a shaft of light falling into a room in a mysteriously moving way
From the Rigpa Glimpse of the Day:
March 9th
Sometimes we have fleeting glimpses of the nature of mind. These can be inspired by an exalting piece of music, by the serene happiness we sometimes feel in nature, or by the most ordinary everyday situation. They can arise simply while watching snow slowly drifting down, or seeing the sun rising behind a mountain, or watching a shaft of light falling into a room in a mysteriously moving way. Such moments of illumination, peace, and bliss happen to us all and stay strangely with us.
I think we do, sometimes, half understand these glimpses. But then, modern culture gives us no context or framework in which to comprehend them. Worse still, rather than encouraging us to explore them more deeply and discover where they spring from, we are told in both obvious and subtle ways to shut them out. We know that no one will take us seriously if we try to share them. So we ignore what could be really the most revealing experiences of our lives, if only we understood them. This is perhaps the darkest and most disturbing aspect of modern civilization—its ignorance and repression of who we really are.
Society provides plenty of warnings and advice to us about the dangers, problems or irrelevancies regarding various (usually ‘external’) groups of people (‘us against them’). If we apply these warnings and advice to society itself, I think we can learn a lot, and start to free ourselves of hidden cultural assumptions that might be reducing our capacity for truly free self-expression and awareness.