The Buddhist Art of Non-Confirmation
jiveny | April 16, 2011The Buddhists are known to practice the art of non-confirmation.
This means they refrain from giving and seeking confirmation of one’s words, of one’s actions and of one’s self.
By doing so, they forge their own path toward freedom.
No longer are they caught up with the illusions of the external world, warping their truth and distracting their presence.
No longer are they governed by their ego, vying to gain power-over through the portrayal of a particular image of self.
Instead, they are left – at first, quite uncomfortably – with only the judgment of their own mind and the guidance of their own moral compass.
And this is where the magic happens…
Where one really gets to know themselves,
Where one is cordially invited commune with their soul;
To discover what it is they truly ache for and pursue it with passion and reckless abandon.
Why do we question our own judgment?
Why do we think, for one second, that another could possibly tell us how to live our own lives any better than by the guidance of our own hearts?
Why are we so afraid to take the reins; to claim our decisions as our own?
Because if we were “wrong” than who’d be to blame?
If we “failed”, than how would we recover from such a loss of face?
But think about it, has life ever thrown you something you couldn’t handle?
You might think so, but you’re still here; you survived.
At worst you might have wound up a little bruised and battered.
Embarrassed perhaps… But you recovered and you evolved.








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