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Adyashanti – The Gift of Wanting

Adyashanti – The Gift of Wanting.mp4
[MP4 Video]

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@staff: this is not really a dupe because the original product is dead:I tried for WEEKS to grab the version @ – but all reseed requests failed… Luckily, I then found that a friend of mine had this version of it. Awesome content, one of the finest satsangs ever!I’m not sharing this for the ratio (and will stop seeding once there are enough seeders), so a simple click on the “Thanks” button is appreciated if you like this upload.The other version of this got three 5 star ratings. Please remember to rate this one too!Description from the other product:Wanting vs. HavingBy Virginia Preston (taken from http://www.compulsiveeating.com/blog/?p=17)I’ve been thinking about this lately…how often I notice myself in a state of ‘wanting’. Wanting approval, wanting security, wanting closure, wanting to know or understand, wanting, wanting…As I’ve become more aware of this habit or tendancy, which seems to me to be a very conditioned human pre-occupation – I’ve also become aware of the subtle shift in experience that’s available in the invitation to ‘Have’ instead of ‘want’.Could I let go of ‘wanting’ right now?Could I allow myself to experience ‘Having’ right now?This is a palpable redirection of energy and attention, and has proven to be quite helpful.It’s a gentle reminder to the nervous system that has been trained to focus on ‘lack’ and ‘less than’, on what is perceived to be missing in one’s environment or experience.The joy of the realization that as ‘real’ as that sense of lack or ‘not possessing’ can appear – equally as available is a sense of calm, satisfaction and ‘enoughness’.There is a wonderful spiritual teacher named Adyashanti and I recently watched a video of his aptly named ‘The Gift of Wanting’. He believes that the experience of wanting is actually a gift, and serves only to draw our attention to that which we already possess in abundance, but have forgotten or over-looked.He maintains that we have been taught from a early age that we ‘want’ because we lack, and that through the attainment of what we lack, we will find fulfillment.However, anyone who’s ever achieved or acquired anything can tell you that the sense of ‘fullness’ (or satisfaction) that seems to accompany the reaching of the goal, is often quickly replaced by a renewed sense of wanting. Perhaps the wanting has shifted to a new person, object or experience, but it’s the same sensation.Adyashanti suggests that it is not the attainment of the ‘desired object or experience’ that fulfills us. Rather, it is the inherent ‘fullness’ that ispresent within us always that is typically covered over by a glaze of ‘want’. This fullness can only be deeply experienced when we cease our practise of ‘wanting’.So, the next time you find yourself ‘wanting’…be it security, attention, approval, control, to be understood, or some material or relationship‘want’, I invite you to check it out. ‘What do I believe getting this thing (insert ‘want’) will bring me?’ and follow that question to it’s core. The answer could be: ‘I will feel more peaceful’. or, ‘I will feel safe’. or, ‘I will feel ‘HERE’, eternal and present’…or any other number of desired states.Then ask: Is it true that I actually lack in these ways, or could this wanting simply be a pointer to what, at the core, I possess in abundance? Is this desired state actually lacking in me, or have I been to busy ‘wanting’ to notice that it’s there?Try it for yourself and see.

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