“We do ourselves a great disservice by judging where we are
in comparison to some final destination. This is one of the pains of aspiring
to become something: the stage of development we are in is always seen against
the imagined landscape of what we are striving for. So where we are—though
closer all the time—is never quite enough.
“The simple rose, at each moment of its slow blossoming, is
as open as it can be. The same is true of our lives. In each stage of our
unfolding, we are as stretched as possible. For the human heart is quite slow
to blossom, and is only seen as lacking when compared to the imagined lover or
father or mother we’d like to become.
“It helps to see ourselves as flowers. If a flower were to
push itself to open faster, which it can’t, it would tear. Yet we humans can
and often do push ourselves. Often we tear in places no one can see. When we
push ourselves to unfold faster or more deeply than is natural, we thwart
ourselves. For nature takes time, and most of our problems of will stem from
impatience.”
—Mark Nepo, The Book of Awakening