
The Buddha was a smart guy. He knew all about the foaming seas of life, and the sharks that loom underneath. Plus he knew something else …
It’s possible to be “chill” amid it all
He talked about equanimity, which the dictionary simply calls “a calm mental state”.
Margaret Cullen was writing in Tricycle magazine about this, and her words reached me this morning:
In Buddhist teachings, a metaphor that is often used for equanimity is grandmotherly love. Whether it is seeing with a grandmother’s eyes or relating through a grandmother’s heart, the grandmother is able to love fully without being caught in the dramas of her grandchildren’s lives. She doesn’t take things personally and sees all children as deserving of love and care. She has seen through the trappings of identity and power and has the wisdom of perspective. A grandmother’s eyes are quiet eyes: They neither seek to possess nor disown. The grandmother’s gaze epitomizes unconditional goodwill.
Well said, Margaret.
Another cool idea that came from the mind of the Buddha is that virtuous qualities have”near enemies”. They masquerade as the real thing. Compassion is great. Pity is not.
Margaret again:
The most significant near enemies of equanimity are indifference, detachment, apathy and passivity.
***
Sometimes bad stuff happens
Sometimes the results you and I create are lovely
And often not
It’s okay
We’ll just keep loving each other













