
We live with what there is to do, with what we will do with it, with what we have done, and what we have failed to do. The ultimate doing is making our peace with all things. Balance and harmony require us to make our peace with all things. "This is the way things are, and this is what we can do about it, and that's that." Squaring ourselves up with the difference between the way we are and the way we are asked to live, and what we are being asked to do, in each situation as it arises is the big destabilizing factor in each day. We reduce our vulnerability by limiting our exposure, yet, even monks, even hermits, even recluses, come to the crossroads and have to give up this to have that. Balance and harmony come and go with the situations and circumstances of each day. No one can sit zazen forever, and why would they if they could? Life calls us onto the field of action! Doing what needs to be done, when/where/how it needs to be done, moment to moment throughout the day. Which makes for a lot of squaring up and making our peace with the disparity between how things are and how things need to be. Awareness and attentiveness make for clarity, and clarity calls for coming to terms with "This is the way things are, and this is what can be done about it, and that is the way things are!" All day long. Every day.
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Your mention of monks made me think of Thomas Merton who joined a monastery for solitude and was called to recruit new novitiates for the Cistertian order by his abbot. Ya gotta do the next right thing!
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