Dear Helena,
In response to your situation with your father, i so happened to come across this quote a couple of days ago:
Imagine that you are having difficulties with a loved one, such as your mother or father, husband or wife, lover or friend. How helpful and revealing it can be to consider the other person not in his or her “role” of mother or father or husband, but simply as another “you,” another human being, with the same feelings as you, the same desire for happiness, the same fear of suffering. Thinking of the other one as a real person, exactly the same as you, will open your heart to him or her and give you more insight into how to help.
- Sogyal Rinpoche
This quote appeals to me because i do sometimes have a difficult situation with some members of my family. i think that difficulties arise because of the expectations I have of my father or mother because of the title/label and I expect them to care for me or express their care for me in a certain way and when they don't, I get upset. But this quote tells me to see things differently and that they are simply another human being, which i find helpful.
I hope it helps you as it has helped me.
Dear WB,
Thank you so much for sharing that quote. It does help me a great deal.
Actually, this quote does reflect a great deal on my Guru's personal advice to me.
Our parents, friends and even strangers and enemies are all another us or me. Because we and me came from them at some point in time, be it in this life or past lifetimes.
We were all once children or parents of one another.
As a child, we often think that our parents should know better.
But as I grew older and read more Dharma, I realised it is not age that bestows wisdom. Nor their position in life, whether they are parents or teachers, etc.
It is really Dharma.
An individual with and without Dharma makes a HUGE difference.
So, may be our parents are not so fortunate as us. They didn't have the merits or karma to meet the Dharma or learn from a Guru. They didn't have a centre or Sangha to support them and nurture them. We did and we are so lucky. So, it is up to us to do more and practice even much more for the people who literally brought us into this world.
I came through my parents. Despite my differences with my father, I must recognise what he has given me to this day. I must appreciate that I am here because of him and my mother.
Rest assured, I shall not allow my own personal delusions and projections to get in the way. Part of my Dharma practice IS in caring for the people I have the most trouble with, even if it is my father, to the best of my ability. Perhaps, even more so.
Thank you again, WB. I do love the quote very much. It does help a great deal, especially in dealing with strangers. The group of people we hardly know and we think we have no reason to care for them. Dharma is just so extraordinary in how it teaches us to connect with everyone around us.