Everything
flows effortlessly
when we are in the flow.
And oh does that feel good.
To be in the flow.
Allow.
Allow.
Allow.
Allow.
Love is,
what is,
all that is.
Release.
Release.
Release.
Receive.
Receive.
Receive.
Embrace.
Embrace.
Embrace.
Love.
Love.
Love.
Effortlessly.
Go for
the
feeling
of effortlessness.
Being in the present moment
is effortless.
Loving is effortless.
Giving is effortless.
Receiving is effortless.
Allowing is effortless.
When it becomes effortless,
we are home.
In the love,
in the now,
in the present,
it is what it is.
Effortless.



“Only in passive awareness is the meaning of ‘what is’ understood.”
As usual, Krishnamurti has powerful and intelligent understanding of the way to move in life…..with being at one with the Now or What Is.
The effortless end of struggle, of dissatisfaction, of ceaseless ambition.
That is all it takes….PASSIVE AWARENESS!
No striving, no effort.
Just being at peace in the Now, at one with God, Universal Spirit, the Source or whatever feels comfortable to describe the love energy that surrounds all and is on tap to us, if only we allow ourselves to become passively aware of What Is.
Effort Is Distraction from ‘What Is’ – from ‘The Book of Life’, Daily Meditations with Krishnamurti.
“We must understand the problem of striving.
If we can understand the significance of effort, then we can translate it into action in our daily life.
Does not effort mean a struggle to change ‘what is’ into what it is not, or what it should be, or what it should become?
We are constantly escaping from ‘what is’, to transform or modify it.
He who is truly content is he who understands what is, who gives the right significance to ‘what is’.
True contentment lies not in a few or many possessions, but in understanding the whole significance of ‘what is’.
Only in passive awareness is the meaning of ‘what is’ understood.
I am not at the moment, talking of the physical struggle with the earth, with construction or a technical problem, but of psychological striving. The psychological struggles and problems always overshadow the physiological.
You may build a careful social structure, but as long as the the psychological darkness and strife are not understood, they invariably overturn the carefully built structure.
Effort is distraction from ‘what is’.
In the acceptance of ‘what is’, striving ceases.
There is no acceptance when there is the desire to transform or modify what is.
Striving, an indication of destruction, must exist as long as there is a desire to change ‘what is’.”