Presence Replaces Patience
Presence Replaces Patience
The gate to Nityakāli’s farm is large is large and well worn, its weathered wood softened by years of hands and weather, set into a low stone wall that borders Nityakāli’s farmland with quiet permanence. Beyond the wall the fields stretch and breathe. Before it, a rutted road runs through the afternoon, its muddy puddles holding small mirrors of the sky - and of the clouds now assembling at the horizon, gray and purposeful, the kind that do not idle. Nityakāli stands beside the gate in the afternoon light, her posture composed, her hands easy at her sides. To anyone passing on the road she would appear serene. Still. Perhaps even wise.
She is not.
Inside her the afternoon is anything but still. Her eyes move to the clouds. Her mind moves with them, already calculating. The umbrella is at the house. The house is a long walk back through the field. Aporia may arrive at any moment on her bicycle, all tangled hair and bright eyes, and find the gate empty. And then what. The interview. The wet clothes. The impression she would make arriving damp and diminished before people who would decide her future with a glance.
And from there the mind of Nityakāli does what minds do when left unattended at a gate in the late afternoon. It follows the chain. Aporia gets the position. Aporia earns the promotion. Aporia is sent abroad, lifted out of Antarā by the ordinary machinery of opportunity, while Nitya remains. The dream of travel - of elsewhere, of a life larger than this road and this gate and this listing post - fades quietly, the way light fades, without announcement.
She is also, beneath all of this, relitigating the bicycle. She could have walked. She should have left earlier, alone, on her own feet, arriving on her own terms. Instead she surrendered the timing of her life to someone else’s wheels. The decision is made and cannot be unmade, but the mind does not honor such distinctions. It returns to the fork in the road anyway, again and again, as though repetition might somehow revise what has already happened.
Her body stands at the gate of Antarā. The afternoon light falls on her shoulders. A bird moves through the field. Nitya is nowhere near any of it.
This is patience. Not serenity. Not wisdom. Patience is the body’s willingness to remain in a place the self has already abandoned. It is a kind of severance - the living person divided against herself, one part anchored in the physical now, the other already elsewhere, moving through futures and pasts with the restless energy of someone who cannot bear to simply be where she is. To the passerby on the road, patience looks like presence. But the passerby sees only the body. They do not see where Nitya actually is.
The trap of turning inward
At some point, Nitya notices. She feels the spin of her own thinking, the way her mind has traveled so far from the gate that she has nearly forgotten the puddles, the field, the particular quality of this light. She decides to correct herself. She turns her attention inward - to her feelings, to the texture of her own anxiety, to the thoughts arising in real time. This, she believes, is the right move. This is presence. She is attending to what is actually happening inside her, here, now.
And she is not wrong that her thoughts and feelings are present. They are arising in this moment. They are real, immediate, undeniably here. But thoughts and feelings are also signs. They point. A feeling of anticipation leans forward into what has not yet happened. A feeling of regret reaches back toward what cannot be changed. A thought about the interview is happening now, yes - but it is about then, about there, about a room she has not yet entered and an outcome she cannot yet know. The thought is present. Its referent is not.
So Nitya, turning inward with the sincere intention of coming home to herself, finds that she has simply exchanged one form of absence for another. She is following signs painted on present-tense walls - real signs, honest signs, signs that genuinely exist in this moment - but signs that point, every one of them, away from the gate, away from the field, away from the small mirrors of sky trembling in the puddles at her feet. She believes herself to be present because she is attending to something real. She does not yet see that attending to the arrow is not the same as inhabiting the place where she stands.
The mistake of remaining
Nitya tries again. This time with more resolve. She will be present. She will hold herself here, at this gate, in this light. She will not follow the thoughts. She will not catastrophize. She will remain.
And here, quietly, a second misunderstanding unfolds.
To remain present is to position the present moment as something to be endured, defended, maintained against the natural pull of a restless mind. It introduces a subtle adversary - the future, the past, the thought that threatens to carry her away - and casts presence as a kind of resistance against that adversary. But resistance is measured against what it resists. To hold a position is already to acknowledge the forces that would displace it. Nitya, resolving to remain, has imported time back into the very practice she designed to escape it. Her presence is now an effort sustained across duration. It has become, in its own patient way, a form of waiting.
Patience has simply changed its clothes.
Presence is not a position to be held. It is not a discipline of staying. It asks nothing of Nitya in the way that endurance asks something - it does not require her to brace, or resist, or measure herself against the next moment. What it asks, if asking is even the right word, is something quieter and stranger. Not that she remain. But that she be.
The gift of the unreturning moment
The puddles in the road are not simply puddles. They are small worlds, red-earthed and trembling, and in them, if one is here enough to see, insects move across the surface tension with the purposeful calm of beings who have never once considered being elsewhere. A lizard - quick, decisive, unhesitating - slips between two stones in the low wall and is gone, leaving only the faint impression of having been. Above, the clouds have built themselves into shapes that have nothing to do with rain and everything to do with imagination - there, unmistakably, the great gray curve of an elephant’s back, drifting with tremendous patience of its own kind toward the far edge of the sky. And the air itself has changed. The approaching storm has done something to it - electrified it, thickened it, given it a taste that lives at the back of the throat and along the soft skin of the inner arms. The world is not the same world it was when Nitya was elsewhere. Or rather - it is exactly the same world. It has been this world all along. The insects have always been there. The lizard has always moved between its stones. The air has been building toward this electric aliveness since long before Nitya arrived at the gate. The world did not change. Nitya arrived in it.
There is a moment - it does not announce itself - when something in Nitya loosens. Not a decision. Not an achievement. The gate is still worn, the road still rutted, the clouds still assembling with their gray intention. Nothing has changed in the world. But something has changed in the quality of Nitya’s relationship to it.
She is not trying to stay. She is not monitoring herself for drift. She is not measuring this moment against the next or the last. She is simply here, in the way that the stone wall is here, in the way that the afternoon light is here - not holding its position against the coming dark but simply being what it is, while it is.
This is not a technique. It is not an accomplishment. It is a quality of engagement that arises when the self stops competing with time. The gate exists. The field breathes. The puddles hold their small trembling skies. Nitya is among these things, not as a witness managing her attention, but as a living presence offering herself to a moment that is brief and will not return.
Every moment is brief. Every moment is unreturning. Most of them pass unmet, their particular quality of light and air and aliveness unnoticed, because the self is elsewhere - leaning into the future, reaching back into the past, following signs that point away from here. Presence is the gift a person gives to the moment they actually inhabit. It is not passive. It is not achieved by subtraction -- by removing distraction, by quieting thought. It is an active offering. An engagement. A recognition that this moment, unrepeatable and vanishing, deserves the whole of one’s living attention.
And then, down the rutted road, through the afternoon light, comes Aporia. Tangled hair, flowing clothes, excitable and happy, arriving the way she always arrives - as though the world is precisely as interesting as it ought to be. She has not been worrying about the clouds. She is not relitigating anything. She lifts a hand and calls out across the puddles and the field, her voice bright in the thick afternoon air.
Nitya is there to receive her. Fully. Here, at the gate of Antarā, in the unreturning light of this particular afternoon. Not patient. Present.
Presence replaces Patience:
a Guided Meditation
Settling:
Find a position that is comfortable for you. Seated, standing, laying down. Not rigid. Not collapsed. Simply at ease within yourself, in whatever way ease comes naturally to your body in this moment.
Allow your hands to rest. Allow your shoulders to soften. There is nothing your body needs to hold right now. Nothing it needs to brace against.
Your eyes may be open or closed. Either is welcome here. If they are open, let your gaze be soft – not fixed on anything in particular, not searching. Simply resting. And know that your eyes may open or close at any point throughout our time together. Follow what feels natural.
Now, without changing anything about the way you are breathing, simply notice that you are breathing. The breath is already happening. It has been happening all along. You do not need to direct it or deepen it or slow it. Simply notice it.
And if, as you notice it, it naturally deepens (on its own!) – allow that. If it naturally slows – allow that. The breath knows its own rhythm. Your only work here is to let it find that rhythm without interference.
Breathe in.
Breathe out.
There is nowhere else to be. There is nothing else required of you in this moment. You are here. Simply here.
The practice:
We spend a great deal of our lives waiting. Waiting for something to arrive. Waiting for something to begin. Waiting for something to finally be over.
And while we wait, most of us are – without quite realizing it – elsewhere. The body is here, yes. The body is always here. But the heart and the mind have already moved away from here – forward into what hasn’t happened yet, or back into what cannot be changed. We call this patience. We may even be proud of it. But patience, honestly examined, is a kind of absence. The self divided. Part of us anchored in the body, part of us already gone.
What we are going to practice today is something different. Not patience. Not the management of waiting. Something quieter and stranger and so much more alive.
We are going to practice being here.
Not remaining here. Not holding ourselves here against the pull of thought. Simply – being. In the way that this room is being. In the way that the air is being. Without effort. Without duration measured against anything else.
Let us begin with what is closest.
Turn your attention, gently, to the sense of touch.
Not a dramatic turning. Not an effort. Simply – an arrival of awareness at the surface of your body.
Feel the places where your body makes contact with what supports it. The weight of yourself, settling. The particular texture of what is beneath your hands. The temperature of the air where it meets your skin – your hands, your face, the back of your neck.
These sensations are not thoughts about sensations. They are not memories of sensations. They are happening now. Here. In this body, in this moment.
Rest in them for a moment...
Rest with them for a moment...
Simply feel what is actually here to be felt.
[Pause.]
Now let your awareness move, just as gently, to sound.
Do not search for anything in particular. Do not name what you hear or place it or explain it. Simply let sound arrive.
There may be sounds nearby – the noises of the building around you, the subtle shift of air. There may be sounds further away. Let them all be equally welcome. Near and far, familiar and strange.
Rest in these sounds for a moment...
Rest with these sounds for a moment...
Sound is happening now. It is not a thought about now. It is not a feeling about now. It is now, arriving at your ears, alive and unrepeatable.
This world. Not the world in the mind. This world.
[Pause.]
And now, if your eyes are closed, you may open them softly. Or they may already be open. Either way, let your seeing be easeful.
Not looking for anything. Not examining. Simply – seeing what is here to be seen.
The quality of the light in this room. The shapes of things. The way surfaces receive the light differently. And return the light differently. The stillness or movement of what is around you.
Rest in these sights for a moment...
Rest with these sights for a moment...
See without commentary. See without the mind reaching ahead to name or to categorize. To compare. See the way a child sees something for the first time – with a gentle, open inquisitiveness that asks nothing of what it sees.
This world. Not thoughts of this world. Not feelings for this world.
This world.
Here.
Now.
[Pause.]
Let your awareness widen now – slowly, without effort – to take in all of your senses at once.
Touch, and sound, and sight – and beneath them, within them, the subtle presence of smell, of taste, of the body’s own inner sense of itself.
Rest in these senses for a moment...
Rest with these senses for a moment...
You are a sensing being, alive in a moment that is happening only once. This precise quality of light will not return. This particular arrangement of sound and air and sensation will never come again. It is here now. It is only here now.
Offer it your full attention.
Not as a discipline.
Not as an effort of remaining.
Simply as a gift.
The gift of your living presence to this never-to-return moment.
This world.
Not over there.
Not in ten minutes.
Not around that corner.
This world.
Now.
Here.
[Pause.]
If you notice that your attention has moved – that a thought has carried you forward into something that has not yet happened, or back into something that cannot be changed – simply notice this shift without judgment. The thought is real. It is present. But notice where it points. Notice that it is a sign, painted on a present-tense wall, pointing somewhere else.
You do not need to follow that sign.
You do not need to resist that sign either.
Simply return – without drama, without effort – to what is actually here. The body. The breath. The sounds in this room. The light on these surfaces. The fragrance on the breeze. The air on your skin.
This world.
Now.
Here.
[Pause.]
There is nothing to achieve in this practice. There is no destination. There is no correct way to arrive.
There is only this – the quality of being here, offered freshly, again and again and again and again and again and again and again, to each unique living moment as it comes.
Rest in that now. Quietly. Easily. Without holding anything in place.
[Long pause.]
[Bell.]
Thank you.
Guide’s reflection:
Take a moment before you move. Simply notice – as you return to the ordinary flow of your awareness – whether the return feels the way you expected it to.
Often, coming out of a practice, there is a sense of crossing back. Of leaving one state and re-entering another. Of the meditative giving way to the ordinary.
Notice whether that crossing feels as distinct as you may have anticipated.
You may find that it does not. You may find that what you were practicing – this quality of being here, of offering your living attention to the unreturning moment – is not so far from what ordinary life, at its best, already is.
Presence was not elsewhere. It was not a special state requiring maintenance or protection. It was simply this. This room. This breath. This moment, met fully, without division.
The practice does not end when the bell rings. It simply loses its frame.
Thank you.
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