prejudice
No mother thinks her
child ugly.
No one is indifferent to themselves.
We are all familiar
with prejudice. It comes in many forms: nationalism, chauvinism,
provincialism, racism. Many of us undoubtedly cry out against these
injustices. As long as there is prejudice, we declare, we are never
able to fairly know one another.
And yet, it is exactly a type of prejudice that also keeps us from
knowing ourselves. If we think about it, we ourselves are the ones we
most favor. We cater to all our bodily needs, our sensual indulgences,
our intellectual curiosities, and our lustful ambitions. When we are
sick or disadvantaged, no one feels our pain more or wails more loudly.
When we are satisfied, no one rejoices with greater satisfaction. When
we are on the verge of death, no one clings with such vehemence.
As long as we are slaves to our appetites, then we cannot have the
attention for spirituality. As long as we value comfort over effort,
then we shall never have the fortitude for a spiritual quest. As long
as we adhere to intellectual ideas over experience, then we can never
have a genuine perception of Tao. As long as we insist that we are
separate, individual entities apart from the rest of the universe, then
we shall never realize oneness.
No mother thinks her child ugly, because that child is her own
creation. In the same way, we are inevitably partial to ourselves: We
create ourselves. If we are to reach any sort of spiritual realization,
we must confront and resolve this prejudice.
prejudice
365 Tao
daily meditations
Deng Ming-Dao (author)
ISBN 0-06-250223-9
Artist: Yu Ee
F4079
2'3" x 1'1"
0.68m x 0.34m
from the Gallery of China
http://www.the-gallery-of-china.com/
this is from room nineteen at this site
this original painting is available for purchase

duckdaotsu will
receive a donation
if this painting is purchased
click on thumbnail
for more information
and mention "duckdaotsu"
Often when one sees a human figure painting of a master and child (or
student) it is a depiction of LaoTsu. I find this especially true when
the master's face is either hidden or turned away. This might be the
artist's depiction of LaoTsu or one of the other Taoist masters of
Chinese history.
also,
do let
me know if you wish to unsubscribe from the daily
meditations or need to take a vacation.
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