We suffer because we fall into patterns of suffering without awareness. It is like walking endlessly toward the east, toward an abyss—yet we only realize we are walking in the wrong direction when we have almost reached the end.
For example, if I keep borrowing money from you, I may feel happy as long as there is money to spend. I enjoy the moment and avoid thinking about how I will return it. The pleasure covers the consequence. If walking toward the east represents a suffering pattern, then learning means learning to stop when I realize I am walking east. It is like an ostrich hiding its head in the sand—avoiding what it does not want to see. When awareness suddenly arrives, that moment is pause while in action.
Pause does not mean stopping all thoughts or eliminating all problems. It means we stop ourselves from continuing down a path of endless suffering. To pause while in action is to recognize that this is the wrong direction. When we can truly see that, we no longer need to keep walking.
We all have this inner ability. But without learning and observation, it rarely emerges. Most people only recognize their suffering pattern after tragedy has already occurred.
The starting point of suffering is how we think. That is why we must observe how we interpret things in daily life. In each moment, our judgments, thoughts, and habitual reactions quietly shape our destiny.
Some may say, “I cannot see how one thought can lead to suffering.” The reason we do not see it is because the thought feels good. When we spend money, we feel happy. We seek happiness and fail to recognize self-sabotage. We believe we can handle things later, rearrange circumstances, or think our way out. In that moment, we escape seeing how this path will eventually harm us.
We are confined by our own limitations. For example, when we compare ourselves with others, crave recognition, or seek praise, we believe these will make us happy. We see only one side of the action. Yet every action has many dimensions. We may taste happiness for five minutes, but then we must spend a long time cleaning up the other nine dimensions.
When we seek recognition, we want more. When others become more praised or more popular, comparison arises again. As long as we act only to satisfy desire, we cannot see the whole picture.
Pause while in action allows that larger view to appear—and with it, the freedom to stop.
By Suzhen Liu
If you enjoy Suzhen Liu’s writings, please check out her new book, “Discover Love Within—Release Your Suffering” available on Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/Discover-Love-Within-Release-Suffering/dp/0999251732