Posts Tagged ‘inner peace’
Rebel Zen and The Glorious Art of Being Imperfect
What follows is the massively-inspired, half-drunk process of me trying to finally define what “Rebel Zen” means in a slogan …
Rebel Zen: It’s not about being perfect – it’s about being alive.
or
Exploring what it means to be alive…
or maybe
Exploring what it means to be human…
or
… and the Glorious Art of Being Imperfect
Yes! That’s it!
Rebel Zen and the Glorious Art of Being Imperfect!
‘Cos to me that is the point – it is about what it means to be a human – warts and all.
What it feels like to be alive; the search for meaning, for authenticity, what it feels like.
The very thing artists strive to express – musicians, poets, madmen.
Forsaking fantasies of perfection – Zen as in “being here now”, whether that feels good or not.
What it feels like to be a human being, with all the inherent imperfection and beauty and baggage that comes part-and-parcel with it it.
What IT means.
THIS.
What THIS all means.
Meaning – and the absence of meaning.
The Personal Development Dilemma: Striving Vs Self-Acceptance
By Seamus Anthony
Should you strive to change your habits, your circumstances, your whole life?
Or should you enjoy increased inner-peace by accepting who you are right now, unconditionally so you can relax and enjoy the moment?
I find life to be a constant tension between these two approaches, and I can’t help but notice that in what we loosely call the “personal development” field there are many pushers of both ways towards inner satisfaction.
I have for a while now leaned heavily in favor of the “Zen” path of warts-and-all self-acceptance of yourself and have been scornful of the Tony Robbins “go-get-em-tiger” school of hyped up motivation and the “follow-these-sacred-rules-and-kiss-my-Guru-ass” schools of overtly serious and holy spirituality.
That’s the attitude we founded Rebel Zen on: a different, down-to-Earth, street-savvy approach to Enlightenment and Worldly Success – and God help us if we ever lose sight of this mission because in my opinion it’s what is sorely needed.
BUT…
The other night I was awake at about 4 in the morning and a thought struck me like a punch in the face.
Are You A Rebel Zen Master?

By Seamus Anthony
Have you noticed a shift in the personal development world lately?
I have, and I know I’m not alone. I believe there’s a quiet movement on the rise that straddles both the worldly “success” field and the spiritual “enlightenment” field.
We’re a movement of connected individuals who DO want powerful tools for personal advancement in this life – but aren’t about to buy into the “bleached teeth and power suit” cliche of the “Wow! Transform Your Life and Get Rich Instantly!” variety.
We’re a movement of connected individuals who DO want to find lasting inner peace and happiness (which is – the way I see it anyway – all enlightenment really is) but who scoff at the idea of the “all-knowing” guru. And we’d rather give the “dolphins and rainbows” aesthetic a miss too, thanks very much.
Choose to Cruise
The Art of DIY Enlightenment
Or How to Achieve Liberation Without Joining a Cult
By Seamus Anthony
The Age of Do-It-Yourself Enlightenment has arrived. Here’s social proof (check out the comments).
But what does this actually mean? Well, in our welcome post Steve and I explained this concept quite well. No real need to go visit that post, here is what we wrote:
“DIY Enlightenment is about finding your own version of truth, peace and happiness. It’s about learning to go with the flow and really experience life free from other people’s rules and dogma. It’s about recognising that ‘enlightenment’ is a concept that you are free to research, define, and achieve on your own – you DON’T need a guru to tell you what to do or to decide when you have achieved enlightenment…
“The Guru (or in the west, the Hermit) used to have the monopoly on the enlightenment niche because information about ‘enlightenment’ was not readily accessible and so it had to be transfered by direct verbal instruction.


