as told by the Dalai Lama

In the time of Shakyamuni Buddha, there lived a man in his eighties who had done little about his spiritual life, and so he set out to find the Buddha’s encampment, which he had heard was nearby. Looking like a beggar, old and hopeless, he arrived at the encampment and asked one of the senior monks if he could be accepted into the sangha.

After testing the old man’s attainment, the monk replied, “You are an old man and haven’t done any practice, so there’s no point in giving you teachings now.”

Completely dejected, the old man lay down in front of the door. When the Buddha came by, he asked the old man why he was lying there. The old man told his story, to which the Buddha replied: “Some of my monks don’t realize that just because the body is old, there’s still every reason to practice. All you need is courage and enthusiasm to study and meditate. I know you have insight and the roots of virtue. I will take care of you.”

Photo by Kepika Thapa on Pexels.com

Somehow these quotes work together

From “Love Hurts: Buddhist Advice for the Heartbroken” by Lodro Rinzler –

“Heartbreak isn’t just pain and suffering. There’s also an opportunity to take what you learned with you, and apply it so you grow in all sorts of ways. You may end up learning that you are constantly changing, and your ego isn’t as tight as you think it is, and that you can actually relax some of that “what if” thinking and become comfortable with the way things are. Those sorts of lessons strike me as incredibly valuable.”

And from “On the Threshold of Transformation: Daily Meditations for Men” by Richard Rohr

“You cannot declare yourself important; any attempt to do so is delusional, even though many try. The problem we try so hard to solve is already completely solved, and most of us don’t even know it. We are searching for what we already have.”