The Ancient Art of Letting Go | Mark Tyrrell

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • It seems to me (okay, and to Buddhists too!) that much human suffering centres around loss. Regret for loss in the past but also fear of loss in the future.
    We become anxious, jealous, angry when we feel we may lose 'face' or something else we consider our property, right, or due. And yet loss is perhaps the one feature of life we can rely on.
    This week's video is more of a reflection piece than a how-to guide. I use a trivial example of my own headlong collision with impermanence and explore the consequences of not letting go and also how life may be enhanced when we do.
    Notes and references can be found on the original article here on my blog:
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    ++About Mark Tyrrell++
    Psychology is my passion. I've been a psychotherapist trainer since 1998, specializing in brief, solution focused approaches. I now teach practitioners all over the world via our online courses.
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Комментарии • 1

  • @markogenyk-berezovskyj1351
    @markogenyk-berezovskyj1351 21 час назад

    I do not share quite a lot of this view. Math does not change, does not pass, does not fade. Genuine art - same story. Human, and very probably animal, plant, fungi etc, will to live , to be oneself in the best sense of the word, also is not a matter of passing, of rise and decline. Traditional wisdom deems eternity, infinity, transcendence, to be something serene, distant, figment of imagination. No, wrong. We live and experience them every, day every minute. They are fundamental to our being, to our doubts, to our struggles, pains, losses and victories. We just do not care about them. We just freaking ignore them, forget them, minimize them. So. I am not going lo learn how to let go of Pythagorean theorem, of Braque paintings, of immense unlimited never ending number of surprises out there.