When external factors shift, we have an opportunity to rediscover our core, the
only truly safe place to call home.
There are times when our whole world seems to be falling apart around
us, and we are not sure what to hold onto anymore. Sometimes our relationships
crumble and sometimes it's our physical environment. At other times, we can't
put our finger on it, but we feel as if all the walls have fallen down around
us and we are standing with nothing to lean on, exposed and vulnerable. These
are the times in our lives when we are given an opportunity to see where we
have established our sense of identity, safety, and well-being. And while it is
perfectly natural and part of our process to locate our sense of self in
externals, any time those external factors shift, we have an opportunity to
rediscover and move closer to our core, which is the only truly safe place to
call home.
The core of our being is not affected by the shifting winds of circumstance or
subject to the cycles of change that govern physical reality. It is as steady
and consistent as the sun, which is why the great mystics and mystical poets
often reference the sun in their odes to the self. Like the sun, there are
times when our core seems to be inaccessible to us, but this is just a
misperception. We know that when the sun goes behind a cloud or sets for the
night, it has not disappeared but is simply temporarily out of sight. In the
same way, we can trust that our inner core is always shining brightly, even
when we cannot quite see it.
We can cling to this core when things around us are falling apart, knowing
that an inexhaustible light shines from within ourselves. Times of external
darkness can be a great gift in that they provide an opportunity to remember
this inner light that shines regardless of the circumstances of our lives. When
our external lives begin to come back together, we are able to lean a bit more
lightly on the structures we used to call home, knowing more clearly than ever
that our true home is that bright sun shining in our core.
No comments:
Post a Comment