Over the past year, I have been collecting the blogs of people living “alternative” forms of career. Or, you might say, doing lives in a form different from the wage-an-hour, 9-5 setting. One thing I’ve noticed among nearly everyone writing these blogs is a passion for life that bleeds through their words. Even when they’re writing about something miserable, about some form of suffering, there’s still an energy present that I find myself attracted to. An underlying joy or ease, perhaps? I haven’t quite pinned it down, and don’t think “it” ever will be.
One of the blogs I follow is called “Zen Habits.” It’s author, Leo Babauta, is clearly influenced by Buddhism, although I don’t know whether he actually practices or not. This is what he says his writing is about:
Zen Habits is about finding simplicity in the daily chaos of our lives. It’s about clearing the clutter so we can focus on what’s important, create something amazing, find happiness.
Now, much can be said about what might be called the “simplicity movement.” I know Katie over at Kloncke once made some astute criticisms about how simplicity advocates tend to speak to middle and upper class folks, and often fail to comment on forms of systemic injustice that often stand in the way of poor and working class people benefiting. Another way to look at it is that it’s often an individualist or nuclear family centric approach.
So, with that said, I like Leo’s blog because while it does appeal to that middle class, consumerist crowd in need of “downsizing” their attachments to stuff and other clutter, it’s not limited to that. Some of the articles could easily be used by someone who is totally broke and trying to figure out how to financially support themselves in a more beneficial way. And some of the posts are simply redirecting our attention towards more wholesome aspects of life and living.
Anyway, I don’t want to just plug Leo’s blog here, but to bring up what he wrote in a recent post.
Gratitude solves all problems. I am grateful for having this friend, or stranger, in my life, and I’m grateful for the chance to even be here, and for the incredible life I have.
Sounds really simple, doesn’t it? Also might sound like nonsense to the practical mind. And it’s true, “problems” in the relative sense don’t get “solved” by simply being grateful. I’ve spent large chunks of time down at our Occupy Wall Street offshoot in Minneapolis this past week precisely because there are complicated social issues that need to be approached in a radically different way.
However, go back to that first sentence. “Gratitude solves all problems.” I think this is a perfect way to describe the tapping into the universal energy flowing through everything all the time. That “place” where it is all ok right now.
Gratitude breaks through suffering. I’ve felt that over and over in my life. Maybe you have as well. And for all of our ability to produce endlessly “profound” spiritual teachings as a species, it so often does come back to something simple that we can rely on. Trust in. While working to address all the complications standing before us.
Ross Lonergan says
Hi Nathan:
Thanks for this. I like these simple (but not always easy) values very much, along with the words that express them. Our lives are so overshadowed and controlled by consumerist, and therefore, in my view, selfish, “values,” that the joy inherent in simplicity is not only lost, it is often scorned. Two of my favourites among these simple values are humility and forgiveness, probably because I do not find them easy to practice.