Thursday, 19 October 2017

A Fearless Heart by Thupten Jingpa




All quotes from Thupten's book



Most of us continue to hold on to a static self-representation.  Each of us has internalized, from our cultural, social and childhood experience, a particular representation of ourselves, a self-concept that exerts a powerful influence on our everyday life, because it affects how we perceive as well as experience ourselves and the world around us. 


Achievement-dependent self-esteem makes us vulnerable to feelings of inadequacy and failure when things don’t unfold as expected. 


Unless we change social structures and institutions, we cannot expect our society to change in any fundamental, enduring way.


Hatred is a form of caring (we don’t hate if we don’t care).  Self-hatred comes from caring a lot but being unable to accept or forgive our imperfect selves.


In intimate relationships, there will be times when one side feels more vulnerable than the other.  It helps if the one who is less vulnerable offers kindness and understanding rather than judgment and recrimination.


Performance obsession can lead to insensitivity, impatience, and even arrogance toward other people, especially when we perceive them to be not up to our standard.


People who are suffering are not always on their best behavior.


When we face a challenge, if we remain caught within the narrow confines of self-preoccupation then fear becomes the dominant emotion.


Having compassion for others doesn’t mean people aren’t accountable for their actions.


Our happiness lies not in avoiding pain and sorrow, but in not letting them disturb our basic equilibrium – the calm of allowing, at least for the moment, the way things are.  The sooner we can make peace with them, the sooner we can stop reacting and start living with compassion for ourselves and for others.


Emotional pain almost always has an element of disappointment, which has to do with certain expectations not being met.