I closed my eyes for a second and swapped the silver sedan for a heavy, spotted bovine. If a cow were standing there, chewing cud and staring blankly at my windshield, would I honk? Would I scream about the unfairness of the universe? No. I’d probably laugh. I would accept that a cow does what a cow does.
The anger began to dissolve because the "wrong" being done to me was just a story I was telling myself. That driver has their own burdens, their own rushing thoughts, their own "cow-like" nature. By demanding the world be "fair" according to my schedule, I was the one creating my own suffering. The Cow in the Parking Lot: A Zen Approach to O...
The core idea is simple but transformative: when someone cuts you off in a parking lot, you feel rage. But if a were standing in that spot, you wouldn’t be angry—you’d just be surprised or amused. You’d think, "It’s a cow; it doesn't know any better." Zen teaches us that people, driven by their own "internal weather" and confusion, are often just like that cow. Here is a short piece reflecting those themes: The Empty Space I closed my eyes for a second and
This sounds like you're diving into the principles of by Leonard Scheff and Susan Edmiston. The anger began to dissolve because the "wrong"
Are you looking to use this for a , a personal essay , or perhaps a meditation prompt ?