We are very concerned ... about anything. What we have, what we have, we can do and what not, for the family, ecology, and the world for ourselves.
But maybe we're a bit wrong about these verbs. Having
and Power are gaps so large that they will never be filled.
In Buddhism explains that as dissatisfaction.
Our nature is dissatisfaction because they never reach the state of fullness.
Here is a brief example Upecchamati my coach said
"Imagine a sunny afternoon but no heat, an evening where your family went its proceedings and are home alone. The street is quiet, the dogs sleep, the phone rests things you have no outstanding debts to pay, things to do.
The house is clean and tidy, the children sleep, have your health, you have money, you have work, you have what you have and the feeling of peace comes over you.
walk into the room and a warm and cool sunshine lights up your favorite chair.
've been reading a book as good as it could not find much, and this is the perfect time to continue your reading. Nestled in your chair with a literary companion and a few minutes of sound isolation.
And even when everything seems right, unmet your nature tells you "this time would be even more perfect, with a cup of tea .... "Oh! as I would be at this time in front of a pool with a pina colada "
Surely the day goes by without enjoying what you do have, what we can do.
learn to live every moment, and not as as cliché as if it were your last. "Enjoy it as if it were the first of many perfections in his life.
Every minute is what should be and no more. Just what we need not know. Everything else , you have it.
Order it, and you have it.
NAMASTE