There are times like these in our lives—such as facing death or even giving birth —
when we are no longer able to manage our outer image, no longer able to suspend ourselves
in pursuit of the ideal self. It’s just how it is—we’re only human beings, and in these times
of crisis we just don’t have the energy to hold it all together. When things fall apart,
we can only be as we are. Pretense and striving fall away, and life becomes starkly simple.
The value of such moments is this: we are shown that the game can be given up
and that when it is, the emptiness that we feared, emptiness of the void, is not what is there.
What is there is the bare fact of being. Simple presence remains—breathing in and out,
waking up and going to sleep. The inevitability of the circumstances at hand is
compelling enough that for the moment, our complexity ceases. Our compulsive manufacturing
of contrived existence stops. Perhaps in that ungrounded space, we are not even comforting ourselves,
not even telling ourselves everything is okay; we may be too tired to do even that.
It’s just total capitulation—we’re forced into non-grasping of inherent reality.
The contrived self has been emptied out along with contrived existence and the tiring treadmill
of image maintenance that goes along with it. What remains is a new moment
spontaneously meeting us again and again.
There is an incredible reality that opens up to us in those gaps
There is an incredible reality that opens up to us in those gaps
if we just do not reject rupture. In fact, if we have some reliable idea of what is happening
in that intermediate, groundless space, rupture can become rapture.
~ Pema Khandro Rinpoche
excerpts from Breaking Open in the Bardo