
What is contentment? A Zen perspective
Contentment in Zen is a quiet, unconditional “acceptance" with things , events, and people whatever good or bad they are.Contentment arises when judgment, comparison, clinging , resistance , aversion drop away and life is allowed to be just as it is in the current moment.
It has nothing to do with cowardice, apathy or resignation when reaction is needed, but a lucid, responsive ease rooted from proper insight into suffering, impermanence, non‑self, and the futility of craving, aversion, judgment and expectation.
So, a spacious sufficiency is felt in any circumstance. of life. This is an emotional equilibrium
similar to the tightrope walker having her/his balance maintained by the pole with extremities
called positive and negative emotions and situations.
Meditation trains the mind to sit right in the middle of many oposite feeling poles: pleasure vs pain, good vs.bad, gain vs loss, praise vs blame, etc, until “great contentment” of the Middle Way appears.
In Zen terms, contentment is not a special state but the natural flavour of suchness when there is no ongoing judgment, no argument, no overthinking, IT addiction, info overloading, no resistance, no unrealistic expectations, no over consumerism, no regretting the past, nor expecting too much of the future. Just pay attention in a mindful way to simple things regarding genuine, concrete reality whatever boring and mundane it is: drinking tea, hearing a car horn, feeling fatigue or pain ,etc…..each of them is complete, nothing lacking.
What can we achieve from being content?
Our resentment, and other negativities are phasing out.
Compassion, loving kindness, stress reduction, and appropriate action arise more freely, because one is not acting out of inner poverty or grasping or aversion, but from a settled, generous heart being at ease with the flux of the ten thousand positive and negative things happening such as events, situations, and behavior of others. Thanks