Self-pity gives us the sense 
that we are warranted 
in blaming circumstance 
for our problems. 
It hinges on the alluring thought 
that our failures and flaws 
are the fault of our abusers, 
our colonizers,
our parents,
and society at large; 
they are the reason 
we're messed up. 
Self-pity is a tight knot 
that serves to ensure 
that our future 
is the same as our past. 
To heal and transform 
— to tap into our full potential — 
we must break the cycle of self-pity.
For this, there is no antidote 
more powerful 
than renunciation 
of the habit of 
self-referential sense-making,
that circular trap of trying to 
prove or disprove our self-worth. 
“I am great”
and “I am a loser”
both arise from 
the same mind habit:
Self-obsession. 
Self-pity is nothing 
but an action of mind 
that allows the past
to dictate the future. 
It is a limiting view 
that perpetuates 
samsaric discontentment. 
We do it because we are afraid 
of taking responsibility 
for our inner richness,
for our power; 
the power to create, 
the power shape our life,
the power to write
the rest of our story. 
Self-pity and self-aggrandizement 
go round and round
constricting inward
until we feel frozen, 
unable to sense the pulse
of life within us 
and our own boundless creativity. 
The whole affliction
of self-assessing,
of grasping for scraps
of so-called self-esteem,
is suffocating. 
The act itself
is riddled with anxiety.
Intuitively, we know
it is game that can never 
be won. 
And yet, 
anytime we want, 
we can just stop. 
This sacred stop
— a divine NO — 
is what mystics call
renunciation; 
a sword that cuts
the knot
of self-perpetuated 
affliction. 
We stop because
we don't ultimately know 
why things happened 
the way they did. 
We stop because blame
is a dead end. 
We stop because mind
can never solve to riddle
of self-esteem. 
We stop because
the pain of perpetuation
is just too unbearable. 
At the moment
of renunciation
a whole new world emerges. 
We become single-pointedly
focused on
how to live fully
here and now. 
We play in a field
of cohesive action, 
and plant seeds 
that decrease suffering 
and increase freedom and joy. 
For this to happen, 
the mind has to arrive 
at a new perspective, 
one that represents 
a wider view of cause and effect.
Whatever we repeat 
will be repeated. 
That's the physics of karma. 
Past pains happened. 
It is enough that we feel them fully; 
that’s all we are responsible for. 
Then, we need to live
from freshness
right now. 
There is a sense 
of lightness
in it, 
a resilience. 
As we reclaim accountability 
for our lives 
we make changes 
that are revolutionary,
changes that transform 
what happened
into what will happen. 
 
A new chapter 
in the story
is unfolding.
We are writing 
that chapter
right now.   
