Usually, when we think of a ‘warrior,’ someone drawing a line in the sand, making their last stand on earth, we think they are committing themselves to an all-or-nothing battle: here and now, on this spot, live or die. That's the kind of ultimatum Carlos and others often describe. They make it sound like a fight, like put up your dukes, but it's really not.
It's the end of fighting, the end of a lifelong struggle.
Drawing this line doesn't mean battle stations, red alert, DEFCOM one and all
that. It’s not that kind of battle. It means we have to lower our shields, not
raise them. That's how easily and effectively we are undone, and it's because
the enemy is within, running the show, redeploying all of our mental and
emotional resources against us.
Instead of adopting a warlike posture, we must, counter-intuitively, lower our
shields and defenses. This seems confusing until we understand that we are both
the protagonist and the antagonist in this conflict, both attacker and
defender.
This is the paradoxical nature of the struggle. We can't win by fighting. The
very thing that fights, that resists, is the thing we seek to overthrow. Only
by vanquishing self-importance can we prevail.
Only in surrender can we find victory. This is the part so few get, and fewer
get beyond.
This is the part where everything starts sounding all sagely or Zen like, but
that can't be helped. If you want to say that all religions and spiritual
teachings share a core truth, it can only be this: Surrender is victory.
Yet, this isn’t the end. It’s only the beginning.
Once we surrender, The Real Work begins.
~
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