Whenever you notice that you’re energy is negative, ask yourself:
“What am I grateful for?”
- What made you happy?
- What energized you?
- What barrier did you overcome?
- What changed you?
- What triggered your creativity?
- What deepened your spirituality?
- What kindness did you experience?
- What did others do for you?
- What inspired you?
- What made you feel good?
- What difficulty taught you an important lesson?
Gratitude is a mind state that leads to happiness and contentment. We
can get caught up in negative emotions, like resentment or anger. But
such emotions are destructive and painful for you as well as for others.
Gratitude is a hallmark of humanity; it lifts our lives out of
ignorance and isolation. But it is difficult to have gratitude for those
around us if they act kindly only out of an expectation of reward or a
sense of obligation. Also, when people try to manipulate others by
granting them favors, the resulting "debt" of gratitude may easily
become a burden. Buddhist wisdom, however, enables us to see our
essential interconnectedness beyond superficial social obligations.
Through our Buddhist practice we expand our capacity to express
gratitude and can even transform hostility into a cause for personal
development. Thus from his exile to the Izu Peninsula, the Daishonin
states: "Moreover, in this lifetime, I have taken faith in the Lotus
Sutra and encountered a ruler who will enable me to free myself in my
present existence from the sufferings of birth and death. Thus, how can I
dwell on this insignificant harm that he had done me and overlook my
debt to him?" (WND-1, 44).
As we develop a perspective and capacity to see even hardship in a
positive light, we can experience a sense of gratitude for something
beyond immediate give-and-take and deepen our humanity. Devadatta failed
to prevent Shakyamuni from acting kindly, and the shogunate government
could not make the Daishonin bitter. From these examples, we can see
that negative circumstances do not have to make us feel ungrateful.
Living Buddhism, May 2000, p.6
and By Mary Jaksch
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