It’s easy to be frightened, to feel cynical, to judge and
criticize, to feel envy or jealousy, and to generally drop into a place of
contention without even noticing. Our culture gives us nonstop messages of
needing things to be other. It keeps us seeking the next best thing, rarely
supporting the value of stopping and enjoying what is already here as it is,
without the need to fix or change.
Mindfulness practice helps us see the habit patterns of the
mind. Once we see them and get familiar with them, we start to see whether they
lead to happiness or unhappiness, stress or ease. And when this happens, we can
make a deliberate choice about how to respond and how to engage.
Rick Hansen, the neuropsychologist and author of The Buddha’s Brain, and Hardwiring Happiness, teaches that the
brain has a natural negativity bias. It’s like velcro for the negative and
teflon for the positive. Our basic survival instinct recognizes and hooks into
danger much more quickly than it recognizes and hooks into peace, joy, love and
the general sense that things are alright. But we can change this. We can look
for the good, deliberately.
The Buddha said “what one frequently thinks and ponders upon
will become the inclination of the mind.” For me, I know that if I keep playing
the worn out tape of an old painful relationship, what happened, what didn’t
happen, I’ll get stuck in the sticky gooey rut of the story. I’ll likely become
sad or resentful, angry or hurt all over again. The repetitive thoughts
themselves will strengthen the imprint of the memory in my mind making the difficult
feelings easy to access, easy feel, cloud the mind and lead nowhere helpful.
Joseph Goldstein says “repetitive thoughts are a dead end.” When I can
recognize this, I can more easily stop the habitual thought pattern, recognize
it for what it is, and avoid replaying the old hurt.
The bright shining spot here is that the same is true for
good memories, good thoughts, and positive experiences, those that nurture and
support our well-being and bring happiness. They, too, imprint in the memory.
When we take in and deliberately recognize joy, happiness, love, a sense of things
being alright, we incline the mind towards well-being and reinforce those
neuronal connections. Not only do we look for the good, but we intentionally take
the time to let in it and soak it up.
As these kinds of habit patterns take root and grow, we have
greater and easier access to our own innate capacity to feel joy. Our happiness
grows. As our own happiness grows, it becomes easier to feel joy for someone
else’s good fortune. This is mudita,
appreciative joy; the completely natural expression of the open, available and
steady heart.
And here’s a little advice from The Dalai Lama…
"It is important to understand how much your own happiness is
linked to that of others. There is no individual happiness totally independent
of others.”
“If we derive happiness from the happiness of others, we
have at least six billion more opportunities to be happy.”
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