A Whole Day with Buddhists...

@chris-chris92 · 2025-09-27 09:35 · hive-194848

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At the beginning I thought the visit would pass like another retreat, the kind of day one attends and later reduces to a polite anecdote. I entered with that mindset, yet the room itself contradicted me. No decoration, no distractions, only walls that pressed their own rhythm. A pair of wooden blocks sat on a table. Short vows covered their surface in thick strokes of ink. They spoke about desire and about a path I barely understood. The rough wood forced me to stare longer than I planned. The question pressed against me with quiet strength: what do I hold on to, and why.

Being with the group shook my balance in ways I had not expected. Their robes erased individuality, yet every face carried a weight that drew me closer. Some lifted their eyes with calm smiles, others stayed still, but no one drifted. I drank tea beside them and silence stretched across the table. It did not suffocate me, it stood firm. For the first time in months I felt no pressure to justify my presence. That absence of performance startled me. I saw how often I flood rooms with words just to prove my existence. In that circle, stripped of chatter, I felt uncovered and relieved at once, as if someone had lifted the mask out of my hands.

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Meditation came with resistance. My legs stiffened, my mind raced through errands, my chest pulled against the quiet. Still I remained. Breath moved in and out, steady and plain. The floor released small cracks of sound, someone shifted behind me, a fan turned above. Nothing dramatic took place, yet I felt the tension loosen. My thoughts lost sharpness once I stopped feeding them. I discovered that detachment does not demand a fight. It requires a release. When I allowed the moment to stand as it was, the noise thinned. I did not conquer my thoughts. They lost their hold when I refused to grip them.

During the walk in the garden the lesson unfolded further. Stones pressed against my sandals, air carried the smell of rain and leaves, light sliced the branches in broken shapes. None of it looked rare, but I received it as though I had never seen it before. I realized then that minimalism does not belong to design or empty shelves. It breathes in the act of noticing without grasp. I moved with the group, slow and equal, robes brushing in rhythm. The borders of self felt thinner. In that fragile clarity I asked myself what remains when I stop defending a fixed image.

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By evening the retreat ended and I stepped back into the weight of my usual life. My phone blinked with alerts, the calendar pressed in, voices waited for answers. The Buddhists had not pressed their doctrine, they had not demanded a new faith. They only offered a mirror without polish. In that mirror I recognized how much of my energy rests on possessions, titles, stories I repeat to secure my place. I left their space with empty hands, yet silence clung to me more than any object. That silence has not left. The confession I carry is this: my scaffolding looks fragile, my search for the self may not depend on adding layers but on shedding them until nothing false remains.

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All photographs and content used in this post are my own. Therefore, they have been used under my permission and are my property.


#buddhist #minimalist-lifestyle #philosophy #story #writing #photography #minimalism #journey #learning
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