Fearless Simplicity: | The Dzogchen Way Of Living...
Simplicity is often mistaken for passivity, but it is actually a state of high clarity. When you aren't clouded by "what if" or "if only," you can respond to the present moment with incredible precision. You do what needs to be done—wash the dishes, write the report, speak your truth—without the heavy baggage of ego-driven hope and fear. 4. Integration: The World is the Retreat
Fearlessness in Dzogchen isn't about the absence of emotion; it’s the courage to leave your mind alone. We usually fear our own thoughts, rushing to suppress the "bad" ones or cling to the "good" ones. Simplicity means dropping the struggle. When you stop trying to curate your internal experience, you discover a natural state of ease that isn't dependent on circumstances. 2. Living in the "Natural State" Fearless Simplicity: The Dzogchen Way of Living...
In the rush of modern existence, we often treat life as a problem to be solved or a project to be managed. We layer our days with expectations, anxieties, and the constant effort of "becoming" something better. The Dzogchen tradition—the "Great Perfection"—offers a radical alternative: the art of being exactly as you are. Simplicity is often mistaken for passivity, but it
By stripping away the unnecessary complexity we project onto reality, we find that life is naturally luminous. We stop seeking for the light and realize we are the ones who have been holding the lamp all along. Simplicity means dropping the struggle