pull down to refresh
108 sats \ 2 replies \ @Se7enZ OP 11 Mar \ parent \ on: Stoic Book Club: Meditations by Marcus Aurelius #5 - Book 5 BooksAndArticles
Aw, shucks Sensei... What a kind and generous response!
This view is familiar to me also, especially a few years ago -- and I think there is value to it. Meditation is a personal journey, and I can see how my perspective has changed a bit with time and practice.
Moreso and moreso, I feel like I'm letting go of controlling or directing where the practice takes me. Of course, there were times when I wanted to be a very powerful yogi, heal the world, or become the next Buddha -- powerful fantasies :) But I think I'm more in touch these last years with Marcus' message when he talks about accepting Fate, accepting the tasks granted to me and trying to do my best with those. The path is now more of a discovery than a self-created plan for achieving enlightenment or something.
Ohhh interesting how meditation allows for plurality of paths haha
Wouldn’t you know? My first nym is faterider, as in riding the tides of fate. Your view agrees well with my free-spirited nature.
What do you make of Sigmund Freud’s “The Theme of the 3 Caskets”? He explains that the names of the three goddesses of fate mean “the accidental within the decrees of destiny,” “the inevitable,” and “the fateful tendencies each one of us brings into the world.”
reply
Welp. I'll definitely be reading "The Theme of the 3 Caskets" sometime soon, now. Thanks! Who knows, maybe it will inspire another post? :)
reply