Accepting Your Unhappiness to Be Happy | Eckhart Tolle
https//www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wd2CMXhU0s&ab_channel=EckhartTolle
“So whatever it is,
realize that the primary factor in any situation
is your inner state
because that determines how you respond.
So no matter what it is your primary responsibility
is to be aware of what goes on inside you.
And that means whatever arises in your life
is actually to be used in your practice so…”
3:05
And so you feel this unhappiness arising
in you and you say, where does that come from?
Oh, I forgot to accept
my experience of this moment.
And then you accept the unhappiness.
And the weird thing with unhappiness is
when you completely accept the unhappiness,
it cannot survive very long. (chuckles)
It doesn’t like… It cannot actually
coexist with acceptance. (chuckles)
3:40
So the weird thing then arises that you say something like
okay, I’m unhappy, that’s okay.
I don’t mind being unhappy.
And then the unhappiness goes, what’s going on?
(audience laughs)
---
So whatever it is,
realize that the primary factor
in any situation
is your inner state.
(bell chimes)
So there are quite a few people
who are joining us from other parts of the planet.
I don't know where they.
I think it's over there.
Now all of you here
luckily have escaped the polar vortex.
Especially if you're from places like Chicago,
you'll be very grateful to be here.
However, if you are in Chicago or similar places,
be grateful that you're experiencing
a one in a lifetime weather phenomenon,
but don't forget to dress up warm enough when you go out.
Be grateful for whatever your experience
of this moment is.
And if you cannot be grateful, at least allow it to be
because it already is.
You might as well.
Now, if you did this little thing, it sounds very little
and it is very little,
allowing your experience of this moment to be the way it is.
Just this little thing would remove...
Well, how to put it in percentage terms?
Let's say 95% of the suffering from your life.
I don't about the rest, the 5%,
we'll get to that sometime.
That would already remove your gigantic chunk of unhappiness
in whatever form
Unhappiness is the most generic term one could use.
The Buddha called it suffering.
And so for the next six months,
then that obviously is one of the practices,
not to internally resist your experience
of this moment.
Now, of course,
many times,
possibly you'll forget that.
And that's fine.
The moment you realize that you forgot it, it's there again.
And then you can accept the experience of this moment
as the unhappiness that is arising in you
because you forgot to accept your experience of this moment.
And so you feel this unhappiness arising
in you and you say, where does that come from?
Oh, I forgot to accept
my experience of this moment.
And then you accept the unhappiness.
And the weird thing with unhappiness is
when you completely accept the unhappiness,
it cannot survive very long. (chuckles)
It doesn't like... It cannot actually
coexist with acceptance. (chuckles)
So the weird thing then arises that you say something like,
okay, I'm unhappy, that's okay.
I don't mind being unhappy.
And then the unhappiness goes, what's going on?
(audience laughs)
That's not supposed to happen. (chuckles)
The unhappiness cannot survive for very long
with the acceptance.
Even the acceptance of unhappiness,
not indulging in unhappiness, but the acceptance.
Now, the acceptance of unhappiness,
it presupposes that there's an awareness there that knows
that you're unhappy.
Now that might sound like something very natural,
but it isn't
because the most unhappy people, and there still millions.
And of course they have reasons for being unhappy, yes.
And it's not necessarily the people who you'd think
would have the most powerful reasons for being unhappy.
It's often those who you would think,
there are many millions who have it worse than they
but these are more unhappy than those.
It's often the case.
So the unhappiness is
something that when it's recognized as unhappiness
and accepted, something happens to it.
It begins to dissolve,
but the really unhappy people are so identified
with the unhappiness, which is...
a combination of certain
recurring thoughts in your head,
a certain narrative that is not pleasant.
Whether it is about my life,
whether the narrative says, my life,
oh dreadful thing my life... oh.
(audience giggling)
Why did it all go so wrong, so wrong, wrong?
And now there's nothing I can do (indistinct).
Or whether the narrative is about somebody else.
Do you know what he did, what she said and did?
The narrative may be about something
that hasn't happened yet.
And it goes on and on
or something that happened in the distant past
or not so distant past.
So there's a narrative.
And then there are emotions that are reflection
of the narrative.
The narrative is thoughts,
certain types of thoughts.
Certain thoughts that have a certain frequency.
(Eckhart groans) (audience giggles)
And then that awakens the emotional frequency
because the body thinks
the narrative in your mind is reality,
that is the reality you're experiencing.
So the body reacts with an emotion.
Simple example, at night,
you can't sleep because you're extremely worried
about what's going to happen to you
or somebody close to you
or even the world.
And it all sounds very critical.
There's a crisis in your head, not outside.
Outside your head, there's a pillow
and there's a blanket
or even something big and fluffy and soft,
down... duvet. (audience laughs)
And there's no unhappiness there.
And if you look around the bedroom also,
where's the unhappiness?
(audience laughs)
The plant is okay. It's not unhappy.
No, it's all happening in here.
(audience laughs)
And then the body, since that is the critical reality
that you inhabit,
there is a crisis in your life.
The body doesn't know the difference
between what's actually happening
and what's happening in your head.
What's happening in your head is taken to be
the absolute reality.
And then you experience the emotion that goes
with that kind of narrative.
And so there's no awareness.
And when you're trapped in that, you don't even really know
that you are unhappy because you are the unhappiness.
The unhappiness has become your identity.
So when you become the unhappiness,
you don't even know that you...
Or suffer, let's use the Buddhist term suffering.
When you are in this deep suffering,
you don't even know you're suffering
because the suffering is a gigantic, huge chunk,
part of your sense of self.
You are a suffering entity.
And as all therapists know
that once the patient
or the client or whatever they call the people
that come to them, according to their school.
They reach a point where there's a possibility
of going beyond the deep seated patterns,
unconscious patterns.
And then there's a huge resistance very often
because the person is afraid
of losing a very important
piece of their identity.
And sometimes it's the most important part
of their identity.
If they have lived with an unhappy sense of self for years
and perhaps even decades, they don't want to let go.
And again, they don't know that consciously.
They never say, "I do not want to let go,"
but if they could say that,
that means there's already some awareness.
So lack of awareness, lack of presence,
that is the unawakened state that still,
unfortunately, millions of humans are trapped in that.
But the moment you know, you recognize your inner state,
that means there is an awareness.
There is another dimension of consciousness that has emerged
in you, through you, a deeper dimension of consciousness
that is not the conditioned thinking.
So we can call it awareness or we can call it presence.
You can call it the unconditioned consciousness.
And then the beginning of freedom,
the possibility of freedom arises.
And it's from there that you recognize your inner states
as they arise.
From there that you recognize your unhappiness.
You can feel the unhappiness.
But the moment you become aware of suffering or unhappiness
in you, you're no longer feeding it with your thoughts.
As long as you're not aware
you're feeding it as a vicious circle.
You're feeding it with your thoughts, with your narrative.
And you're trapped in the vicious circle.
Your narrative creates more unhappiness.
Your unhappiness creates more thought
and you're trapped in that.
So for the next six months and hopefully beyond
because it's a much more pleasant way to live,
make it your practice to be aware of your inner states
and meaning no matter what situation arises in your life,
whether it's little things
big things, difficult situations,
difficult people, challenges, problems...
Because the next six months are not going to be free
of challenges and problems.
So whatever it is, realize that the primary factor
in any situation is your inner state
because that determines how you respond.
So no matter what it is
your primary responsibility is to be aware
of what goes on inside you.
And that means whatever arises
in your life is actually to be used
in your practice
so that you do not
become dependent
on what's going on externally in your life.
So your inner state gradually is no longer determined,
perhaps still a little bit, yes,
but not completely determined
by outer events, people, situations and so on.
Inner freedom arises. That's awakening.
So there's a dis-identification from
the movement of thought and the fluctuating emotions.
There's a stepping back.
You're not repressing anything. You're allowing it.
But you can only allow it because there's an awareness.
And that awareness is you, ultimately.
That is what I sometimes call the deep I,
as opposed to the surface I.
I meaning... not this eye,
but that eye is interesting too.
It's an analogy for consciousness, the eye of awareness,
but now we're talking about the pronoun, I, first...
There's the surface I, which is the conditioned person,
the entity that you are for a while.
And there is the deep I, which is the consciousness.
My usual analogy, which probably you've heard me
mention quite a few times, the ocean.
The surface of the ocean, the wave or the ripple
is the surface I.
And the ocean, the depth of the ocean is the deep I.
And an awakening human is a ripple on the surface
of the ocean
that until recently
had been completely identified
with its ripple existence
on the horizontal dimension of the surface of the ocean.
Looking at every other ripple as another other,
another ripple,
not me, it's another.
And always, you have to be very careful with the others.
And the ego actually likes the others
to be as other as possible.
And then the little ripple begins to realize
that there's a depth,
the moment it stops thinking about its ripple existence.
And there's... thinking subsides
and something else remains,
something else that is very deep,
has no form,
is just a presence.
If we can't even call it anything, a presence.
(water flowing)