? What is
illuminated by leaning into that light? What can we learn about
ourselves and the world from listening to that sweet, resilient light?
Like a flower that can't help but open, what is it our heart can't keep
from doing now that it has a chance to open?
There is another important law of nature we must face as we work toward
inhabiting the sanctity of life. It is the fact that everything living
is worn down and broken open at some point in its journey, and when
enduring that rearrangement, the seed that has been living within us,
once given air, will grow out of that break. So stilling our heart and
living a life of openness also means letting the unexpected break in our
life heal in the light that finds us.
All of this requires a steady and quiet courage. When confused and lost,
unsure what you believe in, simply put your head below your heart and
lean into the light. Like a simple flower, the reward for opening to the
light is that we blossom. The reward for leaning into the light is that
we find our aliveness. And following our aliveness is how we meet our
gifts and how our gifts meet the world. For humans, blossoming into our
aliveness is the act of belief by which everything hidden becomes sweet
and colorful. When a flower blossoms, it turns inside out and wears its
beauty in the world. So do we.
(Written by Mark Nepo (information from Oprah's newsletter)