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Look Inward Unconditionally
By Lu Shuling
(Clearwisdom.net) Gradually let go of human notions while working with fellow practitioners The biggest achievement for me this year is that I have gradually let go of
many human notions while working with fellow practitioners. As I always had a
plainspoken and straightforward personality since I was a child, I found it hard
to get along with others and I always tried to do only what I wanted to do. I
could not take criticism very well. With such a temperament, I had an
instinctive tendency to avoid any group activities. Nevertheless, I still got
worried from time to time about things such as: What am I going to do when I
have to deal with the unavoidable relationship with a mother-in-law? In order to
avoid such problems, I even bought my own house before I got married. I did all
this simply because I did not want to change myself. However, once you take the path of cultivation, you have to let go of all
attachments and you cannot hide any of them. Some time ago, out of necessity, I
had to work with a fellow practitioner in China. This made me feel really
uneasy. I thought that although we cultivate in the same Fa, due to cultural
differences, we were bound to have conflicts on many issues as we would have
difficulties understanding each other. As I expected, we started to have big
conflicts not long after [we started]. Upon reflection, I thought that I was not
that impolite, but why had the fellow practitioner reacted that way? Before I
started to cultivate, whenever I came across something that upset me, I always
thought, "I can always change my job if it becomes too much for me."
But this was Dafa work, and I could not simply go away when there were
conflicts. So I told myself to endure. The first day, I found someone to vent my
grievances to. On the second day I still wanted to find someone to pour out my
feelings to. But when it came to the third day, I calmed down and started to
think: What is it that I need to enlighten to in this matter? When I willingly looked inward, the answer appeared by itself: I suddenly
realized that before cultivation, I was trying to live a life where I would not
be looked down upon. I took the entrance exam to go to university after high
school because I wanted to be respected and taken seriously; I took a work-study
program because I did not want to depend on my family; and all this was praised
as my "having a desire to do better", which in fact contained many
human notions. Master said in "Teaching the Fa at the 2004 Chicago Fa
Conference", "..., you just have to listen to those displeasing words, and you have
to be able to listen to those displeasing words. (Applause) Otherwise,
when you haven't even resolved this most basic cultivation issue, how could
you call yourself a Dafa disciple?" After all, it was still a matter of improving my Xinxing.
I thought that I should not try to avoid it this time and decided to face up to
it. After I untied this knot in my heart, not long afterwards, the practitioner
with whom I had conflicts also changed. She said to me, "I have listened to
the Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party several times
lately, and I found that I had indeed been influenced by the CCP Party culture.
In fact what you said to me earlier was all true, but at that time I could not
help myself and took it the wrong way." Master's arrangements allowed both
me and the fellow practitioner to find our attachments which were not easy to
detect. Now I would like to share some experiences in doing another Dafa project.
Last year, a fellow practitioner asked me to attend a team meeting. It was only
at this time that I realized that I had already been included in the team. I did
not know any of the other team members well and had only communicated with them
on the Internet or through online conferences. I did not want to be bound to any
specific work and did not like to participate in team work. I was indecisive
about whether I should stay or quit, and I decided to share this concern with
fellow practitioners. The fellow practitioners made allowances for my
personality and suggested that I maintain my status quo. I remember that on one occasion fellow practitioners in the team suggested
that I change a certain part of the project. I did not want to make any changes.
They asked me again and explained to me the benefits of the suggested changes,
but I still did not change my mind. For the entire day I felt uneasy. In the
evening I asked my husband, "Am I really that stubborn?" He replied,
"Yes, this is clearly an attachment." I argued, "But I'm only
doing what my heart tells me to do!" The next morning, I received a letter
from a practitioner in my team. In it, she said that she found that there were
some problems that she had failed to notice. After reading the letter, I was
willing to make the suggested changes. If I had accepted fellow practitioners'
advice earlier, I would have been able to detect the problems in time and other
practitioners would have suffered fewer losses. This experience helped me learn
to consider others more and let go of my own attachments if it was beneficial to
others. On another occasion, I made a suggestion to the team but not everybody agreed
with it. We decided to have another meeting the next day. I thought to myself
that I had said all that I wanted to say the day before and my microphone was
not working either, so I used this as an excuse and told fellow practitioners
that I would not attend the conference in the evening. However, in the
afternoon, the more I thought about it the more I felt that I was being unfair
to fellow practitioners. They arranged the conference because of my suggestion,
and yet I did not want to participate. I felt very guilty, so I went to town and
bought a new microphone. I thought that I would keep thinking about whether I
would join the conference. In the evening, I could not help myself and went
online to see how the conference was going. Everyone was very happy to see me
online. I explained my suggestion from a different angle and found that this
time they all understood what I wanted to do and they all felt that it was a
good idea. They immediately looked within themselves and said that they did not
pay much attention to what I was saying the day before and that was why they
could not understand what I meant at that time. I said to them, "Perhaps I
have made some breakthrough today and that is why I could explain my suggestion
in a way that you could understand!" This way, we realised that only by us
improving as one body could we better save sentient beings. During the last six months, I have seen the responsible attitude of fellow
practitioners towards sentient beings; I have seen fellow practitioners' hearts
which are big enough to tolerate each other and complement each other on their
own initiative. I have also seen fellow practitioners' solid cultivation that
has enabled them to deeply look within themselves. I have also moved forward in
the field created with fellow practitioners' righteous thoughts and righteous
actions. Thank you Master, for making this arrangement that has given me the
opportunity to join other practitioners and let go of my attachments. Every cultivator needs to walk his/her own path and there is no example to
follow One other deep understanding that I have come to is that every cultivator
needs to walk his/her own path. There are no role models to follow. This is
truly so, because Dafa disciples play various roles among everyday people and
they also validate the Fa in the role that they play. For example, I'm a
housewife, so I need to enlighten to how to educate my children with the Fa
principles and how to communicate with teachers and other parents who do not
practice cultivation. Take educating children for example. There is much to do in this aspect that
one needs to find out. When coming up against tests, perhaps only fellow
practitioners can understand the inner struggles that one experiences. A fellow
practitioner has a child who is the same age as my child, so they have been
playing with each other all along. Whenever they have an argument, I would blame
my child first. However, after a few such incidents I felt that it was not
right, and I started to observe what was going on. To my surprise I found that
when that child complained to his mother, some of the things that he said had
never happened. This made me feel agitated. At the same time, I also blamed
myself for not being able to keep calm. I wanted to discuss this with that
fellow practitioner, but found it hard to bring the matter up. Later the
children had more and more conflicts, and in the end I decided to let them see
each other less and less as a way to avoid this issue. Later that practitioner told me that her child had been diagnosed as being
"hyperactive", and I realized that her child's emotional behavior was
not deliberate. I asked my son, "Do you feel angry when he talks like
that?" "No, I don't" my son replied. I asked him again, "Why
don't you feel angry?" "Why should I be angry?" he asked. From my
son's innocence, I saw my own gaps: I'm a cultivator. Why is it that I'm able to
tolerate the other child only after I have been told that he has been diagnosed
with having "hyperactive" symptoms? Why was I not able to put myself
in other people's position and be considerate towards others? That fellow
practitioner had suffered much hardship in looking after a hyperactive child,
and yet I did not extend a helping hand. Instead I only looked on and complained
that she spoiled her child too much. No matter how close practitioners are to one another, we must share our
understandings of issues based on the Fa, and the education of young people is
no exception. Now I look at these children from a new perspective and have a
very different feeling. I believe that as long as we keep up our Xinxing
and diligently improve ourselves on the Fa, the children will rectify all that
is not righteous in themselves. Unconditionally look within ourselves The most important understanding I have come to is that we must
unconditionally look within ourselves. If we are confused by the reasoning at
this human level, then whenever we feel that we are in the right, we will use
human reasoning to protect ourselves. If we cannot calm down and truly look
within, then we cannot find anything. Therefore, no matter what circumstances we
find ourselves in, we should not lower the requirements for us created by the
principles of "Truthfulness-Compassion-Forbearance." Whenever I made some improvement and looked back, I found truthfulness. I
felt very proud of this, but later realized I lacked compassion and forbearance.
Sometimes I hurt other people and was not even aware of it. We can cultivate to
a very high level, but it all depends on how we cultivate ourselves. Whenever I come across conflicts, I try to remember Master's words in
"Teaching the Fa at the Conference in Singapore": "If you can examine yourselves with every thing you come across, then
I'd say you are really remarkable, and nothing can block you on your path to
Consummation. Yet when we run into problems, we often look outwards--"Why
are you treating me like that?"--and feel that we've been treated
unfairly, instead of examining ourselves. That's the greatest and most fatal
obstacle for all living beings. In the past, some people said that it was
impossible to succeed in cultivation. How could one succeed in cultivation?
[They couldn't succeed] because that was the biggest obstacle, and nobody was
willing to find faults in himself amidst problems. When a person feels hurt,
or when he encounters misfortune, it's really difficult for him to still
examine himself and see if he's done something wrong. If a person can do that,
then I'd say that on this path, on this path of cultivation, and for the
eternity of his existence, nothing can stop him. It's truly the case." September 18, 2005 |