Thursday, May 7, 2026

Repetitive Injuries

 Imagine this scenario: a daughter is hit by a car and suffers a mild injury. When she goes home, she seeks comfort from her mother. To her shock, not only does her mother fail to comfort her, she scolds her instead: “How useless you are! You’re always creating trouble for me!” The daughter is injured twice—first by the accident, and then by her mother’s words. Imagine how she would feel.

 

Feelings such as fear, being wronged, not being recognized or abandoned leave deep imprints in the mind. Later in life, these imprints are easily reactivated. After marriage, she may have the same emotional reactions when she argues with her husband, and she may even repeat the same scolding patterns with her own children.

 

Most of the time, we no longer remember the details of our original emotional injuries, but the feelings remain. They stay dormant, waiting to be triggered. When a situation even slightly resembles the past, those old emotions rush back to the surface.

 

For example, when she argues with her husband and he says, “Why did you spend two hundred Taiwanese dollars on soy sauce when one hundred would have been enough?” she may immediately feel wronged, misunderstood, and not recognized. Is this really about soy sauce? Please pause and notice this carefully.

 

When we seek counseling for conflicts with our spouse, we often believe the problem is about such surface issues. But how can we clearly sense the original injury beneath them? Most of the time, we cannot. Even though we may have forgotten the events, the emotional wounds—fear, abandonment, not being understood or recognized—are still there. They continue to be triggered whenever similar situations arise.

 

So what should we do with these feelings? How can we face them? Our first instinct is usually to escape when these emotions surface. We may distract ourselves, slack off, or seek pleasure to avoid the pain. As a result, the pattern remains unresolved. Instead, we can choose to return and stay with the pain. When we sense feelings such as being misunderstood, we can pause and remain present with this painful energy. When the pain receives our full attention, it begins to heal itself.

 

During the healing process, you may cry, scream, or feel anger. These are surface expressions of energy. Please continue to remain with the deeper pain beneath them. When this energy passes, it begins to transform.

 

What does it transform into? When you stay present with the feeling of not being understood, you may begin to sense deeper layers—fear and loneliness. At that moment, the emotions of being abandoned or misunderstood naturally begin to collapse. This transformation happens on its own, beyond the mind’s predictions.

 

If we go even deeper, we may see that the original injury was rooted in loneliness and fear. If there was no fear, the daughter might have been able to say to her mother, “I was hit by a car, and you scolded me?” But because of fear, she did not dare to express herself. She was afraid of being abandoned or unloved. That fear silenced her.

 

When we can remain fully present with the feelings of not being understood and abandoned, and allow our awareness to go deeper, we come into direct contact with fear itself. At that moment, we can clearly see the repetitive patterns in our relationships. This is pure attention.

 

Let’s return to the original scenario. Why did the mother scold her daughter? Because she had expectations, and her daughter did not meet them. Disappointment turned into anger. These expectations were formed from the mother’s own past wounds—experiences she did not want to relive. At the root of her reaction was fear.

 

If we do not understand our own fear, we will repeat the same reactions when life presents challenges. In fact, the mother is trapped in her own pattern of suffering. If she cannot observe and bring awareness to it, the pattern will not end. Instead, it will be passed on to the next generation through her daughter.

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


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Effortless being requires a little effort (Video)

 Searching means “you” do not have, otherwise “you” would just relish in the here and now. “God is at Home, it is us who have gone for a walk,” discovered the 13th century monk Meister Eckhart. Yet, when we feel discontented and face obstacles that seem impossible to overcome, what choice do we have but to keep searching. Follow the spiritual method that works for you. Spiritual methods allow us to see the conditioned self at work, and as we do, we can always stop and grasp its illusionary agenda. That’s when effortless being kicks in.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

 What the mind thinks, it eventually becomes. This is called a self-fulfilling prophecy. We receive the same energy we project into the world, so we tend to see what we expect to see and experience what we believe will happen.

 

We rarely realize that the world we experience is a reflection of our inner mind. One reason is that there is often a long distance between the original thought and its final result. For example, when we don’t know how to process stress, we may eat or drink whenever anxiety arises. Over time, this can lead to illness—obesity, high blood pressure, or diabetes. The condition of the body then becomes a mirror of the mind.

 

Every thought and idea is connected. Even when the beginning cause and the final result seem far apart or unrelated, the outcome is still created by the original thought. When someone says, “I can’t stop eating,” what they usually see is only the behavior. But what truly drives that behavior is energy. This energy comes from emotion—perhaps frustration, anger, or anxiety. Not knowing how to be with these feelings, we try to escape them. Eating becomes a way to avoid discomfort. Although it appears to be about food, it begins with a thought and an emotional reaction.

 

That is why paying attention to our thoughts is so important. By observing them, we can trace them back to their origin. If we only become aware at the point of suffering, it becomes very difficult to stop the process. Self-fulfilling prophecy operates at every level—through thought, emotion, energy, and action. Understanding this is the first step toward change.

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.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Self expression

 Become aware of what is in you;

announce it, produce it,

and give birth to it.

Meister Eckhart (1260-1328)


Self expression is a curious thing. We would whither if we didn’t give birth to the music that is playing inside, yet, when we always give free expression to what we feel strongly about we would only be venting. So, which is it?


Ramana Maharshi observed, “Look, this little finger covers the eye and prevents the whole world from being seen.” Along a spiritual quest we spot self identification and expression in action and get the self out of the Way.


We have to accept who we are. There is a time to express our conditioned self, and there is a time to allow life to express itself. We are the observer in either setting; a time to do, a time to reflect on our doing, and a time to just be!


Sunday, May 3, 2026

Listening is beyond the mind

How are you when you are listening? Are your anger or grief sufferings still there? When you are listening, they stop temporarily. They are not functioning at that moment. You are not using your anger to listen. You are not using your grief to listen. You are not using your mind to listen.

 

Listening without our mind opens up our self-sufficient energy. The heart is still. The senses get even sharper and clearer. No intervention. It is a pure and unknown state. At this moment, we enter another space, another dimension. We are connected with energy from another dimension. The energy cleansing happens by itself at this moment. The cleansing process is intensified if you speak the Letting Go Sentences.

--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, May 2, 2026

Be still and let life do its thing

 Life happens and a thought-feeling energy gets released within us, or alternatively, a thought-feeling energy gets released and life happens. We can’t have one without the other. Body, mind and world are one. Everything and everyone on the blue planet arises and vanishes in Oneness.

The opportunity is to live body, mind and our perception of the world in its entirety. Maybe it discharges and leaves our system. Maybe it remains latent in the system but at that moment it stops in its tracks, or maybe it keeps running but we stand beside it. Either way, stillness prevails.

Complete honesty is required along a spiritual quest. We may repress ugly thought-feeling energies only to find that life keeps bringing the disowned to our attention. Maybe we are stoic in the name of spirituality trying to harden our will to stand next to what deep down inside bothers us. 

The silent witness is a tricky phenomenon. It can be a cleverly designed superego that creates a distance between our assumed spiritual perspective and what is. Needless to say, we will only fool ourselves with this approach and life will keep reminding us that we are out of balance within. 

Mindfulness is an acceptance of what is, the “negative” feelings just as the excited feelings. We look at it just as we would study a painting, a tree or a person we meet for the first time. Now or never is in the learning. As we look at the thing “me,” onlooker and “me” energy both transform.

The eternal now is in a layer beneath the thought-feeling energy. It’s quiet there. The opportunity is to penetrate this depth here and now. Life is our ally. The opportunity is to align body, mind and world moment by moment. The thought-feeling energy may be present but we stand next to it.

Being occurs in the here and now. We may confront what is, heal and learn, transcend, or we may get caught in the body, mind, world manifestation once again. The portal is always open. Let go of concepts, will-power and good intentions. It’s now or never. Be still and let life do its thing.


Friday, May 1, 2026

A lost mind

 Most people are not aware of how they are in the present moment. This lack of awareness is the root of our suffering—it is what we call a lost mind.

 

Imagine seeing a curved yellow object. How do we identify it? First, our eyes perceive its shape. That information is sent to the brain, which searches through memory for something similar. Then we reach the conclusion: this is a banana. This is how perception, cognition, and the senses work together.

 

Our mind becomes lost when it is occupied by things that carry strong impressions. For example, some people struggle to attract attention, while others easily resonate with many. We are drawn to certain words, images, or people because they match our own frequency. What we see with our eyes and hear with our ears enters our memory and triggers unresolved energy. When the same frequency—or karma—is activated, we are pulled away from the present moment, and the mind becomes lost.

 

Why do we keep experiencing suffering? Sometimes we believe we have not hurt anyone, so why do we keep falling into the same hole? If we do not understand the cause, how can we clear it? And if we cannot clear it, how can we be free from suffering? We all want freedom and liberation, but without practice, these remain only words.

 

So what captures our attention? It is the frequency that attracts us and keeps us lost. When we understand this, we see that our issues are not truly about other people or external events. Then what is the real issue? It is the mind itself—a mind that is lost.

 

How does a lost mind return to its source, to its original silence? We must observe ourselves and stay in contact with our deep consciousness and then take action. Practice means applying what we have learned in daily life. If we only “know” we are lost, know that we must observe, know that we should reconnect with deep consciousness—but never act—then nothing changes. Everything remains at the starting point. Practice is action.

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.