When we walk the path of being with ourselves,
there are no bad people and no good people in our world—
only clarity or confusion, awakening or being lost,
but no right or wrong.
When a person is lost, they feel helpless and disoriented.
When you are hurt, you will naturally protect yourself and react.
Because you are lost, you do not know where your “home” is.
You feel fear, a deep lack of support and safety.
Those who are lost may hurt others.
But when they find their way—when they begin to see clearly how to walk their path—
they no longer wish to hurt anyone.
Because they understand that to hurt another is to hurt themselves.
We are all walking the same path.
When you begin to walk the path of being with yourself,
there are no bad people—only those who are clear and those who are not.
When you are clear about what guides your life,
when you truly know which path you are walking,
you no longer have time to be entangled in conflicts and disputes with others.
Because you begin to clear away the confusion within your consciousness—
your biases, conclusions, and fixed judgments.
As you step into the path of awareness, attention, and presence,
you move closer each day to a life without troubles.
And the most beautiful thing is—
this requires no force, no striving.
We can simply and gently be with ourselves.
Sometimes resistance arises, and being present may feel difficult.
But that is okay—
continue to be with the resistance.
In doing so, you are already going deeper.
Conflicts between partners are like two lost people arguing,
or like two individuals carrying burdens as vast and heavy as mountains accumulated from their families,
living together day after day—
how could there be no conflict?
But when one person begins to be present,
begins to clear the inherited emotional burdens and obstacles,
something truly begins to change.
If you truly love your children,
this is the greatest gift you can give them.
Notice what you feel in this moment.
Just notice—
do not judge, do not label it as good or bad.
Because the moment you label it,
you fall into liking or disliking.
And if you dislike it,
you will try to make yourself feel better.
Thus begins an endless cycle within “good” and “bad.”
Your time, your life,
will revolve within this loop—
repeating the same patterns again and again.
When presence happens, it is profoundly important.
It allows us to understand what suffering is,
and what joy is.
Once you grasp this essence,
you can truly live well.
And true well-being is simple—
peace, contentment, and an ordinary life.
By Suzhen Liu