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by
Eckhart Tolle
The following is an excerpt from Eckhart Tolle's
Findhorn Retreat
We’re here to find that dimension
within ourselves
that
is deeper than thought.
This teaching isn’t based on knowledge,
on
new interesting facts, new information. The world is full of that already.
You can
push any button on the many devices you have and get information.
You’re drowning in information.
And
ultimately, what is the point of it all? More information, more things,
more of this, more of that. Are we going to find the fullness of life
through more things and greater and bigger shopping malls?
Are
we going to find ourselves through improving our ability to think and
analyze, and accumulate more information, more stuff? Is “more” going to
save the world? It’s all form.
You can never make it on the level of
form. You can never quite arrange and accumulate all the forms that you
think you need so that you can be yourself fully.
Sometimes you can do it for a brief time
span. You can suddenly find everything working in your life: your health
is good; your relationship is great; you have money, possessions, love,
and respect from other people.
But
before long, something starts to crumble here or there, either the
finances or the relationship, your health or your work or living
situation. It is the nature of the world of form that nothing stays fixed
for very long — and so it starts to fall apart again.
The
voice in the head that never stops speaking
becomes a civilization that is obsessed with form,
and
therefore knows nothing of the most important
dimension of human existence:
the
sacred,
the
stillness,
the
formless,
the
divine.
“What does it profit you if you gain the whole world and lose yourself?”

It
has been said that there are two ways of being unhappy: not getting what
you want, and getting what you want.
When
people attain what the world tells us is desirable — wealth, recognition,
property, achievement — they’re still not happy, at least not for long.
They’re not at peace with themselves. They don’t have a true sense of
security, a sense of finally having arrived.
Their achievements have not provided them with what they were really
looking for — themselves. They have not given them the sense of
being rooted in life, or as Jesus calls it, the fullness of life.

The form of this moment is the portal into
the formless dimension. It is the narrow gate that Jesus talks about that
leads to life. Yes, it’s very narrow: it’s only this moment.
To find it, you need to roll up the scroll
of your life on which your story is written, past and future. Before there
were books, there were scrolls, and you rolled them up when you were done
with them.
So
put your story away. It is not who you are. People usually live carrying a
burden of past and future, a burden of their personal history, which they
hope will fulfill itself in the future. It won’t, so roll up that old
scroll. Be done with it.
You
don’t solve problems by thinking; you create problems by thinking. The
solution always appears when you step out of thinking and become still and
absolutely present, even if only for a moment. Then, a little later when
thought comes back, you suddenly have a creative insight that wasn’t there
before.
Let
go of excessive thinking and see how everything changes. Your
relationships change because you don’t demand that the other person should
do something for you to enhance your sense of self. You don’t compare
yourself to others or try to be more than someone else to strengthen your
sense of identity.
You
allow everyone to be as they are. You don’t need to change them; you don’t
need them to behave differently so that you can be happy.

There’s nothing wrong with doing new things, pursuing activities,
exploring new countries, meeting new people, acquiring knowledge and
expertise, developing your physical or mental abilities, and creating
whatever you’re called upon to create in this world.
It
is beautiful to create in this world, and there is always more that you
can do.
Now
the question is, are you looking for yourself in what you do? Are you
attempting to add more to who you think you are? Are you compulsively
striving toward the next moment and the next and the next, hoping to find
some sense of completion and fulfillment?
The
preciousness of Being is your true specialness. What the egoic self had
been looking for on the level of the story — I want to be special —
obscured the
fact that you could not be more special than you already are now. Not
special because you are better or more wretched than someone else, but
because you can sense a beauty, a preciousness, an aliveness deep within.

When
you are present in this moment,
you
break the continuity of your story, of past and future.
Then
true intelligence arises,
and
also love.
The
only way love can come into your life
is
not through form, but through that inner spaciousness that is Presence.
Love
has no form.

Bestselling author
Eckhart Tolle has emerged as one of the finest
spiritual
teachers of
our time. He is the author of many books,
including The Power of Now, A
New Earth, Stillness Speaks. This
article is excerpted from his most recent work, a book and DVD
package called Eckhart Tolle’s
Findhorn Retreat.
Reprinted
with permission from Eckhart Tolle’s Findhorn
Retreat: Stillness Amidst
the World,
©
2006
by Eckhart Tolle, Eckhart Teachings Inc.
Published by New World
Library,
Novato, CA.
www.NewWorldLibrary.com
Published by expressed
permission of the publisher
: New World Library

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