Friday, July 10, 2026

Where Love Begins

 When people hear that they need to go deeper in their learning, some may feel reluctant, or think,” Why should I? I’m not the one who did something wrong.”

 

The moment this thought arises, we place harmony in our relationship outside the door.

 

In intimate relationships, being “right” does not bring happiness. If we define our interactions through the lens of right and wrong, we push away true happiness and stability, and we close off genuine connection between hearts.

 

What remains then is loneliness and isolation. This is not the kind of loneliness felt when you are alone, but the kind that comes when your heart can no longer merge with the hearts of your loved ones.

 

It can also be said that when we are truly willing to explore and understand our partner relationship, it becomes one of the greatest opportunities for growth and awakening in life.

 

This realization can bring meaning and a deep sense of security to our lives. And when we reach this level of understanding, the soul naturally experiences a sense of steadiness, happiness, and joy—something the material world can never provide.

 

The core reason relationships become stuck is that we withdraw from the very beginning, and from the start we make a judgment of who is right and who is wrong.

 

Suzhen Liu

 

If you enjoy Suzhen Liu’s writings, please check out her new book, “Discover Love Within—Release Your Suffering,” available on Amazon.

 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

End compulsion today

 Over the last few days there was a lot of activity on my blog on addictions and cravings. This has happened before. I figure we are at some inflection point where some people break free while others continue with their destructive patterns until the next auspicious opening occurs. 


We have always access to the portal connecting us with the higher Power. When we engage in mind numbing activities—leaving aside the body harm, alienation, neurological bondage, and waste of time, energy and money—there is an inner knowledge that knows we can do much better. We mind!


On the flip side, when we appeal to our so-perceived higher self and promise to do better in the future, there is also an inner pain body that feels overlooked and judged. That’s why there is a vicious counter-attack whenever our energy is low and the pain body comes to the surface. Breaking a compulsive habit is hard.


Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Power of Admitting Our Emotions

 Sometimes we are deceived by our own ideas. We tell ourselves, “this is fine.” “Don’t be upset.” We use one thought to manage another, trying to convince ourselves to feel differently. Yet beneath all of this, the energy remains exactly as it is. No matter how much we pretend not to care, the truth is that we often do care deeply. Thoughts cannot be used to eliminate thoughts.

 

When we honestly admit our emotions, the energy can begin to move. Once it starts to flow, it can change. How deeply it changes depends on our attitude and on how willing we are to reveal ourselves. The more open we are, the deeper the transformation. But if we cannot accept one of our own weaknesses, the process of letting go will stop there.

 

We often believe that thought can overcome everything, and that effort or willpower can remove pain. But all of these attempts remain within the boundaries of “my thinking.” Real change begins when we see how our pain is formed. In that seeing, the suffering can stop—sometimes all at once.

 

Any emotion, any form of energy, can transform when it is allowed to be seen. For example, when anger arises, its expression is not simply venting. It represents an honest admission to oneself: I am angry. In that admission, attention becomes possible.

 

Then we must observe carefully: What thoughts arise as this angry energy moves?

 

“I am angry.”

What am I angry about?”

“She should not have treated me this way. I feel deeply hurt.”

As we stay with the anger and allow it to quiet down, something important happens. Quietness is essential, because in quietness there is no desire, no intention—only observation.

Then the thoughts may begin to change:

From: “How dare she treat me like this?”

To: “Please love me. Please be kind to me. Please accept me.”

 

Without this process, the energy cannot be transformed. If we deny our emotions or reject what we call negative energy, we cannot see our truth—and we cannot see love. To deny our emotions is, in a sense, to deny love itself.

 

True learning happens naturally, without force. When we fail to see our patterns and instead repress ourselves with ideas, we create the need for even more ideas to suppress the earlier ones. In this way, our energy becomes trapped in repression. But when we are willing to face these negative obstacles directly, the energy changes on its own. This is transformation at the root.

 

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

 


Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Rowing in a new direction

 I saw two images this morning on social media. One, a subway full of masked white nationalists headed for a rally and one depressed looking black woman sitting right in the middle. The other was the victory celebration by Norwegian scorer Erling Haaland who was beating the drum with his teammates and the Norwegian fan base in the stadium rowing to his beat.


I remember thinking of the Viking raids 1500 - 1000 years ago when I saw the rowing celebration for the first time. How much innocent blood was shed, especially in England, and how much suffering they in turn caused with their British Raj. I was born in Germany. My ancestors carry their fair share of blood. Yet, that Norwegian chant is fun. Soccer unites the nations more than it separates.


The boat can be used for attack and the boat can be used for travel and trade. We can’t wish or meditate away the past, but we can see through its illusionary nature. We call ourselves human beings for a reason. With one foot in his(her)story, the other in the transcendent dimension. The higher Power is happy to channel creation through our nature without the need for us to stand in the Way.


Let’s row in a new direction. 


Monday, July 6, 2026

Frame analysis

 Something strange happened to me in recent weeks. A weight seems to have fallen off. The reaction time to the inner movie that is unfolding seems to have gone up. I can literally observe the different stages of feelings and thoughts and notice it when the energy of these toppling domino pieces changes. Let me give an analogy.


When we edit a video we zoom into the frames. You zoom into the spot where an interruption took place, cut it out, and start the video again at the frame when the talk continues. For the onlooker of the edited movie it seems as if there never was an interruption in the first place.


Using this example, when we carry painbodies with us—emotional hotspots when our life energy got interrupted—it is as if some frames are missing. An emotional trigger happens and we jump to this part of the video where the past gets repeated without having any ability to be mindful of what happens beneath the surface. 


As we let go of the pain bodies of the past, we suddenly have access to all the frames and we have the ability to respond consciously rather than evoking some past reaction function. Let me give an example that Suzanne Yang shared at the spiritual roundtable meeting the other day.


Say we get angry. It is healthy to have that anger rise rather than suppress it in the name of spirituality. Letting the anger energy flow does not mean we abuse someone. We just stay with the anger energy and observe it. Typically fear arises then. “What if I can’t control myself?” “It’s not spiritual to be angry!” etc.


If we manage to follow the raw energy mutating from anger to fear yet another stage appears. Maybe it’s understanding of what the spiritual meaning of this event is. Maybe we see that this hurtful voice is not out to hurt us but to help us, or maybe it’s an invite to draw healthy boundaries to an energy that we have outlived. 


Suddenly we are able to follow the movie frame by frame. Have the boldness to follow a strong energy jolt and stay for it for a few moments to let it teach you what this event is truly all about. Today is as good as any to have a clear break from the past and experience the moment as is not as you would have it or fear it.


Sunday, July 5, 2026

End the cycle of frustration

 The Letting Go Method is, at its core, very simple. What makes it distinct from many other methods, healing systems, psychotherapies, or spiritual teachings is that it does not center on reviewing ourselves in order to improve.

 

From an early age, we are taught to reflect on ourselves whenever something goes wrong. If we are unhappy with what we have done, we review it until we reach a conclusion: my effort is not enough; I still need to work on this; I must improve. Once we fall into this cycle of review and improvement, it becomes endless.

 

For example, we may feel that we do not have enough wisdom. To become enlightened, we believe we must try harder. After one review, we decide to recite the sutra more often. After the next review, we increase it again—perhaps to twenty times a day.

 

What happens then? We work tirelessly to improve ourselves, yet the harder we try, the more frustration we feel.

 

And what follows? Because we remain trapped in the mode of review and improvement, every conclusion points to the same thing: we are still not doing enough, so we must work harder. This leads us into another cycle of frustration. If one attempt is not enough, we review and improve; if the next is not enough, we review and improve again. Each round creates another sense of failure.

 

Over time, repeated failures and frustration give rise to powerlessness, worry, depression, and self-blame—bringing even more suffering into our lives.

 

No matter what teaching or discipline we pursue, many systems still encourage this pattern: review, make more effort, and improve. We are told to work harder in the areas where we are lacking. Because this mindset is so deeply normalized, we often do not recognize the problem within it. Whenever we struggle, others encourage us to keep pushing, and unconsciously we become dependent on external guidance and validation.

 

Why is it so difficult to escape this mode? Because it was taught to us by our parents, reinforced by schools, and absorbed into our way of living. It has been imprinted in us: identify the cause, improve yourself, and expect a better result.

 

Yet beneath this process, a belief quietly strengthens: I am not good enough. The more we strive, the stronger this belief can become, and the more self-blame arises. Some people may also gain direction, achievement, or satisfaction from this cycle, and therefore feel uneasy about letting it go.

 

When we feel depressed, in pain, or full of self-blame, we often wish someone would save us. This longing to be saved is also a longing to be loved. Yet these are not separate problems—they are the natural consequences of the cycle itself, created by review, effort, and improvement.

 

Why do we seek love? Why do we want others to rescue us? Because we are burdened by deep depression, self-blame, and pain. In that state, we become desperate for relief. If we cannot see this clearly, we remain trapped in the cycle.

 

The difference with the Letting Go Method is that we begin to see the entire process for ourselves.

 

In Letting Go, instead of pursuing a fixed goal, we remain in a state of clarity, openness, and freedom. The moment we cling to an intention, we create another pattern and become stuck within it. Through practice, we become aware of this intention as it arises.

 

Practicing the Letting Go Method invites us to become calm, relaxed, and willing to surrender. In doing so, we enter a state of “nothingness.” If we can see through this state, we naturally move into happiness and love.

 

This is not something we must acquire—it is an ability we are born with. We fail to recognize it only because we have been entangled in our behaviors, beliefs, and thoughts.

 

Presence is essential. During the practice of Letting Go, whenever depression, defeat, or self-blame appears, we do not fight them. Instead, we observe how they are created. We begin to see clearly where they come from. Once they are fully seen and understood, the accumulated energy behind them dissolves effortlessly.

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.

 

 


Saturday, July 4, 2026

Perfect and pure

 When an evil mirror broke into a 1000 pieces, a little boy was hit by a splinter in the eye and one in the heart. Suddenly he didn’t want to associate any longer with his best friend and was instead lured away by the Snow Queen where he nearly froze to death. His friend didn’t give up and when she finally tracked him down her loving embrace melted away the splinter in his heart. Realizing her devotion he started crying and the splinter in his eye was washed away too. Suddenly he had perfect vision and a pure heart once again. They lived happily ever after.


Christian Andersen’s Snow Queen story tells us about the fall of humanity and the homecoming. The recovery quest differs for each of us but the setup is the same. We have a pure heart and perfect vision but a little polishing and healing is required for each of us to reclaim our birthright. What’s your homecoming story?